Project Life Cycle: Defining Planning Executing Delivering / Controlling
Project Life Cycle: Defining Planning Executing Delivering / Controlling
Project Life Cycle: Defining Planning Executing Delivering / Controlling
Defining
Planning
Executing
Delivering / controlling
DEFINING A PROJECT
Activities
Scope estabilished
Tasks defined
Planning Stage
Plans are made to determine what the project will entail
When it will be scheduled- timeframes
Major and minor milestones
Cost calculations
Teams and formed
Resource requirements
Further refinement of scope
Key Skills
Process Analysis
Team building
Negotiating
Delegating
Communicating
Project Plan
As the saying has it, "If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail."
Best Practices
Take some time and really think through what you know about the
objective of your project.
Look at some historical data from similar projects. You can even
have a few informal meetings with knowledgeable individuals you
can use as a sounding board to make sure you aren't completely off
base. You'll be surprised how good a draft you can develop if you put
in a little effort.
With this draft you will be able to speak with subject matter experts
(SMEs) and stakeholders to flesh out the project plan. If you don't
make some level of effort to develop a rough draft, you may give a
bad impression which will make it harder for you to obtain the
support of the persons you need to implement the project.
After you have fleshed out your draft with your core team, and some
other SMEs that may not be a part of your team, you should give the
document a baseline status. Your timeline / project plan should not
undergo many edits, if any, after it achieves baseline status.
EXECUTING
Executing the plan
Involves monitoring the schedules, cost and specifications
Holding of weekly reviews
Managing contigencies, delays, forecasting future progress
Making necessary changes
Key Skills
Supervising
Delegating
Communicating
Leading and Motivating
Problem solving
Conflict management
Documents
Reports
Review meetings
Training of personnel
Documentation
Transfering of documents
Redeploying resources
Lesson #2Project
Sponsorship/ Top leadership
It is vitally important to the
success of a project to have a
project champion or sponsor
Adequate project
sponsorship is important in relatively simple projects, so it is
even more of a necessity in complex projects, such as
defense
acquisition projects (Hosking).