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Lindsay Sherwin
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A Summary of the Project approach
All organisations that manage projects on a
regular basis develop a set of "groundrules" that summarise the way
projects are managed in their organisation. The following are our groundrules. They will apply to all projects but will need to be tailored to suit
a particular project.
1. Projects are best managed through a broad structure of stages.
- Projects progress through the five broad stages -
proposal, scoping and planning, start-up, implementation, and
closure.

See Project Stages
for more information on this.
2. Project Organisation
- All projects to have a formal Project Manager and Project
Sponsor
- The Project Manager is responsible for
delivery of the project. To be chosen on the basis of skills,
capability and knowledge of the project task, and their ability
to get things done.
- The Project is Sponsor is responsible for looking
after the project and the outcomes on behalf of the
organisation, and supporting the project manager. The sponsor
may be an individual or a group.
See Project
Organisation for more information on this.
3. Projects are always Scoped
- The project
proposal stage establishes what the project is to deliver. The
project scoping stage is to plan and organise that delivery.
- All projects to have a Project Scoping Stage
where the Project Manager has the opportunity to scope the
project.
- This stage will normally last a few days (or
weeks for larger projects)
- It will focus on clarifying:
- what the project objectives and terms of
reference are,
- what the issues are,
- how the project should be organised and
tackled - what tasks, what resources needed, what the
schedule should be.
- The conclusions should be summarised in a
brief (typically two to five pages) Project Scoping Report (sometimes
called project initiation document or project plan).
See Project
Scoping for more information on this
4. Project
Scoping Report
- A brief two to five page document which
describes what the project is to achieve and how it will be
organised and tackled. It should cover the following:
- Project Terms of Reference and Objectives
- Benefits to be realised and costs and
disruption to be contained.
- Top Level Plan showing planned progress
in terms of stages, milestones and activities.
- Project Organisation showing who is
involved and the key responsibilities - project manager,
project sponsor, team and contributors.
- Risks and implementation issues which may
occur.
See Scoping a
Project for more information on this
5. Project Control
- Project progress needs to be monitored and controlled.
Progress control needs to be established to suit
the particular project. This is normally achieved via discussion,
meetings, and project reports.
See Project Control for more information on this.
6. Project Reporting
- There are four main project reports used
in project management - project brief, project plan, progress report,
post-project review.
See Project Reporting for more information on this.
7. Key Company Procedures
- As well as project specific procedures, the project manager will need
to follow particular organisation-wide procedures, such as
Contracts, Finance,
IT, and human resources.
See Key Company
Procedures for more information on this.
8. Projects are often coordinated within Programmes
- Many organisations coordinate individual projects
via a number of strategic programmes. Each programme is built from a portfolio of
inter-related projects, all contributing to a common outcome.
See Programme Management for more information on this.
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