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MAKING PROJECTS WORK
Critical issues
Meeting the Mission:
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Why are you undertaking this project in the first place? |
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Who are the stakeholders and the customers? |
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What are their expectations for the project? |
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How does the project mission fit into your company’s mission? |
Strategies:
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What do you want to accomplish with this project? |
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Articulate the business objectives, the technical environment, and the project plan. |
People:
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Who are the project participants, and how are they organized? |
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Communicate with the organizational leadership, the project leadership, the team members, the stakeholders and the customers. |
Processes:
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How will the project accomplish its objectives over time? |
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Define the planning processes, the technology management, and the control of tasks. |
Meeting The Project Mission
It’s why you’re here
Know the Project Stakeholders
A strong project mission can not be created in a vacuum. Who are the people with an interest in the outcome of the project? What are their common expectations? Stakeholders’ expectations are rarely spelled out in legislation, executive orders, or formal memoranda.
Amplify the Voices of Your Customers
Who will be paying for this project? Who will actually be using the systems and processes being designed? Clarify the business priorities of these customers and their criteria for success. Actively and emphatically communicate this information. Do this for customers inside the organization as well as those outside the organization.
Maintain High-Level Communication About the Project Mission
Communicate steadily with stakeholders and customers throughout the project. This will help to manage their expectations and requirements over time. Design project development so that requirements and expectations can be reconfirmed at regular junctures. Periodically check to see that stakeholders and customers understand and support changes, delays, and new developments.
Strategies
What do you want to accomplish?
Set Realistic Business Objectives
What are the common business needs of the organizations that will depend on the system? What accomplishments will be critical for the project to be considered successful? Define project boundaries at the outset, and use this definition to manage requirements throughout the project. A clear definition of business success will also help ensure that project efforts support the agency’s strategic plan.
Define a Sound Architecture
Drive Toward an Enterprise-Wide Business Model
Ensure that the business model meets business objectives while remaining within the project’s scope. Publish a detailed concept of operations which distinguishes clearly among the business model, the layout and relationship of systems and communications, and the technical architecture. These should be anchored in an enterprise-wide IT strategy.
Implement Systems Incrementally
Work toward a systems implementation that will deliver, in twelve months or less, incremental, useable levels of functionality which support specific business objectives. The detailed concept of operations should explain how the architecture will satisfy these objectives and how it will prioritize them. It should also communicate responsibilities for implementing and managing the architecture.
Coordinate Technical Standards
Which standards are essential to ensure that the technical architecture ultimately supports business objectives? Define these, paying particularly close attention to technical interfaces. Develop a plan to ensure compliance with architecture standards. The technical architecture must be documented to ensure its consistency with the overall agency-level design.
Gain Agreement on the Project Plan
The project plan formally captures and documents agreements among customers, stakeholders and project participants. Secure an informed agreement up front, and maintain this agreement throughout the project life. This will ensure that the project meets expected results. This will also help align the project with the organization’s business plans and supporting IT plans. Over time, manage the project scope carefully, since there will be a tendency for different areas of the project to acquire their own divergent momentum.
People
Understand the project participants
Organizational Leadership
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Listen to the Customer and Create a Vision |
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Leverage the Existing Organizational Structure Support. |
Project Leadership
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Select a Strong Project Manager: |
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Drive. Does the project manager have a strong desire to succeed? |
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Ability to Build Consensus. Can the project manager get key individuals to work together towards common ends? |
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Ability to Take Risks. Can the project manager recognize opportunities and find ways to seize them? |
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Ability to Communicate. Is the project manager able to communicate clearly and convincingly to all parties? |
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Experience. Does the project manager have a track record of success? |
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Technical Knowledge. Does the project manager possess demonstrated knowledge in the appropriate technical fields? |
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Sense of the Big Picture. Does the project manager understand the project from a broad business perspective? |
Project Team Members
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Get What’s Needed to Succeed |
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Keep the Core Team Together |
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Monitor Team Productivity |
Processes
Making it happen
Planning
Managing Technology
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Choose an Appropriate Development Model |
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Risks (High development time, high uncertainty associated with the new technology, etc.) |
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Type (A new development, a modification of an existing system, a system integration, etc.) |
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Select an Appropriate Life Cycle |
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Deal with Shifting Priorities |
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Make Progress Visible to All |
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Know The Limits of Automation |
Controlling Tasks
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Controlling Inputs (Budget, resources) |
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Controlling Activities ( meetings, technical reviews) |
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Controlling Outcomes (Desired results) |
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