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Information Systems Project Management

ISQS 4350 Zhangxi Lin

Chapter 1: The Nature of Information Technology Projects

Questions
   

What is a project? What is project management? How does project management relate to other disciplines? What is the career outlook for project managers in information technology?

What Is a Project?


A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to accomplish a unique product or service (Project management body of Knowledge (PMBOK) Guide 2000, p. 4) Attributes of projects
    

unique purpose temporary require resources, often from various areas should have a primary sponsor and/or customer involve uncertainty

Case #1: Calebs Mission Critical Schedule


System (MCSS) for Continental Airlines


If an airline company has to make up a cancelled flight in an emergency, for example, a plane crash, it may take it several hours to reschedule the relevant flights as well as the crew teams, and a couple of days to settle down other legacy problems. Caleb has developed a mission critical schedule system for airline companies, which can find the solution in minutes and solve other legacy problems in a few hours. Continental Airlines, as a client of Caleb Technology (Austin) for years, has carefully evaluated the system and decided to adopt the application. Delighted by the winning of the contract, Caleb is facing the following several questions:
   

EDS is the original application developer and will be working with Caleb in the user interface as Continental Airlines required. How to cooperate with Continental Airlines is the key issue. MCSS must be integrated into existing enterprise information system of Continental Airlines. How this will be done? How test MCSS in the real environment to guarantee its reliability and availability. How to switch from old system to the new system integrated with MCSS?

Case #2: Online medical services


appointment system


Making the appointment with a PCP or specialist doctor is normally via phone call. Even though e-commerce and many other online services are prevailing, such a service in medical area has never been done yet. We there were such a system, this system would have allowed patents to check the availability of a doctor or any other medical services from the Internet, making and changing the appointment. So, this is a promising system in several ways:
  

It will greatly make the appointment convenient It can be connected to other networked medical information services, such as medical insurance. It will also benefit the medical service providers much in saving costs and improving service quality. Who will initialize the project? Who should be involved ? Who is to be a target buyer of the system? How this system can be co-operated with other medical information systems? Is this system really beneficial?

There several issues :


    

Case #3: Adams Globalization online


translation services development


Adams Globalization is a leading translation service company in Austin, Texas. The company provides the translation between English and several other languages, such as Spanish, German, French, Japanese, and Chinese. The company started in 1982. In 1993 it hired 4 employees and in 2003 it hired 40 employees and operating a translator network with more than 1000 freelance translators. The companys revenue in 2002 was $4,000,000. Adams Globalization has been facing more and more pressures to convert its business model from traditional translations to an Internet-based one:
  

There is an increasing Internet-based application translation demand. Intensified Internet usage requests the company to change its business processes The company is moving towards a global market.

Therefore, there are several reasons for Adams Globalization to adopt e-business. There are several issues:
  

What is the new business model? How to develop a web-based business system? What is the project scope?

The Software Crisis


If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization. -Gerald Weinberg
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Status of IT Projects


31% IT projects were cancelled before completion 53% were completed, but were over-budget, over-schedule, and did not meet the original requirements. The average cost overrun of medium-sized projects was 202%

Why Projects Fail CHAOS STUDY

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What is Project Management?


Project management is the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities in order to meet project requirements (PMI*, Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK Guide), 2000, p. 6)

*The Project Management Institute (PMI) is an international professional society. Their web site is www.pmi.org.
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Improving the likelihood of success


 

Socio-technical Approach


Cooperation between developers and users Depending more on processes and infrastructure Resources management Delivering the outcomes in a professional way as expected Coping with greater internal and external competition Improving efficiency and effectiveness lessons learned best practices
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Project Management Approach


    

Knowledge Management Approach


 

The 2001 Standish Group Report Showed Decided Improvement in Project Success
    

Time overruns significantly decreased to 163% compared to 222% Cost overruns were down to 145% compared to 189% Required features and functions were up to 67% compared to 61% 78,000 U.S. projects were successful compared to 28,000 28% of IT projects succeeded compared to 16%

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Why the Improvements?


"The reasons for the increase in successful projects vary. First, the average cost of a project has been more than cut in half. Better tools have been created to monitor and control progress and better skilled project managers with better management processes are being used. The fact that there are processes is significant in itself.*
*The Standish Group, "CHAOS 2001: A Recipe for Success" (2001)

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Factors For Successful Projects


        

User involvement Executive management support Clear statement of requirements Proper planning Realistic expectations Smaller project milestones Competent staff ownership Clear vision & objectives Hard-working, focused team
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Chaos Study

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Why do we learn project management?


