Improving Your Project Management Skills
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About this ebook
Larry Richman
An ambitious project management executive with over twenty-five years experience. Certified PMP (Project Management Professional). Consultant and trainer to hundreds of employees of Fortune 500 companies. Authored 13 books, seven book translations, and articles in professional magazines and journals. Translator in three languages. Publishing executive for a major publishing company. Experienced in all aspects, including writing, editing, graphic design, printing, marketing, and distribution. Experienced product manager for printed, audiovisual, and Web products (including LDS.org, evergreeninternational.org, and other major Web sites). AIPMM Certified Product Manager and Certified Product Marketing Manager. Larry Richman's Specialties: Project management, project office, development of project management systems, Web product management, Web content management, single source publishing, strategic electronic publishing systems, Web standards, translation, interpretation, localization.
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Improving Your Project Management Skills - Larry Richman
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This book is based on the seminar Improving Your Project Management Skills: The Basics for Success,
revised for the American Management Association by Gary Chin and Helen Gordon.
ISBN: 978-0-8144-1728-7 (eBook)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Richman, Larry L. (Larry Leon), 1955–
Improving your project management skills / Larry Richman.—2nd ed.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN-13: 978-0-8144-1728-7 (alk. paper)
ISBN-10: 0-8144-1728-0 (alk. paper)
1. Project management. I. Title.
HD69.P75R526 2011
658.4’04—dc22
2011003247
© 2012 Larry Richman.
All rights reserved.
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Contents
Introduction to the Second Edition
PART 1: PROJECT MANAGEMENT FOUNDATIONS
Chapter 1. The Core Concepts
Project Management Vocabulary
Why Project Management?
Classic Functions of Project Management
Processes in the Life of a Project
Knowledge Areas
PART 2: INITIATING
Chapter 2. Defining and Authorizing the Project
The Role of Stakeholders in the Authorization Process
The Business Case for Undertaking the Project
The Goal Breakdown Structure
Project Charter
PART 3: PLANNING
Chapter 3. Collecting Requirements and Defining Scope
The Five Processes of Project Scope Management
Collecting Requirements
Creating a Scope Statement
Example Scope Document
Chapter 4. Creating a Work Breakdown Structure
The Work Breakdown Structure Is an Outline
Considerations in Creating Work Breakdown Structures
The Work Breakdown Structure Is a Validation Tool
Work Breakdown Structures Are Flexible
Techniques in Creating Work Breakdown Structures
Verifying Scope
Controlling Scope
Chapter 5. Defining and Sequencing Activities
Defining Activities
Sequencing Activities Using Network Diagrams
Identifying Dependencies Between Activities
Defining Activity Relationships
Sample Network Diagram
Chapter 6. Estimating Activities
Using the Work Breakdown Structure
Steps in Estimating Activities
Estimating Methods
Guidelines for Estimating
Considering Risk in Estimating: Using Three-Point Estimates
Precision of Estimates
Duration-Based vs. Resource-Based Estimates
Building Contingency in Estimates
Improving Estimates over Time
Chapter 7. Scheduling Activities
Scheduling Activity Dates
Project Float
Accelerating Project Schedules
Chapter 8. Identifying Resources and Budgets
Identifying Resources
Balancing Resources
Creating a Project Budget
Chapter 9. Compiling the Major Components of a Project Plan
Project Charter
Project Scope Statement
Schedule Plan
Resource Utilization Plan
Budget Plan
Milestone Plan
Organization Plan
Risk Management Plan
Communication Plan
PART 4: EXECUTING, MONITORING, AND CONTROLLING
Chapter 10. Executing Projects
Project Kick-Off Meeting
Project Control
Project Meetings
Project Control Process
Monitoring Project Work
Collecting Project Information
Schedule Importance
Labor Hours
Data Analysis
Change Control
Sources of Change
Chapter 11. Monitoring and Controlling Projects
Establishing a Project Baseline as a Control Point
Measuring Performance: Earned Value Analysis
Chapter 12. Leading and Directing Project Teams
Leading Others
Directing Others
Managing Others
Conducting Meetings
Interviewing Others
Chapter 13. Managing Risk
Identifying Risk
Assessing and Prioritizing Risk
Responding to Risk
Acting on the Response Plan
PART 5: CLOSING
Chapter 14. Closing a Project
Project Closure: The Final Process
Ensuring Project Requirements Are Met
How Projects Can End
Administrative Closure
Contractual Closure
Initiating Project Closure
Lessons Learned
Finance and Administration Records
Performance Reporting
Staff Release
Appendix A: Learning Resources
Appendix B: Glossary
Index
Introduction to the Second Edition
PROJECT MANAGEMENT KNOWLEDGE and skills can help you complete projects on schedule, within budget, and in full accordance with project specifications. At the same time, they help achieve the other goals of the organization, such as productivity, quality, and cost-effectiveness. By definition, every project is unique—a specific set of tasks aligned to meet stated requirements. But a skilled project manager consistently applies universal processes and skills to bring consistency and results to one project after another. Learning project management skills can help you implement these proven strategies for clarifying project objectives, avoiding serious errors of omission, and eliminating costly mistakes.
