Garner MIS exam 2 Chp. 5-6 & programming
Elements of project planning
-Describe project scope, alternatives, feasibility. -Divide project into tasks. -Estimate resource requirements and create resource plan. -Develop preliminary schedule. -Develop communication plan.
The Process of Initiating and Planning IS Development Projects
-Establishing the Project Initiation Team -Establishing a Relationship with the Customer -Establishing the Project Initiation Plan -Establishing Management Procedures -Establishing the Project Management Environment and Project Workbook -Developing the Project Charter
Factors in Determining Scope
-Organizational units affected by new system -Current systems that will interact with or change because of new system -People who are affected by new system -Range of potential system capabilities
Outline of a Baseline Project Plan
1. Introduction 2. System Description 3. Feasibility Assessment 4. Management Issues
Four general rules of risk assessment
1. Larger projects are riskier than smaller projects 2. A system in which the requirements are easily obtained and highly structured will be less risky than one in which requirements are messy, ill structured, ill defined, or subject to the judgement of an individual 3. The development of a system employing commonly used or standard technology will be less risky than one employing novel or nonstandard technology 4. A project is less risky when the user group is familiar with the systems development process and application area than if unfamiliar
system description simple examples
1. Web-based online system 2. Mainframe with central database 3. Local area network with decentralized databases 4. Batch data input with online retrieval 5. Purchasing of a prewritten package
Tangible benefits
A benefit derived from the creation of an information system that can be measured in dollars and with certainty.
Intangible benefit
A benefit derived from the creation of an information system that cannot be easily measured in dollars or with certainty.
Tangible cost
A cost associated with an information system that can be measured in dollars and with certainty.
intangible cost
A cost associated with an information system that cannot be easily measured in terms of dollars or with certainty.
One-Time Cost
A cost associated with project start-up and development or system start-up.
Baseline Project Plan (BPP)
A major outcome and deliverable from the project initiation and planning phase that contains the best estimate of a project's scope, benefits, costs, risks, and resource requirements.
Technical feasibility
A process of assessing the development organization's ability to construct a proposed system.
Economic Feasibility
A process of identifying the financial benefits and costs associated with a development project
Break-Even Analysis (BEA)
BEA finds the amount of time required for the cumulative cash flow from a project to equal its initial and ongoing investment.
User Group
Familiarity with IS development process, application area, use of similar systems
Development Group
Familiarity with platform, software, development method, application area, development of similar systems
In the feasibility assessment high level project specifications utilize what
Gannt chart , and network diagrams
Net Present Value (NPV)
NPV uses a discount rate determined from the company's cost of capital to establish the present value of a project. The discount rate is used to determine the present value of both cash receipts and outlays.
Project Structure
New vs. renovated system, resulting organizational changes, management commitment, user perceptions
Present Value Equation
PV = FV/(1+r)^t
Project Risk Factors
Project Size, Project Structure, Development group, User Group
project initiation
Project initiation focuses on activities designed to assist in organizing a team to conduct project planning.
Return on Investment (ROI)
ROI is the ratio of the net cash receipts of the project divided by the cash outlays of the project. Trade-off analysis can be made among projects competing for investment by comparing their representative ROI ratios
Project Size
Team size, organizational departments, project duration, programming effort
_________________ contains all information collected and analyzed during project initiation and planning
The Baseline Project Plan (BPP)
Legal and contractual feasibility
The process of assessing potential legal and contractual ramifications due to the construction of a system.
operational feasibility
The process of assessing the degree to which a proposed system solves business problems or takes advantage of business opportunities.or take advantage of the opportunities outlined in the System Service Request or project identification study.
schedule feasibility
The process of assessing the degree to which the potential time frame and completion dates for all major activities within a project meet organizational deadlines and constraints for affecting change.
v
The process of assessing the degree to which the potential time frame and completion dates for all major activities within a project meet organizational deadlines and constraints for affecting change.
Political feasibility
The process of evaluating how key stakeholders within the organization view the proposed system.
discount rate
The rate of return used to compute the present value of future cash flow
standards bearer
The role of this person is to ensure that the work product adheres to organizational technical standards. Many larger organizations have staff groups within the unit responsible for establishing standard procedures, methods, and documentation formats. These standards bearers validate the work so that it can be used by others in the development organization.
One-Time Cost examples
These costs typically encompass activities such as systems development, new hardware and software purchases, user training, site preparation, and data or system conversion
user
This person (or group) makes sure that the work product meets the needs of the project's customers. This user would usually be someone not on the project team.
presenter
This person describes the work product to the group. The presenter is usually an analyst who has done all or some of the work being presented.
coordinator
This person plans the meeting and facilitates a smooth meeting process. This person may be the project leader or a lead analyst responsible for the current life cycle step.
Maintenance oracle
This person reviews the work product in terms of future maintenance activities. The goal is to make the system and its documentation easy to maintain.
secretary
This person takes notes and records decisions or recommendations made by the group. This may be a clerk assigned to the project team or it may be one of the analysts on the team.
Intangible benefits refer to
items that cannot be easily measured in dollars or with certainty. Intangible benefits may have direct organizational benefits, such as the improvement of employee morale, or they may have broader societal implications, such as the reduction of waste creation or resource consumption.
Tangible costs refer to
items that you can easily mea- sure in dollars and with certainty. From an IS development perspective, tangible costs include items such as hardware costs, labor costs, and operational costs including employee training and building renovations.
Intangible costs can include
loss of customer goodwill, employee morale, or operational inefficiency.
The final section of the Baseline Project Plan is what
management issues
Examples of tangible benefits
might include reduced personnel expenses, lower transaction costs, or higher profit margins.