 

 

It is different from system analysis It will allow you to apply all the knowledge you have learned in IS, such as programming, data management, and system analysis, into the practices But more management Consider you get a programming job. In the first week in the company you are asked:
  

To work with someone to do some Java programming but you dont know what it is for; To join a project group for internal software resource sharing project but you dont know who are your colleagues before a meeting; or To look into the latest WiMAX (IEEE 802.16e) technology to see the potential application to your companys business. You here of it but wonder why To investigate the search engine market and write a proposal it is a task for a programmer?

What should you do?


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The context of project management


Project Attributes:
     

Time Frame Purpose Ownership Resources Roles Risks & Assumptions

  

Interdependent tasks Organizational change Operating Environment

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The Triple Constraint of Project Management

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Roles in a project
Project Manager  Project Sponsor  Subject Matter Expert(s) (SME)  Technical Expert(s) (TE)


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Risks & Assumptions




Internal risk


From the estimation process or from the fact that a key member of the project team could leave in the middle of the project Arises from the dependencies on other contractors or vendors What we used to estimate scope, schedule, and budget and to assess the risk of the project
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External risk


Assumptions


The Project Life Cycle and IT Development

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Definitions


 

Project Life Cycle (PLC)  A collection of logical stages or phases that maps the life of a project from its beginning to its end for a project Deliverable  A tangible and verifiable product of work Phase exits, stage gates, or kill points  Phase-end review of key deliverables that allow the organization to evaluate the projects performance and take immediate action to correct errors or problems
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Generic Project Life Cycle

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Phases/Stages of PLC
 

Define project goal Plan project


 

Answer questions (What, why, how, who, et al) Baseline plan

  

Execute project plan Close project Evaluate project


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Systems Development Life Cycle

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Systems Development Life Cycle




SDLC: sequential phases or stages an information system follows throughout its useful life. Phases/Stages
    

Planning Analysis Design Implementation Maintenance and Support


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Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC)


1. Problem Definition & Feasibility 6. Operations & Maintenance 2. Analysis

5. Implementation 4. Development, Coding

3. Design

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Implementing SDLC:
Structured Approaches: Waterfall Method

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Implementing SDLC:
Rapid Application Development (RAD) Approaches:  Prototyping


Develop a small test system in a short time and improve it. The project is broken into mini-projects each addressing one or more risks until all risks are addressed The system is transferred to the users in a series of releases. Each release is a working system that only includes one or several functions.

Spiral Development


Extreme Programming (XP)




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The PLC vs the SDLC

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PLC vs. SDLC




PLC focuses on the processes of managing a project SDKC focuses on creating and implementing a product the information system SDLC is part of PLC most of SDLC activities occur during the execution phase of PLC.

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Enterprise System Implementation Phases


1. Initiation 6. Operations & Maintenance

2. Planning

5. Transition 4. Realization
(Fulfill ERP)

3. Analysis & process design

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What is PMBOK


The Project management body of Knowledge (PMBOK)




 

A document providing a basis for identifying and describing the generally accepted principles and practices of project management Originally published in 1987 Available from Project Management Institute (PMI)

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Project Management Framework

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Project Management Knowledge Areas


1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Project integration management Project scope management Project time management Project cost management Project quality management

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Project Management Knowledge Areas

6. 7. 8. 9.

Project human resource management Project communication management Project risk management Project procurement management

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Sample Gantt Chart

The WBS is on the left, and each tasks start and finish date are shown on the right using a calendar timescale. Early Gantt Charts, first used in 1917, were drawn by hand.
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Sample Network Diagram

Each box is a project task from the WBS. Arrows show dependencies between tasks. The bolded tasks are on the critical path. If any tasks on the critical path take longer than planned, the whole project will slip unless something is done. Network diagrams were first used in 1958 on the Navy Polaris project, before project management software was available.
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The Project Management Profession




The job of IT Project Manager is in the list of the top ten most in demand IT skills Professional societies like the Project Management Institute (PMI) have grown tremendously Project management research and certification programs continue to grow

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Top Ten Most in Demand IT Skills


IT Skill/Job Average Annual Salary QL ata ase al st $ 0,664 Oracle ata ase al st $ ,144 / ++ r ra er $ , 2 Vis al asic r ra er $ 6, 03 -c erce/Ja a e el er $ ,163 6 i s /2000 ert $ 0,63 i s/Ja a e el ert $ 3, ec rit rc itect $ 6, 1 9 r ject a a er $95, 19 10 et r i eer $ 2,906 a l Zi , e 10 I ills i e a , l al K le e e cast (www.globalknowledge.com) (11/20/2002).
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Rank 1 2 3 4

