Project Integration Management (Section 9) Flashcards
What is the main idea of project integration management? & How does project integration management start?
Make various processes work together - Requires choices about resource allocation and trade-offs, to coordinate all aspects of the project.
This also includes measuring repercussions of these changes.
This starts with creating the project charter.
What does it mean by “tailoring” project integration management?
Being able to make a judgement call on how in-depth you need to go on each process, depending on the depth of the project
What is the timeline where project integration management is important?
Alignment of what you’re doing during the project, and the effect it has on the post-project success
Documentation of what we’ve created, lessons learned, etc. in context of
What are examples of project integration management trends?
Automated - PMIS (when people enter hours in a software rather than a document or email)
Visual document tools - i.e. Kanban board, Dashboard
Business case development
Hybrid methodologies
What is an adaptive project methodology?
Approach to projects with the understanding that key components are constantly in flux.
Teams need to adopt a flexible mindset to continually learn by re-evaluating results and decisions through a project.
Collaboration with stakeholders is crucial at every level to determine if the project is successful as it evolves
In what context are conditions of satisfaction (CoS) important?
In adaptive project methodology, CoS are approved by the stakeholders prior to the Work Breakdown Structure. They are the “rudder” to steer the ship
What is the key difference between traditional project management and adaptive development methodology?
In adaptive development methodology, the timeline set during the scoping and planning cycles is fixed (because the others are in flux)
What is the scope triangle?
Cost, schedule, scope
What deliverable is a key output in addition to the project charter?
Assumption Log
What does the project charter ultimately do?
Authorizes the PM to act on behalf of the sponsor
to achieve the vision, required to be authorized by executive sponsorship
How often does the project charter happen?
Typically once, but it is possible to have it happen multiple times, for each phase, i.e. in an adaptive environment
In what case would a project charter happen more than once?
In an adaptive environment, when it happens once per phase
What is a stakeholder expectation/risk threshold?
This is an example of an enterprise environment factor. It discusses the tolerance for risk.
High priority projects have a low risk tolerance. Low priority projects have a higher risk tolerance
What is expert judgment?
Consultants, industry groups, PMO, etc. anyone else besides the PM who contributes to a project
What is a scoring model?
A tool for benefits measurement that assigns weights
What is the future value of money?
This is a project selection method.
Make sure to multiply 1.0X by n years the project will last, then multiply it by the dollar amount. If your project isn’t worth at least this is N years, most likely not a good investment
FV=PV(1+i)^n
What is the i & n in the future value of money calculation?
I = interest rate n= number of years
What is net present value? What’s a reasonable NPV?
Helps analyze the future profitability of a present project (When making an investment, you want the return to exceed not only the amount invested but also make up for potential losses incurred due to the time value of money. NPV lets you convert future investment growth to today’s dollars, giving you a more accurate picture of the true value of the investment).
NPV greater than zero, is good - A broad way of saying “Does this investment make sense?)
NPV is the difference between the present value of cash inflows and the present value of cash outflows over a period of time. When comparing similar investments, a higher NPV is better than a lower one
https://www.businessinsider.com/personal-finance/npv
How is NPV different than DCF?
NPV = Present value, of future investments and returns (in “today’s dollars”)
DCF = Amount of investment needed now to achieve the expected value in the future
What is internal rate of return?
Interest rate (discount rate) that will bring a series of cash flows (positive and negative) to a NPV of zero
NPV of zero means the NPV will be equal to the current value of cash invested
All things being equal (including risk), IRR is a helpful tool in project selection