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 Project Management Success with the Top 7 Best Practices
by: Simon Buehring
Managing a project can be daunting. Whether planning your
wedding, developing a new website or building your dream house by the
sea, you need to employ project management techniques to help you
succeed. I'll summarise the top 7 best practices at the heart of good
project management which can help you to achieve project success.
Define the scope and objectives
Firstly, understand the project objectives. Suppose your boss
asks you to organise a blood donor campaign, is the objective to get as
much blood donated as possible? Or, is it to raise the local company
profile? Deciding the real objectives will help you plan the project.
Scope defines the boundary of the project. Is the organisation
of transport to take staff to the blood bank within scope? Or, should
staff make their own way there? Deciding what's in or out of scope will
determine the amount of work which needs performing.
Understand who the stakeholders are, what they expect to be
delivered and enlist their support. Once you've defined the scope and
objectives, get the stakeholders to review and agree to them.
Define the deliverables
You must define what will be delivered by the project. If your
project is an advertising campaign for a new chocolate bar, then one
deliverable might be the artwork for an advertisement. So, decide what
tangible things will be delivered and document them in enough detail to
enable someone else to produce them correctly and effectively.
Key stakeholders must review the definition of deliverables and must agree they accurately reflect what must be delivered.
Project planning
Planning requires that the project manager decides which people, resources and budget are required to complete the project.
You must define what activities are required to produce the
deliverables using techniques such as Work Breakdown Structures. You
must estimate the time and effort required for each activity,
dependencies between activities and decide a realistic schedule to
complete them. Involve the project team in estimating how long
activities will take. Set milestones which indicate critical dates
during the project. Write this into the project plan. Get the key
stakeholders to review and agree to the plan.
Communication
Project plans are useless unless they've been communicated
effectively to the project team. Every team member needs to know their
responsibilities. I once worked on a project where the project manager
sat in his office surrounded by huge paper schedules. The problem was,
nobody on his team knew what the tasks and milestones were because he
hadn't shared the plan with them. The project hit all kinds of problems
with people doing activities which they deemed important rather than
doing the activities assigned by the project manager.
Tracking and reporting project progress
Once your project is underway you must monitor and compare the
actual progress with the planned progress. You will need progress
reports from project team members. You should record variations between
the actual and planned cost, schedule and scope. You should report
variations to your manager and key stakeholders and take corrective
actions if variations get too large.
You can adjust the plan in many ways to get the project back on
track but you will always end up juggling cost, scope and schedule. If
the project manager changes one of these, then one or both of the other
elements will inevitably need changing. It is juggling these three
elements - known as the project triangle - that typically causes a
project manager the most headaches!
Change management
Stakeholders often change their mind about what must be
delivered. Sometimes the business environment changes after the project
starts, so assumptions made at the beginning of the project may no
longer be valid. This often means the scope or deliverables of the
project need changing. If a project manager accepted all changes into
the project, the project would inevitably go over budget, be late and
might never be completed.
By managing changes, the project manager can make decisions
about whether or not to incorporate the changes immediately or in the
future, or to reject them. This increases the chances of project
success because the project manager controls how the changes are
incorporated, can allocate resources accordingly and can plan when and
how the changes are made. Not managing changes effectively is often a
reason why projects fail.
Risk management
Risks are events which can adversely affect the successful
outcome of the project. I've worked on projects where risks have
included: staff lacking the technical skills to perform the work,
hardware not being delivered on time, the control room at risk of
flooding and many others. Risks will vary for each project but the main
risks to a project must be identified as soon as possible. Plans must
be made to avoid the risk, or, if the risk cannot be avoided, to
mitigate the risk to lessen its impact if it occurs. This is known as
risk management.
You don't manage all risks because there could be too many and
not all risks have the same impact. So, identify all risks, estimate
the likelihood of each risk occurring (1 - not likely, 2 - maybe
likely, 3 - very likely). Estimate its impact on the project (1 - low,
2 - medium, 3 - high), then multiply the two numbers together to give
the risk factor. High risk factors indicate the severest risks. Manage
the ten with the highest risk factors. Constantly review risks and
lookout for new ones since they have a habit of occurring at any
moment.
Not managing risks effectively is a common reason why projects fail.
Summary
Following these best practices cannot guarantee a successful
project but they will provide a better chance of success. Disregarding
these best practices will almost certainly lead to project failure.
About The Author
Simon Buehring is a project manager, consultant and trainer. He
works for KnowledgeTrain which offers Project Management training
courses in the UK and overseas. Simon has extensive experience within
the IT industry both in the UK and in Asia. He can be contacted via the
KnowledgeTrain website at http://www.knowledgetrain.co.uk/.
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