CH 2: Project Selection and Prioritization Pt 2
source selection criteria
A set of attributes desired by the purchaser that the seller is required to meet or exceed.
Product backlog
A wish-list of things that may be created by the project team.
Customer prioritization
Decide importance or urgency of work based on customer input.
Customer-driven value
Define value from a customer's perspective.
Solutions
Deliverables that are usable, desirable, and functional in helping customers achieve desired outcomes
Portfolio Vision
Description of desired future state of value streams and solutions.
Prioritized backlog
Desired products prioritized by business value and risk
Financial Source Selection Criteria:
Financial capacity Life cycle cost Cost basis and assumptions Warranties
Eat Your Dessert First
Find and create the highest value capability for the customer first.
Team
Get Team Members involved as early as possible Team members will be far more invested in a project they help to plan, and a variety of opinions often leads to better outcomes. A project manager may do well to take on the role of servant leader by removing obstacles, providing encouragement and development opportunities, and empowering team members more than instructing them.
Epic
Large functionality or product, not defined enough to produce.
Management Source Selection Criteria:
Management experience Project charter Planning and scheduling Project control
User Story
Need to be described by who wants it, how they will use it, and why.
Ways to identify project opportunities:
Perform portfolio alignment exercise Attend trade shows and professional conferences Practice customer relationship management -Establish and nurture personal contacts -Link information systems
Release
Period when functionality is created and transitioned to users.
How is Strategic Planning conducted?
Plan-Driven: Outputs considered at the organizational level Agile: Outcomes considered at the organizational level
How is alignment with organizational goals ensured?
Plan-Driven: Portfolios and programs Agile: Portfolios and programs shown as roadmaps
What is the primary way future work is organized?
Plan-Driven: Projects in portfolio Agile: Products in backlog
How is project work secured?
Plan-Driven: Proposal and negotiation Agile: Partnering
How are resources determined for selected and prioritized project work?
Plan-Driven: Resource Assignment matrix Agile: Relative Priority Ranking
How is work prioritized?
Plan-Driven: Scoring model Agile: Backlog refining led by Product Owner
How are projects selected?
Plan-Driven: Scoring model Agile: Customer-driven value
What is the primary organization at a lower level?
Plan-driven: Projects and subprojects Agile: Products and sometimes projects
Development Approach
Predictive approaches require more planning up front, whereas adaptive are planned and executed in sprints. When choosing projects to add to a portfolio, executives often follow the same strategy they would if managing a financial portfolio: diversification. It makes sense to have a range of projects in terms of size, complexity, cost, etc.
Operational Source Selection Criteria
Production capacity Business size and type Past performance References
Planning
Requires a holistic approach and alignment. At both the project management and portfolio management levels, decision makers need to remember that "deliverables drive outcomes." In other words, we are not pursuing projects for the deliverables themselves but rather for the value and benefits they can bring to our organization.
Domains Impacting Project Selection
Stakeholders Team Development Approach Planning Uncertainty
Determine Which Opportunities to Pursue
Target projects to pursue. -Use SWOT analysis. Determine if project will help achieve contractor objectives. Consider cost to pursue the work. Consider probability of securing the project. Consider capability to perform the work.
Technical Source Selection Criteria:
Technical experience Understanding Needs Technical Approach Risk Mitigation
Product
The deliverables that are created in an Agile project.
Minimum viable product (MVP)
The simplest version of a product with just enough features to gain quick customer feedback.
Risk-adjusted backlog
To-do prioritized list of work to both create product and reduce risk.
Uncertainty
Understand the larger environment (e.g., social, market) This includes political, social, market, and environmental factors.
Refine requirements
Use feedback to progressively understand true needs.
Stakeholders
Useful in project selection and prioritization It encourages us to see the role individual projects play as part of a larger organizational strategy of providing useful outcomes for both internal and external stakeholders. It reminds us that benefits and values derived from a project may outlive the project itself.
Product roadmap
Visual showing high-level plans of products expected to be created during each release.
Once all proposals have been delivered and evaluated, the client company may elect to either
award the project or enter into negotiations with one or more potential contractors.
External projects
can be viewed either from the perspective of the client company that wants the project to be executed or from the perspective of the contractor company that wants to perform the work.
Preparing and submitting a proposal itself is a small project, with the primary deliverable of the project being a
compelling and complete proposal.
On more routine projects, the contract may be awarded at this point. Further clarifications and negotiations may follow for
complex projects
A company (called the client) interested in completing a project, but for which it may hire
external resources (called contractors) to execute a significant part or all of the work.
Successful project managers try hard to convince potential clients that they are capable of all
four dimensions
Client companies
may first put prospective external projects through a selection and prioritization process as described above and, if selected, then decide whether to perform the work internally (make) or hire the project to be performed by others (buy). If the decision is to buy, then the client company needs to plan and conduct the procurement.
A client company and a contractor company may negotiate the amount of
money to be paid for a project. They may also negotiate the contractual terms, schedule, specific personnel to be assigned to work on the contract, quality standards, reporting mechanisms, and various other items.
Contractor companies
need to identify potential project opportunities, determine which they will pursue, submit proposals, and be prepared to either bid or negotiate to secure the work.
Successful project managers understand the need to prepare well for
negotiations. This starts with a clear understanding of what is most important to their management. Often, it includes fact finding with the client company to understand its needs and abilities. Armed with an understanding of both perspectives, a project manager attempts to find a solution that allows the organization to secure the project work with enough profit potential and with the start of a good working relationship with the client. In the end, the client company will select the contractor(s) and award the contract(s).
Negotiation is an approach to redefine an old relationship that is
not working effectively or to establish a new relationship. Negotiations should aim for a win-win solution, meaning the outcome must benefit both the parties involved in negotiations.
The discussion above pertains to projects that are internal to an
organization
A project manager may need to make arrangements with
potential suppliers to secure the products and services needed to perform the project.
Potential projects are selected based upon a
product vision of how a user will achieve a desired outcome, not just receive an output from a project team.
While strategic planning is conducted in both predictive or Agile environments, project selection is
quite different in Agile projects.
While criteria will vary extensively from one project to another, generally, a client would like to be convinced that the potential contractor is
technically, managerially, financially, and operationally competent.