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IT Projects have a terrible track record |
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A 1995 Standish Group study (CHAOS) found that
only 16.2% of IT projects were successful and over 31% were canceled before
completion, costing over $81 B in the U.S. alone |
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The need for IT projects keeps increasing |
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In 1998, corporate America issued 200,000
new-start application development projects |
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In 2000, there were 300,000 new IT projects, and |
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In 2001, over 500,000 new IT projects were
started |
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Better control of financial, physical, and human
resources |
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Improved customer relations |
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Shorter development times |
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Lower costs |
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Higher quality and increased reliability |
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Higher profit margins |
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Improved productivity |
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Better internal coordination |
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Higher worker morale |
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A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to
accomplish a unique purpose |
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Attributes of projects |
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unique purpose |
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temporary |
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require resources, often from various areas |
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should have a primary sponsor and/or customer |
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involve uncertainty |
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Northwest Airlines developed a new reservation
system called ResNet (see chapters 11-16) |
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Many organizations upgrade hardware, software,
and networks via projects (see chapter 5 opening and closing case) |
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Organizations develop new software or enhance
existing systems to perform many business functions (see examples
throughout the text) |
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Note:
“IT projects” refers to projects involving hardware, software, and
networks |
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Every project is constrained in different ways
by its |
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Scope goals:
What is the project trying to accomplish? |
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Time goals:
How long should it take to complete? |
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Cost goals:
What should it cost? |
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It is the project manager’s duty to balance
these three often competing goals |
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Time overruns significantly decreased to 63%
compared to 222% |
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Cost overruns were down to 45% compared to 189% |
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Required features and functions were up to 67%
compared to 61% |
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78,000 U.S. projects were successful compared to
28,000 |
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28% of IT projects succeeded compared to 16% |
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"The reasons for the increase in successful projects vary. First, the average cost of a project has
been more than cut in half. Better
tools have been created to monitor and control progress and better skilled
project managers with better management processes are being used. The fact that there are processes is
significant in itself.“* |
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The
Standish Group, "CHAOS 2001: A Recipe for Success" (2001) |
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Project management is “the application of knowledge, skills, tools,
and techniques to project activities in order to meet project requirements”
(PMI*, Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK Guide), 2000, p. 6) |
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Stakeholders are the people involved in or
affected by project activities |
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Stakeholders include |
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the project sponsor and project team |
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support staff |
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customers |
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users |
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suppliers |
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opponents to the project |
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Knowledge areas describe the key competencies
that project managers must develop |
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4 core knowledge areas lead to specific project
objectives (scope, time, cost, and quality) |
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4 facilitating knowledge areas are the means
through which the project objectives are achieved (human resources,
communication, risk, and procurement management |
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1 knowledge area (project integration
management) affects and is affected by all of the other knowledge areas |
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Project management tools and techniques assist
project managers and their teams in various aspects of project management |
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Some specific ones include |
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Project Charter and WBS (scope) |
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Gantt charts, network diagrams, critical path
analysis, critical chain scheduling (time) |
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Cost estimates and earned value management
(cost) |
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Bosses, customers, and other stakeholders do not
like surprises |
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Good project management (PM) provides assurance
and reduces risk |
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PM provides the tools and environment to plan,
monitor, track, and manage schedules, resources, costs, and quality |
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PM provides a history or metrics base for future
planning as well as good documentation |
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Project members learn and grow by working in a
cross-functional team environment |
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*Knutson, Joan, PM Network, December 1997, p. 13 |
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Much of the knowledge needed to manage projects
is unique to PM |
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However, project managers must also have
knowledge and experience in |
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general management |
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the application area of the project |
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Project managers must focus on meeting specific
project objectives |
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Modern project management began with the
Manhattan Project, which the U.S. military led to develop the atomic bomb |
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In 1917 Henry Gantt developed the Gantt chart as
a tool for scheduling work in job shops |
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In 1958, the Navy developed PERT charts |
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In the 1970s, the military began using project
management software, as did the construction industry |
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By the 1990s, virtually every industry was using
some form of project management |
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A 1996 Fortune article called project management
the “number one career choice” |
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Professional societies like the Project
Management Institute (PMI) have grown tremendously |
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Average salaries for project managers are over
$81,000 |
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PMI hosted their first research conference in
June 2000 in Paris, France |
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The PMBOK Guide – 2000 Edition is an ANSI
standard |
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PMI’s certification department earned ISO 9000
certification |
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Hundreds of new books, articles, and
presentations related to project management have been written in recent
years |
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PMI provides certification as a Project
Management Professional (PMP) |
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A PMP has documented sufficient project
experience, agreed to follow a code of ethics, and passed the PMP exam |
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The number of people earning PMP certification
is increasing quickly |
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PMI and other organizations are offering new
certification programs (see Appendix B) |
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By 2001, there were hundreds of different
products to assist in performing project management |
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Three main categories of tools: |
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Low-end tools: Handle single or smaller projects
well, cost under $200 per user |
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Midrange tools:
Handle multiple projects and users, cost $200-500 per user, Project
2000 most popular |
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High-end tools:
Also called enterprise project management software, often licensed
on a per-user basis |
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Project management applies to work as well as
personal projects |
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Project management applies to many different
disciplines (IT, construction, finance, sports, event planning, etc.) |
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Project management skills can help in everyday
life |
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