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Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition
Note: See the text itself for full citations.
Copyright 2009
 Describe the systems view of project management
and how it applies to information technology
projects
 Understand organizations, including the four
frames, organizational structures, and
organizational culture
 Explain why stakeholder management and top
management commitment are critical for a
project’s success
2
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition
Copyright 2009
 Understand the concept of a project phase and
the project life cycle and distinguish between
project development and product development
 Discuss the unique attributes and diverse nature
of information technology projects
 Describe recent trends affecting IT project
management, including globalization, outsourcing,
and virtual teams
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 3
Copyright 2009
 Projects must operate in a broad organizational
environment
 Project managers need to use systems thinking:
◦ Taking a holistic view of carrying out projects within the
context of the organization
 Senior managers must make sure projects
continue to support current business needs
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 4
Copyright 2009
 A systems approach emerged in the 1950s to
describe a more analytical approach to
management and problem solving
 Three parts include:
◦ Systems philosophy: an overall model for thinking about
things as systems
◦ Systems analysis: problem-solving approach
◦ Systems management: address business, technological,
and organizational issues before making changes to
systems
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 5
Copyright 2009
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 6
Copyright 2009
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 7
Structural frame:
Focuses on roles and
responsibilities,
coordination and control.
Organization charts help
define this frame.
Human resources frame:
Focuses on providing
harmony between needs of
the organization and needs
of people.
Political frame:
Assumes organizations
are coalitions composed
of varied individuals and
interest groups. Conflict
and power are key
issues.
Symbolic frame: Focuses
on symbols and meanings
related to events. Culture
is important.
Copyright 2009
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 8
Many enterprise resource planning (ERP) projects fail due to
organizational issues, not technical issues. For example, Sobey’s
Canadian grocery store chain abandoned its two-year, $90 million
ERP system due to organizational problems.
As Dalhousie University Associate Professor Sunny Marche states,
“The problem of building an integrated system that can
accommodate different people is a very serious challenge. You
can’t divorce technology from the sociocultural issues. They have
an equal role.” Sobey’s ERP system shut down for five days, and
employees were scrambling to stock potentially empty shelves in
several stores for weeks. The system failure cost Sobey’s more
than $90 million and caused shareholders to take an 82-cent after-
tax hit per share.*
*Hoare, Eva. “Software hardships,” The Herald, Halifax, Nova Scotia (2001).
Copyright 2009
 3 basic organization structures
◦ Functional: functional managers report to the
CEO
◦ Project: program managers report to the CEO
◦ Matrix: middle ground between functional and
project structures; personnel often report to
two or more bosses; structure can be weak,
balanced, or strong matrix
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 9
Copyright 2009
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 10
Copyright 2009
Project
Characteristics
Organizational Structure Type
Functional Matrix Project
Weak Matrix Balanced
Matrix
Strong
Matrix
Project manager’s
authority
Little or none Limited Low to
Moderate
Moderate
to high
High to
almost total
Percent of
performing
organization’s
personnel assigned
full-time to project
work
Virtually none 0-25% 15-60% 50-95% 85-100%
Who controls the
project budget
Functional
manager
Functional
manager
Mixed Project
manager
Project
manager
Project manager’s
role
Part-time Part-time Full-time Full-time Full-time
Common title for
project manager’s
role
Project
Coordinator/
Project Leader
Project
Coordinator/
Project
Leader
Project
Manager/
Project
Officer
Project
Manager/
Program
Manager
Project
Manager/
Program
Manager
Project management
administrative staff
Part-time Part-time Part-time Full-time Full-time
PMBOK Guide, 2000, 19, and PMBOK Guide 2004, 28.