This book guides you step-by-step through all the processes in the life of a project, beginning with defining project scope and requirements. It explains how to create a work breakdown structure and diagram the activities into a logical sequence using simple network diagrams. It then describes techniques for estimating work on these activities, including trade-offs in time, cost, and resource allocation. You then learn how to compile your schedules, budgets, and resource plans into a comprehensive project plan.
Chapters will teach you how to monitor and control project activities using your project plan as a baseline. In addition to hard project management skills, you will learn the people skills needed to lead and direct project teams to get the job done. The book also includes chapters on identifying and managing risk and how to properly close the project and document lessons learned.
This book is based on the best-selling American Management seminar Improving Your Project Management Skills,
attended by thousands of project professionals every year. This second edition has been updated for consistency with A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide)—Fourth Edition, published by the Project Management Institute. It reflects the latest professional standards in project management and provides current project management practices and examples.
Your organization demands and deserves superior project execution and consistent results. These powerful project tools, based on a world-class learning program and proven, universal project management tenets, will help you streamline processes, reduce costs, and improve productivity in your project environment.
PART 1
Project Management Foundations
CHAPTER 1
The Core Concepts
PROJECTS ARE AN ESSENTIAL PART of human history. Some projects arise in myth, some in wartime, some from faith, and others from science and commerce. Some projects are monumental, and others are more modest. Ancient Egypt created the Great Pyramids, the Sphinx, the Library, and the Lighthouse of Alexandria. China’s Great Wall, which still stands today, took over 1,000 years to build. Peru’s Incan culture left us the lingering splendor of Machu Picchu. In our own time, we have placed men on the moon and returned them safely. We have developed drugs that target specific diseases. We have responded to environmental incidents, managed failures at nuclear sites, and responded to natural disasters. We have linked individuals and organizations through the miracle of the Internet. We have fulfilled the promise of integrated business systems that embrace enterprise resource planning, inventory management, production and control, human resources, and financial systems. This history of accomplishment will not end.
Some projects are ambitious and far-reaching in their social, economic, and political impacts. Others are less grand and more self-contained. Some require advances in basic science, and others deploy proven technology or best practices. Some projects challenge deeply held beliefs, and others uphold traditional values. And some projects fail.
The goal is always to achieve some beneficial change. Every project is an endeavor. Every project is an investment. Every project will end. Some will end when the goal is achieved, and others when the time or cost is disproportionate to the value. Some projects will be cancelled. In all cases, the project manager serves as the focal point of responsibility for the project’s time, cost, and scope.
Project Management Vocabulary
Success requires that the project manager serve as the focal point of effective, timely, and accurate communication. To do this well, the project manager must master a new vocabulary and must use it consistently to communicate successfully. The definitions introduced in this chapter are the project manager’s methods of art—words and terms used in the context of planning, scheduling, and controlling projects.
A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique product, service, or result.
* Projects are temporary because they have a definite beginning and a definite end. They are unique because the product, service, or result is different in some distinguishing way from similar products, services, or results. The construction of a headquarters building for ABC Industries is an example of a project. The unique work is defined by the building plans and has a specific beginning and end.
Project management is "the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities to meet