Lecture 03 - Project Management
Lecture 03 - Project Management
Lecture 03 - Project Management
Projects
Project Management
Raymond Sanchez
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Overview of Project Management
Project management
Planning, scheduling, monitoring and controlling,
and reporting on information system development
What shapes a project?
Successful projects must be completed on time,
within budget, meet requirements, and satisfy
users
Overview of Project Management
(Cont.)
What is a project triangle?
Challenge: find optimal balance among the
factors
Any change in one leg will affect the other legs
FIGURE 3-4 The top screen shows a Gantt chart with six tasks. The PERT chart in the bottom screen
displays an easy-to-follow task pattern for the same project. When the user mouses over the summary
box for Task 5, the details become visible.
Creating a WBS (Cont.)
Identifying tasks in a WBS
Task or activity: any work that has a beginning
and end
Requires the use of company resources such as
people, time, or money
Should be small and manageable
Projects have events or milestones
Events or milestones: recognizable reference points
used to monitor progress
Creating a WBS (Cont.)
Listing the tasks
Tasks might be embedded in a document
Estimating task duration
Can be hours, days, or weeks
Time estimates made by project managers
Best case-estimate (B), probable-case estimate (P),
and worst-case estimate (W)
After making estimates, the manager assigns a
weight to each estimate
Calculates the task duration
Creating a WBS (Cont.)
Using a questionnaire requires a series of tasks and events to track the progress. The illustration shows the
relationship between the tasks and the events, or milestones, that mark the beginning and end of each task.
Creating a WBS (Cont.)
Factors affecting duration
Project size
Identify all project tasks and time required
Consider time taken for events affecting productivity
Human resources
Assemble and guide a development team that has the
skill and experience to handle the project
Deal with factors that could affect the schedule
Creating a WBS (Cont.)
This example of a dependent task shows that the finish time of Task 1, Day 5,
controls the start date of Task 2, which is Day 6.
Task Patterns (Cont.)
Multiple successor tasks
Tasks that can be initiated simultaneously
Termed concurrent
Often, two or more concurrent tasks depend on a
predecessor task
Example of a PERT/CPM chart with five tasks. Task 2 is a dependent task that has multiple
successor tasks. Task 5 has multiple predecessor tasks. In this figure, the analyst has arranged the
tasks and entered task names, IDs, and durations.
The Critical Path (Cont.)
FIGURE 3-19 Now the analyst has entered the start and finish times, using the rules explained
in this section. Notice that the overall project has a duration of 95 days.
Activity WBS: Sports Party Event
Project Monitoring and Control
Monitoring and control techniques
Structured walk-through: review of a project team
member’s work by other team members
Takes place throughout the SDLC
Known as design, code, or testing reviews based on
the phase in which they occur
Project Monitoring and Control
(Cont.)
Maintaining a schedule
Projects run into problems or delays
Projects managers monitor and control work
Anticipate problems, avoid them, and minimize
impact
Identify potential solutions and select the best way to
solve the problem
Tasks and the critical path
Project managers spend most of their time
tracking the tasks along the critical path
Reporting
Project status meetings
Project managers schedule regular meetings
Share updates, discuss common problems, explain
new techniques, and help collect data
Project status reports
Regularly communicated by project managers to
supervisors, upper management, or users
Dealing with problems
Deciding how to handle problems can be difficult
Project Management Software
Project managers use software applications to
help plan, schedule, monitor, and report on a
project
Most programs offer features such as
PERT/CPM, Gantt charts, resource scheduling,
project calendars, and cost tracking
Risk Management
Steps in risk management
Develop a risk management plan
Identify the risks
Analyze the risks
Qualitative and quantitative risk analysis
Create a risk response plan
Proactive effort to anticipate a risk and describe an
action plan to deal with it
Monitor risks
Managing for Success
Project management is a challenging task
Project managers must be alert, technically
competent, and highly resourceful
Projects get derailed for a wide variety of
reasons
Business issues
Budget issues
Schedule issues
Summary
Project management is the process of planning,
scheduling, monitoring, and reporting on the
development of an information system
A successful project must be completed on time,
within its budget, and deliver a quality product that
satisfies users and meets requirements
A project triangle shows three legs that require
balancing— project cost, scope, and time
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Summary (Cont.)
Planning, scheduling, monitoring, and reporting
all take place within a larger project development
framework, which includes three key steps—
creating a work breakdown structure, identifying
task patterns, and calculating the critical path
Task patterns establish the sequence of work in a
project
A critical path is a series of tasks that, if delayed,
would affect the completion date of the overall
project
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Summary (Cont.)
A Gantt chart is a horizontal bar chart that
represents the project schedule with time on the
horizontal axis and tasks arranged vertically
A PERT/CPM chart shows the project as a
network diagram with tasks connected by arrows
Most project managers use powerful software
such as Microsoft Project to plan, schedule, and
monitor projects
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