Chapter 2.
Project Management Growth:
Concepts and Definitions
Jurusan Teknik Elektro dan Komputer
Dr. Ramzi Adriman
Ahmadiar
Fathurrahman
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Introduction
The growth and acceptance of Project Management has changed
significantly over the past 40 years, and are expected to continue.
The growth of Project Management :
Roles and responsibilities
Organization structures
Delegation of authority
Decision-making
Corporate profitability
Nowadays, the survival of a business may well rest upon how well
project management is implemented, and how quickly.
Fail Fast, Learn Fast & Improve fast.
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General Systems Management
General systems theory can be classified as a management approach
that attempts to integrate and unify scientific information across many
fields of knowledge.
Systems theory attempts to solve problems by looking at the total picture.
In 1951, Dr. Ludwig von Bertalanffy, a biologist, identified how
specialists in each subsystem could be integrated so as to get a
better understanding of the interrelationships, therefore contributing to
the overall knowledge of the operations of the system.
In 1956, Prof. Kenneth Boulding identified the communications
problems that can occur during systems integration among different
subsystems and call for a common language.
In Project Management, the common language can be the PMBOK
(Project Management Body of Knowledge).
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Project Management: 1945-1960
Line manager wearing the hat of a project manager, would perform
the work necessitated by their line organization, and when
completed, would throw the ball over the fence in hopes that
someone would catch it.
The problem with over-the-fence management was that the no
single contact point for customer.
DOD appointed a single point of contact, namely project manager
who had totally accountability through all project phases.
Due to inability to forecast technology, projects have been
overruns and last ten to 20 years. Project manager was often
wrongly blamed for.
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Project Management: 1960-1985
In search for new management techniques and organizational
structures that could be quickly adapted to a changing
environment. Project management became a necessity due to :
Technology increasing at astounding rate
More money invested in R&D
More information available
Shortening of project life cycle
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Project Management: 1985-2003
Project Management Evolution
By the 1990s, companies had begun to realize that implementing
project management was a necessity, not a choice.
Life-cycle Phases for Project Management Maturity
Driving Forces for maturity
The components of survival
The speed of maturity
Benefits of Project Management
Project Management cost versus benefits
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Life Cycle Phases for Project
Management Maturity
Executive
Embryonic Management
Acceptance
Line
Management Growth Maturity
Acceptance
Life Cycle Phases for Project
Management Maturity
Embryonic Phase
– Recognize need & benefits & applications
Executive Management Acceptance Phase
– Executive understanding & support of project
management
– willingness to change way of doing business
Line Management Acceptance Phase
– Line management commitment & support
Life Cycle Phases for Project
Management Maturity
Growth Phase
– Use of life-cycle phase
– Development of project management methodology
– Selection of project tracking system
– Commitment to project planning
Maturity phase
– Development and integration of cost/schedule control
system
– Development of education program to enhance project
management skill
Project Management Costs
Versus Benefits
Cost of Project
Management Additional
Profits from
Better Project
Management
$ Pegged
Time
?
Industry Classification
(By Project Management Utilization)
Project -Driven Hybrid Non-
Project-Driven
• PM has P&L • Production driven
but with many • Very few projects
responsibility
projects • Profitability from
• PM is a
• Emphasis on new production
recognized
profession product develop. • Large brick walls
Present Past
• Multiple career • Short product life • Long life cycle
paths cycles products
• Income comes • Marketing-orient.
from projects • Need for rapid
develop. process
Project Program Product
Management Management Management
Systems, Programs, and Projects: A Definition
Definition: Systems
Air Force Definition- A composite of equipment, skills, and techniques capable
of performing and/or supporting an operational role.
NASA Definition- One of the principal functioning entities comprising the
project hardware within a project or program.
Definition: Programs
Air Force Definition- The integrated, time-phased tasks necessary to
accomplish a particular purpose.
