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Through 2004, IS organizations that
establish enterprise standards for project management, including
a project office with suitable governance, will experience half
the major project cost overruns, delays, and cancellations of
those that fail to do so (0.7 probability).
August 2000 Gartner Report "The Project Office: Teams, Processes, and
Tools"
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We've Got Answers....
Project Managers
vs. MS
Project Users
(Or...Reality vs. Plan)
Yes, Microsoft Project and other project software are a great
tools, but no matter how long
you tinker with it, it will not solve management issues like a
shortage of staff or other real-world complications. Solving
those problems remains the domain of the project manager.
A common mistake.
A
project manager builds his plan using Microsoft Project (or
other tool),
covering the details by outlining tasks and assigning
resources. MS Project will take these assignments and figure
out how much work is scheduled per day. Many project managers
pay close attention to these distributions because they are
key metrics affecting deadlines and completion date.
In this example, well focus on one task. The project is set
to start on April 2 and end on April 6 and will require 40
hours of work to complete. This task has one resource
(remember, staff members are termed resources in Project)
assigned to work the entire 40 hours of work
(eight-hours-per-day across the five-day duration to equal the
40-hour task).
The project manager decides that the work value is key to him,
so he sets the task to be a Fixed Work task type. But by the
second day of the project, our project manager is already in
trouble.
The first eight-hour day goes just as planned. But he works
only six hours on the second day. This shortfall means that
two hours must be put at the end of the task timeline, pushing
the new finish date to April 9.
As time goes on, and the resource works less than eight hours
per day, the finish date keeps going and going. Our poor
project managers hair is now turning gray because his plan
is no longer perfect.
Often these project managers then spend a great deal of time
trying to figure out what Project did to break his plan,
when in reality, Project was on target.
MS Project was correct because, according to the settings it
has for hours per day and the settings that designate working
days, the changes it made to the task are valid.
Why is this a common problem? There are several reasons.
First, many users do not have a firm grasp of what it is that
Project does when it recalculates dates or other data. They
just see some things values change and they feel like it is
somewhere in the realm of black magic.
Second, many people managing projects are unclear on the finer
points of project management. They are looking too closely at
some data and not closely enough at other data. They are
staring at the dates and missing the greater question of why
work is being completed slower rather than scheduled by MS
Project.
A better approach
Project cannot predict the future. It does not claim to
tell you what will happen but rather what might happen,
given the information you have supplied. It will look at the
trends and the data and give you notice of what will happen if
no further action is taken.
Our project manager was telling Project that the work was
being done slower than projected so the software, in turn,
showed that this slowed work pattern would cause the task to
finish late.
This manager was missing the real point: The task will be
late unless he does something. What he saw was data
changing without making the connection between the data and
the reality of the resources working on tasks.
An experienced project manager would have looked at the
situation above and made the connection that the original
estimates were off and action needed to be taken. What our
project manager should have done was examine why the work was
going slower and determine how he could change the situation,
not the numbers. The focus of this project manager should not
be on troubleshooting the Project 2000 scheduling engine, but
rather on how to fix the very real staffing issues and
resource efficiencies of the project.
Project managers need to be thinking about the following:
- Can this resource work overtime to get the project
back on track?
- Would adding another resource help meet the original
finish date?
- Can we reschedule this work so that finishing it
later than scheduled will not affect other tasks?
The key concept for our project manager to remember is that
just because the plan says the task will finish later than
first thought does not mean that the apocalypse is upon us. It
just means that something might need to be done to get this
task back on track.
And the moral of the story is
Project plans
will not always be on target. Many people may theoretically
accept this, but what matters is how you react to these
changes.
The goal of the project manager is not to build a plan that
does not change but to be able to deal with the changes that will
occur no matter how thoroughly you plan.
Good project managers do not fear changes. A good
project manager watches the data, uses the software to help
identify trends, and then deals with the changes before they
become problems. The art lies in your ability to monitor
progress, predict potential issues, and deal effectively with
those issues that cannot be avoided.
Use Project as a tool to monitor potential trouble and
remember that the plan is not reality; the resources doing the
work are reality.
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