Project Management Knowledge Continues to Grow and Mature


   

PMI hosted their first research conference in June 2000 in Paris, France, and the second one in Seattle in July 2002 The PMBOK Guide 2000 is an ANSI standard PMIs certification department earned ISO 9000 certification Hundreds of new books, articles, and presentations related to project management have been written in recent years

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Project Management Certification


 

 

PMI provides certification as a Project Management Professional (PMP) A PMP has documented sufficient project experience, agreed to follow a code of ethics, and passed the PMP exam The number of people earning PMP certification is increasing quickly PMI and other organizations are offering new certification programs (see Appendix B)

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Growth in PMP Certification, 19932002

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Software outsourcing
Supplemental material

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Offshore Software Outsourcing


 

In next few years, about 2 million IT jobs will shift to foreign countries because of outsourcing, e.g. to India. Companies have to do so because of the tough surviving environment. This is the trend of globalization as the economies in different countries are more dependent of each other. While Indias position is reasonably secure, there is no room for being complacent. Several upcoming destinationsArgentina, the Czech Republic and China in particular. India scores over China in employee costs, primarily due to that country importing project managers from Hong Kong and Australia. East Europe is home to top-notch engineering talent; it is quite likely that high-end engineering work will flow there.

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Software Industry in Developing Countries


 

Many developing countries have adopted the development of Software Industry as a long-term strategy for economy growth As software outsourcing is a global trend for developed countries, there are good opportunities for developing countries to speed up their software industry development The suggested two-stage development strategy for the software industry in developing countries:
 

Focus on the domestic market first Go to global market once the software companies are competitive enough

Current two patterns of software industries reflect the two-stage development strategy:


International market oriented normally providing outsourcing market for the developed countries, which is the pattern for those early birds, e.g. India, Domestic market oriented for latecomers, e.g. China
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The Pattern of ExportOriented: India




Comparatively, in 2002-2003, the software industry in India was worth US$ 12 billion, of which software export was $9.5 billion with a growth rate of 25.3%. The software industry is expected to account for something like 20% of Indias exports for 2002-03. (http://www.expresscomputeronline.com/20030331/softs erv.shtml). Heeks (1996) indicated that if the software exports grows rapidly, the growth of the domestic market is prevented.

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The Pattern of Domestic Market Oriented: China




In the past 10 years Chinas software industry revenue has been growing at an annual rate between 20-40%. The revenue of software industry in 2002 reached US$13.3 billion, a 46.5% increase from 2001. In the last three years its software export almost doubled every year. However, Chinas software market is domesticoriented - nearly 90% software products were sold domestically. In 2002, Chinas application software accounted for 64.5% of the total domestic software products. Foreign software and system integration still account for 95.3% of the upper software market
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India Pattern vs. China Pattern




Comparison of software revenue in 2002:


 

India: $12.5 billion, with $9.5 billion from the export China: $13.3 billion, with $1.5 billion from the export

Indias case is a successful example, while Chinas case is more representative for the developing countries just started their software industry. Heeks (1999) outlines some generic approaches to a developing countrys software industry development. Two dimensions, the target market served (Domestic vs. Export) and the types of business intended (Service vs. Packages), are used in analyzing the strategic positioning for a developing country.
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Potentials of Indias software industry




Several markets that could result in large opportunities for Indian.




Product Data Management (PDM) is one such area, covering applications that manage product data and product development workflow. The global market for PDM is projected to grow to $11 billion by 2006, according to CIMData. Automotive, electronics and telecom, aerospace, machinery and process industries are major users of PDM. Content management is another growth area with the thrust being on delivering digital content across multiple channels. This market is projected to be worth $27 billion by 2006. Services account for roughly 90 percent of this market. Enterprise Application integration (EAI) is a potential gold mine for Indian software houses. It is projected to be a $43.4 billion market by 2005; services account for 73 percent of this market. Business Intelligence and data warehousing will together account for a $29 billion market by 2005. The market for wireless and mobile infrastructure consulting, integration and management services will be worth $37.4 billion by 2006.

Straight-through processing (STP) is the complete automation of stock trading from order entry to final settlement. The global market for STP is expected to touch $6.3 billion by 2004. India can offer customised application development, maintenance and support, consulting and transaction processing outsourcing in this segment.
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References in offshore outsourcing


  

http://news.com.com/ -1 11-51 81 .html http://www.expresscomputeronline.com/ 1/softserv.shtml Heeks, Richard, Software strategies in developing countries, Development Informatics working paper series, 1999. i, M., and M. Gao, Strategies for Developing Chinas Software Industry, Information Technology and International Development ). (

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