NASA Definition- A relative series of undertakings that continue over a period
of time and that are designed to accomplish a broad, scientific or technical
goal in the NASA long-range plan.
Definition: Projects
NASA/Air Force Definition- A project is within a program as an undertaking
that has a scheduled beginning and end, and that normally involves some
primary purpose.
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KINDS OF PROJECTS
Once a group of tasks is selected and considered to be a
project the next step is to define the kinds of projects
encountered. There are four categories of projects:
INDIVIDUAL PROJECTS
Short-duration projects normally assigned to a single
individual who may be acting as a project manager
and/or a functional manager.
STAFF PROJECTS
These projects that can be accomplished by one
organizational unit, say a department. Staff (or a task
force) is developed from each section involved. This
works best when one functional unit is involved.
SPECIAL PROJECTS
Very often special projects occur which require that
certain primary functions and/or authority be assigned
temporarily to other individuals or unit. These works
best for short-duration projects. Long-term projects
can lead to severe conflicts.
MATRIX OR AGGREGATE PROJECTS
These projects require specific (or specialized) input from
a large number of functional (or business) units and
usually control vast resources.
Product versus Project Management: A Definition
For all practical purpose, there is no basic difference between
program management and project management
But what about product management? One major difference
between Product and Project Management is the end date of his
project.
https://medium.com/pm101/the-difference-
between-product-program-and-project-
management-64e2f1ee4f01
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Maturity and Excellence: A Definition
Maturity and Excellence in Project Management are different.
Maturity in project management is the implementation of a
standard methodology and accompanying process such that exists
a high likelihood of repeated successes.
Organizations excellent in project management are those that
create the environment in which there exists a continuous stream
of successfully managed projects and where success is measured
by what is in the best interest of both the company and the project.
Excellence goes well beyond maturity. One must have maturity to
achieve excellence.
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Successes Vs. Failures
Failures
Successes
Projects
MATURITY EXCELLENCE
2 YEARS 5 YEARS
Time
Informal Project Management: A Definition
Companies today are managing projects more informally than
before.
Informal management does some degree of formality but
emphasizes managing the project with a minimum amount of
paperwork.
Informal project management mandates:
Effective communications
Effective cooperation
Effective teamwork
Trust
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Evolution of Policies,
Procedures and Guidelines
Checklists
Life Policy and Guidelines General with
Cycle Procedure per Project Periodic
Phases Manuals Life Cycle Guidelines Review
Phase Points
1970s Early 1980s Mid 1980s Late 1980s 1990s
Project
CONVENTIONAL PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Management
with Concurrent
Engineering
LEGEND
n
a tio
t
en
um
D oc
of
de
tu
ni
ag
M
The Many Faces of Success
Historically, the definition of success has been meeting the
customer’s expectations regardless of whether or not the
customer is internal or external.
Success also includes getting the job done within the constraints
of time, cost, and quality.
Success: Point or Cube?
Definition of Success:
Primary Factors
Secondary Factors
Key performance indicators (KPI)
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Success: Point Or Cube?
Cost
i
l )ty
a
Qu p e co
s
(or
Time
Success
Definition of Success
– Primary Factors
Within Time
Within Cost
Within Quality
Accepted by The Customer
Success
Secondary Factors:
Customer Reference
Follow-on Work
Financial Success
Technical Superiority
Strategic Alignment
Regulatory Agency Relations
Health and Safety
Environmental Protection
Corporate Reputation
Employee Alignment
Ethical conduct
Success
Critical Success Factors (CSFs) [Focuses
on the Deliverables]
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
[Focuses on the Execution Metrics of the
Process]
Key Performance Indicators
These are shared learning topics
which allow us to maximize what
we do right and correct what we
do wrong.
The Many Faces of Failure
The true definition of failure is when the final results are not what
were expected, even though the original expectation may or may
not have been reasonable.