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 11
Copyright 2009
 Organizational culture is a set of shared
assumptions, values, and behaviors that
characterize the functioning of an organization
 Many experts believe the underlying causes of
many companies’ problems are not the structure
or staff, but the culture
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 12
Copyright 2009
 Member identity*
 Group emphasis*
 People focus
 Unit integration*
 Control
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 13
 Risk tolerance*
 Reward criteria*
 Conflict tolerance*
 Means-ends
orientation
 Open-systems focus*
*Project work is most successful in an organizational
culture where these items are strong/high and other
items are balanced
Copyright 2009
 Project managers must take time to identify,
understand, and manage relationships with all
project stakeholders
 Using the four frames of organizations can help
meet stakeholder needs and expectations
 Senior executives/top management are very
important stakeholders
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 14
Copyright 2009
 The New York Times reported that the project to
rebuild Ground Zero in New York City is having
severe problems; imagine all of the stakeholders
involved in this huge, highly emotional project
 A 34-page report describes the many challenges
faced in the reconstruction of the former World
Trade Center site nearly seven years after the
terrorist attack of September 11, 2001
 The report identified the need for a steering to
make final decisions on important matters
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 15
Copyright 2009
 People in top management positions are key
stakeholders in projects
 A very important factor in helping project managers
successfully lead projects is the level of commitment
and support they receive from top management
 Without top management commitment, many projects
will fail
 Some projects have a senior manager called a
champion who acts as a key proponent for a project
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 16
Copyright 2009
 Providing adequate resources
 Approving unique project needs in a timely
manner
 Getting cooperation from other parts of the
organization
 Mentoring and coaching on leadership issues
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 17
Copyright 2009
 IT governance addresses the authority and
control for key IT activities in organizations,
including IT infrastructure, IT use, and project
management
 A lack of IT governance can be dangerous, as
evidenced by three well-publicized IT project
failures in Australia (Sydney Water’s customer
relationship management system, the Royal
Melbourne Institute of Technology’s academic
management system, and One.Tel’s billing
system)
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 18
Copyright 2009
 If the organization has a negative attitude toward
IT, it will be difficult for an IT project to succeed
 Having a Chief Information Officer (CIO) at a high
level in the organization helps IT projects
 Assigning non-IT people to IT projects also
encourages more commitment
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 19
Copyright 2009
 Standards and guidelines help project managers
be more effective
 Senior management can encourage:
◦ The use of standard forms and software for project
management
◦ The development and use of guidelines for writing project
plans or providing status information
◦ The creation of a project management office or center of
excellence
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 20
Copyright 2009
 A project life cycle is a collection of project
phases that defines:
◦ What work will be performed in each phase
◦ What deliverables will be produced and when
◦ Who is involved in each phase
◦ How management will control and approve work
produced in each phase
 A deliverable is a product or service produced or
provided as part of a project
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 21
Copyright 2009
 In early phases of a project life cycle:
◦ Resource needs are usually lowest
◦ The level of uncertainty (risk) is highest
◦ Project stakeholders have the greatest opportunity to
influence the project
 In middle phases of a project life cycle:
◦ The certainty of completing a project improves
◦ More resources are needed
 The final phase of a project life cycle focuses on:
◦ Ensuring that project requirements were met
◦ The sponsor approves completion of the project
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 22
Copyright 2009
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 23
Copyright 2009
 Products also have life cycles
 The Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) is
a framework for describing the phases involved in
developing and maintaining information systems
 Systems development projects can follow
◦ Predictive life cycle: the scope of the project can be
clearly articulated and the schedule and cost can be
predicted
◦ Adaptive Software Development (ASD) life cycle:
requirements cannot be clearly expressed, projects are
mission driven and component based, using time-based
cycles to meet target dates
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 24
Copyright 2009
 Waterfall model: has well-defined, linear stages of
systems development and support
 Spiral model: shows that software is developed
using an iterative or spiral approach rather than a
linear approach
 Incremental build model: provides for progressive
development of operational software
 Prototyping model: used for developing prototypes
to clarify user requirements
 Rapid Application Development (RAD) model:
used to produce systems quickly without
sacrificing quality
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 25
Copyright 2009
 Agile software development has become popular
to describe new approaches that focus on close
collaboration between programming teams and
business experts
 Visit www.agilealliance.org for information
 See the companion Web site for Suggested
Readings
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 26
Copyright 2009
 A project should successfully pass through each of
the project phases in order to continue on to the
next
 Management reviews, also called phase exits or
kill points, should occur after each phase to
evaluate the project’s progress, likely success,
and continued compatibility with organizational
goals
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 27
Copyright 2009
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 28
"The real improvement that I saw was in our ability toin the words
of Thomas Edisonknow when to stop beating a dead
horse.…Edison's key to success was that he failed fairly often; but as
he said, he could recognize a dead horse before it started to
smell...In information technology we ride dead horsesfailing
projectsa long time before we give up. But what we are seeing now
is that we are able to get off them; able to reduce cost overrun and
time overrun. That's where the major impact came on the success
rate.”*
Many organizations, like Huntington Bancshares, Inc., use an
executive steering committee to help keep projects on track.
