Project Management Guide

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          OverviewScoping a ProjectOn Project ManagementGuidance Helpnotes

On Project Management

bullet Introduction
bullet Project Objectives
bullet Project Life Cycle
bullet Five Project Stages
Project Proposal
Scoping & Planning
Plan, Organise, Start-Up
Implementation
Establish and Close
bullet Project Planning
bullet Project Organisation
bullet Project Control
bullet Programme Management
bullet Risk Management

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Lindsay Sherwin

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Project Stages

Stage 1      Project Proposal - identifying and specifying the project

Five Project Stages

  • This stage covers the work involved in identifying and specifying a project - identifying a need or a problem, generating ideas and options, and then developing a preferred agreed proposal or solution - "this is what we should do". It may not be a distinct stage but an evolutionary development from the normal policy management process.
     
  • In some projects, particularly in commercial organisations, this can be a very formal process with prescribed sub-stages for identifying new projects, filtering and shortlisting them, producing formal business cases involving investment appraisal, and selecting from a set of options against pre-prepared factors.
     
  • In much government policy work this stage is often quite complex and requires the involvement of a number of stakeholders and interested parties, who need to contribute to specifying the end-result and outcomes. Only in certain areas would a formal process such as the one described above be appropriate.
     
  • This stage should result in a brief Project Proposal within which the following key questions are addressed:

Key Questions

  • Rationale - What is the rationale for doing this? What is problem/issue is the project addressing?
  • Fit - How does it fit with our other policies and projects, and with our corporate objectives?
  • Options - What options are there for tackling this?
  • Practical - Is the solution proposed really practical?
  • Stakeholders - Who are the key stakeholders and what are their positions/reactions?
  • Key Issues - What are the key issues to be addressed?
  • Resource Requirements - In broad terms, what will it require from us in terms of resources and time?

 Typical Key Outputs

  1. A proposal, and agreement to proceed further
  2. A project brief, covering what is to be delivered, by when; who is to be the project manager and project sponsor, and what resources are to be committed?