Components of failure – planning failure & actual failure
Perceived failure = planning failure + actual failure
Ineffective planning/scheduling/estimating/cost control
Poor morale/motivation/commitment/productivity/human
relations
Risk planning
Mitigation strategies available
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Risk Planning
n s Poor Risk
t i o Management
ct a
p e
E x
r
Performance
m e Technical
s to Inability
Cu
r m a n ce
a l Pe rf o
Actu
Time
Mitigation Strategies Available
Technical Risk Financial Risk
Assessment Assessment
and Forecasting
Te
c
St hni
ra
teg cal
y
Project Project Project
k et Objectives Planning Execution
r a
M
t/ gy
c
u a te
o d r
Pr St
Market Risk
Assessment Schedule Risk
and Forecasting Assessment
Numerous Opportunities for Tradeoffs Limited
Resulting from Risk Analyses
The Stage-Gate Process
The Stage-Gate Process is the starting point and eventually
evolved into life-cycle phase.
The Traditional organizational structure was primarily top-down
that no longer practical for organizations that use project
management and horizontal work flow.
Stage
Gate
Gatekeeper
Gatekeeper’s decision
Stage-Gate process can facilitate decision-making and risk
management.
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Project Life Cycles
The life-cycle of a product
Research and development
Market introduction
Growth
Maturity
Deterioration
Death
The life-cycle phase of a system
Conceptual
Planning
Testing
Implementation
Closure
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DEFINITION OF A PROJECT LIFE CYCLE
CONCEPTUAL FEASIBILITY AND DETAILED IMPLEMENTATION CONVERSION
PHASE PRELIMINARY PLANNING PHASE PHASE OR TERMINATION
PLANNING PHASE PHASE
RESOURCES
Resources
Utilized
* PMO
PMO
TIME
Project Management Methodologies: A Definition
Achieving project management excellent, or maturity, is more likely
with a repetitive process that can be used on each and every
product.
Integrated process for the 21 century.
Integrated process (past, present, and future)
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Integrated Processes for
The 21st Century
Project Management
Concurrent Total Quality
Engineering Management
Change Risk
Management Management
Integrated Processes
(Past, Present, and Future)
Yrs: 1990-2000 Current Yrs: 2000-2010
Integrated Integrated Integrated
Processes Processes Processes
• Project • Supply chain
management management
• Total quality • Business
management processes
• Concurrent • Feasibility
engineering studies
• Scope change • Cost-benefit
management analyses (ROI)
• Risk management • Capital
budgeting
Change Management and Corporate Cultures
The most difficult projects to manage are those that involve the
management of change.
Methodology inputs
Resistance to change
Types of Culture
Change Process
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Methodology Inputs
People
Project
Work Management Tools
(Tasks)
Methodology
Organization
Systems Thinking Is Vital For Project Success
The system approach:
Defined as logical and disciplined process of problem-solving
Forces review of the relationship of the various subsystems
Is a dynamic process that integrates all activities into a meaningful
total system
Systematically assembles and matches the parts of the system
into a unified whole
Seeks an optimal solution or strategy in solving a problem
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Systems Thinking (continued)
Phases of development is similar to project life cycle:
Translation
Analysis
Trade-off
Synthesis
The terms of system approach:
Objective
Requirement
Alternative
Selection criteria
Constraint
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Systems Thinking (continued)
Systems analysis process:
Input data into mental process
Analyze data
Predict outcomes
Evaluate outcomes and compare alternatives
Choose the best alternative
Take action
Measure results and compare them with prediction
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Tugas
Buat cornell note untuk materi hari ini, highlight
perbedaan dari project, product dan programe
management?(ditulis tangan)
Buatlah sebuah tulisan max 1000 kata
mengenai kegagalan pengebangan Boeing
737 Max-8 dari perspective project
management? (diketik komputer)
Due on 12 March 2021 (16.00)
Submit via E-Learning (disatukan menjadi satu
file format pdf)
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