*Cabanis, Jeannette, "'A Major Impact': The Standish Group's Jim Johnson On
Project Management and IT Project Success," PM Network, PMI, Sep.1998, p. 7
Copyright 2009
 IT projects can be very diverse in terms of size,
complexity, products produced, application area,
and resource requirements
 IT project team members often have diverse
backgrounds and skill sets
 IT projects use diverse technologies that change
rapidly; even within one technology area, people
must be highly specialized
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 29
Copyright 2009
 Globalization: lower trade and political barriers
and the digital revolution have made it possible to
interact almost instantaneously with billions of
other people across the planet
 Outsourcing: outsourcing is when an
organization acquires goods and/or sources from
an outside source; offshoring is sometimes used
to describe outsourcing from another country
 Virtual teams: a virtual team is a group of
individuals who work across time and space using
communication technologies
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 30
Copyright 2009
 Issues
◦ Communications
◦ Trust
◦ Common work practices
◦ Tools
 Suggestions
◦ Employ greater project discipline
◦ Think global but act local
◦ Keep project momentum going
◦ Use newer tools and technology
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 31
Copyright 2009
 Organizations remain competitive by using
outsourcing to their advantage, such as finding
ways to reduce costs
 Their next challenge is to make strategic IT
investments with outsourcing by improving their
enterprise architecture to ensure that IT
infrastructure and business processes are
integrated and standardized (see Suggested
Readings)
 Project managers should become more familiar with
negotiating contracts and other outsourcing issues
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 32
Copyright 2009
 Increasing competiveness and responsiveness
by having a team of workers available 24/7
 Lowering costs because many virtual workers
do not require office space or support beyond
their home offices
 Providing more expertise and flexibility by
having team members from across the globe
working any time of day or night
 Increasing the work/life balance for team
members by eliminating fixed office hours and
the need to travel to work
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 33
Copyright 2009
 Isolating team members
 Increasing the potential for communications
problems
 Reducing the ability for team members to network
and transfer information informally
 Increasing the dependence on technology to
accomplish work
 See text for a list of factors that help virtual teams
succeed, including team processes,
trust/relationships, leadership style, and team
member selection
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 34
Copyright 2009
 Project managers need to take a systems approach
when working on projects
 Organizations have four different frames: structural,
human resources, political, and symbolic
 The structure and culture of an organization have
strong implications for project managers
 Projects should successfully pass through each
phase of the project life cycle
 Project managers need to consider several factors
due to the unique context of information technology
projects
 Recent trends affecting IT project management
include globalization, outsourcing, and virtual teams
Information Technology Project
Management, Sixth Edition 35

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project management and information technology

  • 1. Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition Note: See the text itself for full citations.
  • 2. Copyright 2009  Describe the systems view of project management and how it applies to information technology projects  Understand organizations, including the four frames, organizational structures, and organizational culture  Explain why stakeholder management and top management commitment are critical for a project’s success 2 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition
  • 3. Copyright 2009  Understand the concept of a project phase and the project life cycle and distinguish between project development and product development  Discuss the unique attributes and diverse nature of information technology projects  Describe recent trends affecting IT project management, including globalization, outsourcing, and virtual teams Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 3
  • 4. Copyright 2009  Projects must operate in a broad organizational environment  Project managers need to use systems thinking: ◦ Taking a holistic view of carrying out projects within the context of the organization  Senior managers must make sure projects continue to support current business needs Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 4
  • 5. Copyright 2009  A systems approach emerged in the 1950s to describe a more analytical approach to management and problem solving  Three parts include: ◦ Systems philosophy: an overall model for thinking about things as systems ◦ Systems analysis: problem-solving approach ◦ Systems management: address business, technological, and organizational issues before making changes to systems Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 5
  • 6. Copyright 2009 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 6
  • 7. Copyright 2009 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 7 Structural frame: Focuses on roles and responsibilities, coordination and control. Organization charts help define this frame. Human resources frame: Focuses on providing harmony between needs of the organization and needs of people. Political frame: Assumes organizations are coalitions composed of varied individuals and interest groups. Conflict and power are key issues. Symbolic frame: Focuses on symbols and meanings related to events. Culture is important.
  • 8. Copyright 2009 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 8 Many enterprise resource planning (ERP) projects fail due to organizational issues, not technical issues. For example, Sobey’s Canadian grocery store chain abandoned its two-year, $90 million ERP system due to organizational problems. As Dalhousie University Associate Professor Sunny Marche states, “The problem of building an integrated system that can accommodate different people is a very serious challenge. You can’t divorce technology from the sociocultural issues. They have an equal role.” Sobey’s ERP system shut down for five days, and employees were scrambling to stock potentially empty shelves in several stores for weeks. The system failure cost Sobey’s more than $90 million and caused shareholders to take an 82-cent after- tax hit per share.* *Hoare, Eva. “Software hardships,” The Herald, Halifax, Nova Scotia (2001).