Introduction section components
often limited to only a few pages, sequenced as the first section of the BPP it is often the final section to be written, activity that should be performed initially is the definition of project scope.
Initiation
one or more analysts are assigned to work with a customer—that is, a member of the business group that requested or will be affected by the project—to establish work standards and communication procedures.
For very large projects
one-time costs may be staged over one or more years. In these cases, a separate one- time cost worksheet should be created for each year. This separation will make it easier to perform present value calculations
Assessing Operational Feasibility, The first relates to examining the likelihood that the project will attain its desired objectives, called
operational feasibility
Management Issues
outlines a number of managerial concerns related to the project
Management issues section
outlines a number of managerial concerns related to the project.
feasibility assessment section
outlines issues related to project costs and benefits, technical difficulties, and other such concerns
System description section
outlines possible alternative solutions
Contractual obligations may involve
ownership of software used in joint ventures, license agreements for use of hardware or software, nondisclosure agreements with partners, or elements of a labor agreement
Project Scope sections
problem statement project objectives project description business benefits deliverables expected duration
The PSS
produced by the team clearly outlines the objectives and constraints of the project for the customer.
The amount of technical risk associated with a given project is contingent on four primary factors:
project size, project structure, the development group's experience with the application and technology area, and the user group's experience with systems development projects and the application area
scheduling trade-offs
project team size, availability of key personnel, subcontracting or outsourcing activities, and changes in development environments may all be considered as having a possible impact on the eventual schedule
Another feasibility concern relates to project du- ration and is referred to as assessing
schedule feasibility.
The second section of the BPP is the
system description
During project initiation and planning, the most crucial element of the design strategy is the
systems scope
The PSS ensures what?
that both you and your customer gain a com- mon understanding of the project.
The major outcomes and deliverables from the project initiation and planning phase are
the Baseline Project Plan and the Project Scope Statement
The BPP becomes
the foundation for the remainder of the development project
The Feasibility Assessment Section of the Baseline Project Plan is also called
the work break down structure
One-time costs refer to
those associated with project initiation and development and the start-up of the system
Recurring costs refer to
those costs resulting from the ongoing evolution and use of the system.
Most techniques used to determine economic feasibility encompass the concept of the____________________
time value of money (TVM)
One goal of a cost-benefit analysis is to accurately determine the
total cost of ownership (TCO) for an investment
TCO is focused on
understand- ing not only the total cost of acquisition but also all costs associated with ongoing use and maintenance of a system
It is not uncommon, however, to define project scope
using diagrams such as data flow diagrams and entity-relationship models.
Examples of Recurring Cost
• Application software maintenance • Incremental data storage expenses • Incremental communications • New software and hardware leases • Supplies and other expenses (e.g., paper, forms, data center personnel)
Most tangible benefits will fit within the following categories:
• Cost reduction and avoidance • Error reduction • Increased flexibility • Increased speed of activity • Improvement of management planning and control • Opening new markets and increasing sales opportunities
most feasibility factors are represented by the following categories:
• Economic • Technical • Operation • Scheduling • Legal and contractual • Political
_______________ is often referred to as cost-benefit analysis
Economic feasibility
Further, numerous assumptions about resource availability and potential problems will have to be made. Analysis of these assumptions and system costs and benefits forms a
business case
roles of structured walk throughs
coordinator, presenter, user, secretary, standard-bearer, maintenance oracle
Possible considerations of legal and contractual feasibility might include
copyright or nondisclosure infringements, labor laws,antitrust legislation (which might limit the creation of systems to share data with other organizations), foreign trade regulations (e.g., some countries limit access to employee data by foreign corporations), and financial reporting standards, as well as current or pending contractual obligations
The rate at which money can be borrowed or invested is referred to as the _______________
cost of capital
cost of capital is called what in TVM calculations
discount rate
The objective of the break-even analysis is to
discover at what point (if ever) benefits equal costs (i.e., when breakeven occurs).
In the third section, _____________________, issues related to project costs and benefits, technical dif- ficulties, and other such concerns are outlined.
feasibility assessment
tangible costs include items such as
hardware costs, labor costs, and operational costs including employee training and building renovations.
The purpose of assessing economic feasibility is to
identify the financial benefits and costs associated with the development project
Objective of project planning
is the development of a Baseline Project Plan (BPP) and the Project Scope Statement (PSS)
key activity of project initiation
is the development of the project charter
Project Planning
is the process of defining clear, discrete activities and the work needed to complete each activity within a single project.
The purpose of the Introduction of the BPP
is to provide a brief overview of the entire document and outline a recommended course of action for the project.
Tangible benefits refer to
items that can be measured in dollars and with certainty.
Break Even Analysis
A type of cost-benefit analysis to identify at what point (if ever) benefits equal costs.
____________________ is a short document prepared for the cus- tomer that describes what the project will deliver and outlines all work required to complete the project.
The Project Scope Statement (PSS)
Time value of money (TVM)
The concept that money available today is worth more than the same amount tomorrow
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)
The cost of owning and operating a system, including the total cost of acquisition, as well as all costs associated with its ongoing use and maintenance.
Present value
The current value of a future cash flow.
business case
The justification for an information system, presented in terms of the tangible and intangible economic benefits and costs and the technical and organizational feasibility of the proposed system.
structured walk throughs
a peer group review of any product created during the system development process
system description contains
an outline of possible alternative so- lutions in addition to the one deemed most appropriate for the given situation
Fixed costs
are costs that are billed or incurred at a regular interval and usually at a fixed rate (a facility lease payment)
Variable Cost
are items that vary in relation to usage (long-distance phone charges