Let practicing Project and Programme Managers help you plan, optimise and manage your projects and their people better.

Course overview
With emphasis is placed on how teams of people plan, manage and control one or several projects, this course provides a detailed understanding of what project management is all about. Powerful tools and techniques are explained in a practical way that references real-world best practices. Syndicate exercises, role playing and a detailed case study enforce this learning.
Delivery method
Physical Classroom: 3 days.  Available In-Company only.
Learning outcomes
After completing this course, delegates will be able to plan, execute and manage projects more effectively and consistently. They will:

  • Understand the differences between project s and programmes together with the critical success factors of both.
  • Be able to articulate a client’s requirements into a working project brief whilst determining the feasibility of various project options.
  • Be able to break down a project’s scope into manageable components and build these components into a working communication strategy.
  • Understand how programmes of multiple projects are developed and the impact this has on the wider organisation and its people.
  • Be able to accurately scope individual tasks and relate these tasks to form an accurate and workable vision of a project and its objectives.
  • Be able to accurately schedule a project, both within itself and also to other projects within a programme and also to the outside world.
  • Understand the impact resources have on a project’s success and develop strategies for optimising resource utilisation programme-wide.
  • Be able to effectively build and mopbilise a project team to fulfil the needs of all aspects of project stakeholder.
  • Be able to define, articulate and manage both qualitative and quantitative project risks.
  • Understand the impact that change and progress can have upon the project and how to analyse this against previously-defined targets.
  • Understand why, when, how and what to replan whilst keeping a project on track and satisfying the needs of project stakeholders.
  • Be able to effectively close a project.
Audience
Project Manager, Programme Manager, Resource Manager.
Course detail
Project simulation

To introduce delegates to project management (and to each other), this introductory exercise simulates the processes and techniques of planning and executing a simple project. The establishment of the project team and its behaviour as the project progresses is explored to provide an insight into how projects are created, planned and managed.

  • Understanding the project brief
  • Creating and managing the project team
  • Defining the project
  • Mobilising the team to undertake the project
  • Getting the project to meet its objectives
  • Reviewing the outcome of the project
Project management preliminaries

This next section discusses essential PM principles. Why projects fail and the various types of project leads into interpersonal issues, team building and communication. An exercise creates a project methodology and a basic test determines initial PM knowledge.

  • What is a project and why do they go wrong?
  • How do projects and programmes differ?
  • Types of projects
  • Interpersonal issues
  • Team building and communication
  • Creating a feedback mechanism
Project startup

From an understanding of PM fundamentals, the project begins to take shape. The three project resources of work, time and cost are discussed, along with task delegation. The planning sequence is commenced, starting with an understanding of a client’s requirements. A practical exercise discusses a project’s feasibility.

  • The role of project planning
  • The three project resources
  • Knowing what the client wants
  • Creating a project definition
  • How feasible is the project?
Defining what to do

With a project’s feasibility confirmed, the project definition can be expanded into just what is required (and at what level of detail for reporting and control). A top-down approach creates a work and cost breakdown, confirmed with a syndicate exercise.

  • Levels of detail required for control
  • Levels of reporting
  • Creating a Work Breakdown Structure
  • Cost breakdown and coding structures
  • Adding milestones
Projects and programmes

As projects are rarely in isolation, the relationship between the project and the overall programme is introduced. This is discussed in how the tasks themselves will be performed, together with the people that will carry out those tasks. The role of the project team is explored in detail and a practical exercise maps people with their tasks and responsibilities.

  • Programme definitions
  • Product breakdowns and other structures
  • Project team structures
  • Creating an organisation breakdown
  • Creating assignment matrices
How to accomplish work

With the project scope defined, how it will be achieved is discussed. The work, cost and time content of tasks is explained, along with sources of this information. Task relationships are introduced and an exercise creates a project network.

  • Sources of time / work information
  • Time vs. work
  • The cost of doing work and tasks
  • Relationships between tasks
  • Tasks with multiple predecessors / successors
When things happen / further timing influences

The network says how things will be done. Critical path analysis determines when: how quickly and how slowly. Gantt charts depict the schedule of tasks and their spare time. Task relationships are expanded to increase flexibility. Influences external to the project are added to create a more realistic model of reality. Practical exercises confirm the appropriate techniques to use.

  • How quickly / slowly can tasks be done?
  • Tasks with spare / no spare time
  • Gantt charts to show when
  • Overlapping or delaying tasks
  • Constraining tasks starts / finishes
  • Influences from other projects
Who does what and when

People to perform the tasks need to be added to the project to be a true model of reality. Their influence is discussed in how they are assigned and the problems that they can bring. Techniques for resource management are introduced, along with the implications in applying them. Practical exercises optimise this resource usage and create a cost schedule.

  • Simple / effort-driven assignments
  • How resource usage adds up
  • Resource management options
  • Resource levelling with / without delays
  • Substituting alternative resources
  • Scheduling project costs
Making it all happen

With a plan in place, the needs of the project team require assessment, management and understanding. This module looks at how project information is integrated, teams are formed and the needs of project stakeholders are maintained. Emphasis is placed on the need for effective benefit management in the group discussions and delegate exercises.

  • Integrating inputs from different viewpoints
  • Why, how and when to mobilise
  • Mobilisation roles
  • Developing the project team
  • Mobilisation and the project lifecycle
  • Determining, assessing and managing stakeholders
Assessing project risks

As projects are modelling the future, this implies an element of risk. Where the risk comes from and when it should be reviewed are discussed. Different types of risk are explained, together with their probability of happening and the impact if they do happen. Syndicate work identifies sources of risk and contingencies for removing / alleviating that risk.

  • When and why manage risk?
  • Using risk diagrams and matrices
  • P.E.R.T. as a risk management tool
  • When to apply contingencies
  • Contingency effects
Controlling work in progress

Once a project goes live, it is subject to (often dramatic) change. The necessity for tracking what has happened is expanded to encompass updating cycles and their frequency. What is captured and how it is done are discussed, together with what is different to as before and why it is different. A practical exercise tracks a project’s progress, compared to what should have been achieved.

  • Change: its impact and opportunities
  • Update cycles and their frequency
  • Capturing: what; how & who
  • Comparisons to original plans
  • Understanding earned-value analysis
  • Evaluating the impact of the change
Replanning to stay on track

Actual work accomplished creates a requirement for replanning – at varying levels of detail. Options to control time, cost and quality are discussed, together with the need for timely action. The importance of reporting and communication is emphasised. A practical exercise deals with alleviating a number of project problems, arising out of an update.

  • Why replan, and at what detail?
  • Changing how long things take
  • Changing task relationships
  • Keeping control of costs and quality
  • Keeping people informed
  • The need to update regularly
Reviewing after progress

This final section emphasises the importance of formally closing a project. Confirming that it has met its requirements and that the project team performed well are important lessons to learn for the future. A final exercise re-runs a test on general PM knowledge.

  • Why review the past?
  • When to review and close
  • Team benefits from a review
  • Project closure meetings
  • Project closure reports

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