  • 9. Copyright 2009  3 basic organization structures ◦ Functional: functional managers report to the CEO ◦ Project: program managers report to the CEO ◦ Matrix: middle ground between functional and project structures; personnel often report to two or more bosses; structure can be weak, balanced, or strong matrix Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 9
  • 10. Copyright 2009 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 10
  • 11. Copyright 2009 Project Characteristics Organizational Structure Type Functional Matrix Project Weak Matrix Balanced Matrix Strong Matrix Project manager’s authority Little or none Limited Low to Moderate Moderate to high High to almost total Percent of performing organization’s personnel assigned full-time to project work Virtually none 0-25% 15-60% 50-95% 85-100% Who controls the project budget Functional manager Functional manager Mixed Project manager Project manager Project manager’s role Part-time Part-time Full-time Full-time Full-time Common title for project manager’s role Project Coordinator/ Project Leader Project Coordinator/ Project Leader Project Manager/ Project Officer Project Manager/ Program Manager Project Manager/ Program Manager Project management administrative staff Part-time Part-time Part-time Full-time Full-time PMBOK Guide, 2000, 19, and PMBOK Guide 2004, 28. Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 11
  • 12. Copyright 2009  Organizational culture is a set of shared assumptions, values, and behaviors that characterize the functioning of an organization  Many experts believe the underlying causes of many companies’ problems are not the structure or staff, but the culture Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 12
  • 13. Copyright 2009  Member identity*  Group emphasis*  People focus  Unit integration*  Control Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 13  Risk tolerance*  Reward criteria*  Conflict tolerance*  Means-ends orientation  Open-systems focus* *Project work is most successful in an organizational culture where these items are strong/high and other items are balanced
  • 14. Copyright 2009  Project managers must take time to identify, understand, and manage relationships with all project stakeholders  Using the four frames of organizations can help meet stakeholder needs and expectations  Senior executives/top management are very important stakeholders Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 14
  • 15. Copyright 2009  The New York Times reported that the project to rebuild Ground Zero in New York City is having severe problems; imagine all of the stakeholders involved in this huge, highly emotional project  A 34-page report describes the many challenges faced in the reconstruction of the former World Trade Center site nearly seven years after the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001  The report identified the need for a steering to make final decisions on important matters Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 15
  • 16. Copyright 2009  People in top management positions are key stakeholders in projects  A very important factor in helping project managers successfully lead projects is the level of commitment and support they receive from top management  Without top management commitment, many projects will fail  Some projects have a senior manager called a champion who acts as a key proponent for a project Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 16
  • 17. Copyright 2009  Providing adequate resources  Approving unique project needs in a timely manner  Getting cooperation from other parts of the organization  Mentoring and coaching on leadership issues Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 17
  • 18. Copyright 2009  IT governance addresses the authority and control for key IT activities in organizations, including IT infrastructure, IT use, and project management  A lack of IT governance can be dangerous, as evidenced by three well-publicized IT project failures in Australia (Sydney Water’s customer relationship management system, the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology’s academic management system, and One.Tel’s billing system) Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 18
  • 19. Copyright 2009  If the organization has a negative attitude toward IT, it will be difficult for an IT project to succeed  Having a Chief Information Officer (CIO) at a high level in the organization helps IT projects  Assigning non-IT people to IT projects also encourages more commitment Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 19
  • 20. Copyright 2009  Standards and guidelines help project managers be more effective  Senior management can encourage: ◦ The use of standard forms and software for project management ◦ The development and use of guidelines for writing project plans or providing status information ◦ The creation of a project management office or center of excellence Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 20
  • 21. Copyright 2009  A project life cycle is a collection of project phases that defines: ◦ What work will be performed in each phase ◦ What deliverables will be produced and when ◦ Who is involved in each phase ◦ How management will control and approve work produced in each phase  A deliverable is a product or service produced or provided as part of a project Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 21
  • 22. Copyright 2009  In early phases of a project life cycle: ◦ Resource needs are usually lowest ◦ The level of uncertainty (risk) is highest ◦ Project stakeholders have the greatest opportunity to influence the project  In middle phases of a project life cycle: ◦ The certainty of completing a project improves ◦ More resources are needed  The final phase of a project life cycle focuses on: ◦ Ensuring that project requirements were met ◦ The sponsor approves completion of the project Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 22
  • 23. Copyright 2009 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 23
