Fundamentals of Project Planning, Scheduling, Monitoring & Control

assocpm 6,652 views 12 slides Mar 15, 2016
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About This Presentation

Feedback from the survey undertaken by the attendees
The attendees at each table were provided with a topic related to Project Planning, Scheduling, Monitoring & Control and were asked to list their top 5 ‘good practice’ lessons learned.
Topics: Planning, Change Management, Reporting, Scope,...


Slide Content

Fundamentals of Project
Planning, Scheduling,
Monitoring & Control

BAWA 2
nd
March 2016
Feedback from Attendees on Good
Practice

Good Practice
The attendees at each table were provided with a topic related to
Project Planning, Scheduling, Monitoring & Control and were
asked to list their top 5 ‘good practice’ lessons learned
Topics: Planning, Change Management, Reporting, Scope,
Schedule Management, Risk Management
The following slides capture their feedback.

Planning
1.Communication and engagement with stakeholders (also seek
their experience)
2.Iterative scope & dependency review and management & review of
Business Case
3.Realistic planning, account for optimism and realistic timescales
4.Engage with risk management and ‘learning from experience’ from
the start
5.Consider the necessary detail at the point in time

Planning
1.Clarify scope, what are the requirements of the project
2.Clarify resource needs
3.Understanding dependencies
4.Plan length of project and bring in appropriate mitigation actions
5.Establish project milestones and plan around them

Change Management
1.Early stakeholder engagement
2.Configuration Control
3.Analyse impacts
4.Risk Management
5.Leadership
6.Evaluation / lessons learned
7.Cost control

Reporting
1.Graphical information
2.Tailored to the audience / relevance
3.Imparting context
4.Taking feedback from reporting / amending presentation and
content as necessary
5.One truth / real time

Reporting
1.Cadence of reporting
2.Messaging tailored to the audience
3.Past, current and forecast performance
4.Standardised reporting – so people are used to them
5.Reuse information as you go up the reporting chain, automated as
far as possible to avoid “old” data

Scope
1.Store it so everyone can find it
2.Logical layout, in line with the schedule
3.Suitable level of detail
4.Detail progress with planning
5.Stakeholder involvement

Scope
1.Writing them down – Specification / Business Case / Solution
2.Requirements Management process / System Engineering
3.Communication & Testing / Verification
4.Change Control & Configuration Management
5.Value Engineering

Schedule Management
1.Regularly updated / reviewed
2.Realistic – involves stakeholder input
3.Integrated with resources and other project dependencies
4.Consider ‘Learning from experience’ (lessons learned)
5.Communication / identify ‘swim lanes’
6.Consider structure / hierarchy
7.Organisational standards for schedules

Risk Management
1.Continued recording and use of lessons learned
2.Risk awareness and communication - up and down the business
3.All stakeholders involved in risk identification
4.Early Risk Management Plan construction
5.Use a common toolset

Risk Management
1.Stakeholder engagement
2.Regular risk reviews
3.Regular impact assessments
4.Reporting & escalating risks process
5.Assign clear owners for risk responses
6.Understanding project’s aims / objectives
7.Revisiting the risks