  • 24. Copyright 2009  Products also have life cycles  The Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) is a framework for describing the phases involved in developing and maintaining information systems  Systems development projects can follow ◦ Predictive life cycle: the scope of the project can be clearly articulated and the schedule and cost can be predicted ◦ Adaptive Software Development (ASD) life cycle: requirements cannot be clearly expressed, projects are mission driven and component based, using time-based cycles to meet target dates Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 24
  • 25. Copyright 2009  Waterfall model: has well-defined, linear stages of systems development and support  Spiral model: shows that software is developed using an iterative or spiral approach rather than a linear approach  Incremental build model: provides for progressive development of operational software  Prototyping model: used for developing prototypes to clarify user requirements  Rapid Application Development (RAD) model: used to produce systems quickly without sacrificing quality Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 25
  • 26. Copyright 2009  Agile software development has become popular to describe new approaches that focus on close collaboration between programming teams and business experts  Visit www.agilealliance.org for information  See the companion Web site for Suggested Readings Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 26
  • 27. Copyright 2009  A project should successfully pass through each of the project phases in order to continue on to the next  Management reviews, also called phase exits or kill points, should occur after each phase to evaluate the project’s progress, likely success, and continued compatibility with organizational goals Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 27
  • 28. Copyright 2009 Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 28 "The real improvement that I saw was in our ability toin the words of Thomas Edisonknow when to stop beating a dead horse.…Edison's key to success was that he failed fairly often; but as he said, he could recognize a dead horse before it started to smell...In information technology we ride dead horsesfailing projectsa long time before we give up. But what we are seeing now is that we are able to get off them; able to reduce cost overrun and time overrun. That's where the major impact came on the success rate.”* Many organizations, like Huntington Bancshares, Inc., use an executive steering committee to help keep projects on track. *Cabanis, Jeannette, "'A Major Impact': The Standish Group's Jim Johnson On Project Management and IT Project Success," PM Network, PMI, Sep.1998, p. 7
  • 29. Copyright 2009  IT projects can be very diverse in terms of size, complexity, products produced, application area, and resource requirements  IT project team members often have diverse backgrounds and skill sets  IT projects use diverse technologies that change rapidly; even within one technology area, people must be highly specialized Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 29
  • 30. Copyright 2009  Globalization: lower trade and political barriers and the digital revolution have made it possible to interact almost instantaneously with billions of other people across the planet  Outsourcing: outsourcing is when an organization acquires goods and/or sources from an outside source; offshoring is sometimes used to describe outsourcing from another country  Virtual teams: a virtual team is a group of individuals who work across time and space using communication technologies Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 30
  • 31. Copyright 2009  Issues ◦ Communications ◦ Trust ◦ Common work practices ◦ Tools  Suggestions ◦ Employ greater project discipline ◦ Think global but act local ◦ Keep project momentum going ◦ Use newer tools and technology Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 31
  • 32. Copyright 2009  Organizations remain competitive by using outsourcing to their advantage, such as finding ways to reduce costs  Their next challenge is to make strategic IT investments with outsourcing by improving their enterprise architecture to ensure that IT infrastructure and business processes are integrated and standardized (see Suggested Readings)  Project managers should become more familiar with negotiating contracts and other outsourcing issues Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 32
  • 33. Copyright 2009  Increasing competiveness and responsiveness by having a team of workers available 24/7  Lowering costs because many virtual workers do not require office space or support beyond their home offices  Providing more expertise and flexibility by having team members from across the globe working any time of day or night  Increasing the work/life balance for team members by eliminating fixed office hours and the need to travel to work Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 33
  • 34. Copyright 2009  Isolating team members  Increasing the potential for communications problems  Reducing the ability for team members to network and transfer information informally  Increasing the dependence on technology to accomplish work  See text for a list of factors that help virtual teams succeed, including team processes, trust/relationships, leadership style, and team member selection Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 34
  • 35. Copyright 2009  Project managers need to take a systems approach when working on projects  Organizations have four different frames: structural, human resources, political, and symbolic  The structure and culture of an organization have strong implications for project managers  Projects should successfully pass through each phase of the project life cycle  Project managers need to consider several factors due to the unique context of information technology projects  Recent trends affecting IT project management include globalization, outsourcing, and virtual teams Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition 35