Project Management Assignment
Project Management Assignment
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Project Management
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Students are required to submit three assignments
ASSIGNMENT
Assignment A
Assignment B
Assignment C
DETAILS
Five Subjective Questions
Three Subjective Questions + Case Study
Forty Nine Objective Questions
MARKS
10
10
10
:
:
Assignment 'A'
Assignment 'B'
Assignment 'C'
Assignment-A
All Questions carry equal Marks
Marks: 10
1. Describe briefly the aspects of a business environment that needs to be monitored as well
as the dimensions along which a firm may appraise its strengths and weaknesses for
identifying investment opportunities.
2. The sales of a certain product during a 14 year period have been as follows:
Period
Sales (Rs)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
2,000
2,200
2,100
2,300
2,500
3,200
3,600
4,000
3,900
4,000
4,200
4,300
4,900
5,300
Find out the least square regression line for the data given.
For the data given above assume that forecast for the period 1 was Rs 2,100. If the
constant () is equal to 0.3, derive the forecast for the periods 2 to 14.
3. What is Project Implementation Schedule? How it is important? What information is
required for preparing the project implementation schedule?
4. What are replacement decisions? Explain three components of the cash flow stream
of a replacement decision.
5. A company is considering an investment proposal to install new milling controls at a
cost of Rs 50,000. The facility has a life expectancy of 5 years and no salvage value.
The tax rate is 35 percent. Assume that the firm uses straight line depreciation
method and the same is followed for tax purposes. The estimated cash flows before
depreciation and tax (CFBDT) from the investment proposal are as follows:
Year
1
2
3
4
5
CFBDT
Rs
Rs
Rs
Rs
Rs
10,000
11,000
12,500
13,500
21,000
Payback period
Accounting Rate of Return
IRR
NPV at 10 % discount rate.
Assignment-B
Marks: 10
1. (a) What are key issues considered by financial institutions while appraising a project for
term financing?
(b) Discuss the key consideration in determining the debt-equity ratio of the firm.
2. What is Performance review and control in respect of the projects? What are advantages of
conducting it? What problems are encountered in performance review and how can they
overcome?
3. A project has the following time schedule:
Activity
Time in weeks
1-2
1-3
2-4
3-4
3-5
4-9
5-6
5-7
6-8
7-8
8-9
8-10
9-10
4
1
1
1
6
5
4
8
1
2
1
8
7
CaseStudy
1. You are appointed to take up the task of metro project by Government of India. You are
asked to complete the task within the period of seven years but you express your doubts on
that stating various reasons and difficulties. The concerned secretary tells you to go through
the project implementation history of Delhi metro project and prepare a complete report
with regards to:
a) Preparing the preliminary activities to be taken up before a large infrastructure project
can be started.
b) Understanding the significance of the role of a project manager in project execution.
c) Understand the importance of the right work culture in successful project management.
d) Recognize the importance of managing the various stakeholders in a project.
e) Understand the difficulties involved in the execution of large infrastructure projects in
developing countries, and how these can be overcome.
f) Importance of financial management tools.
2. You have collected the requisite information through published and unpublished sources and
compiled as given below
With a 6.5 km section of Line 3 becoming operational in April 2006, Phase I of the
Delhi Metro3 project was nearing completion. Of the total length of 65.16 km of the first
phase, 62 km had been completed and opened for service. This phase was set to cost Rs.
98 billion. As of early 2006, around 450,000 passengers were traveling by the Delhi Metro
every day invariably and the strength will go up very fast.
The Delhi Metro was meant to solve Delhi's traffic problems, which had become
almost unmanageable. The first steps to build a metro system in the city were taken in the
early 1990s. In 1995, the Government of India (GoI) and the Government of the National
Capital Territory of Delhi (GNCTD) formed the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation Ltd (DMRC)
under the Companies Act to construct the Delhi Metro.
Conceived as a social sector project, a significant portion of the project cost was
funded through a soft loan provided by the Japanese government through Japan Bank
International Corporation (JBIC). The rest was contributed by GoI and GNCTD through
equity. E. Sreedharan was appointed managing director (MD) of the DMRC and project
manager for Phase I of the project in November 1997. Work on Line 1 of Phase I started in
October 1998. DMRC formed consortiums to advise it on the project and to provide it with
the latest technology. It also saw to it that the foreign companies worked with the Indian
companies to ensure that the latter assimilated their expertise and technological know-how.
The DMRC faced any number of technical and systemic challenges during the construction of
the metro. However, thanks to thorough planning, an effective project design, and a 'wemean business' culture, it was able to overcome all these hurdles. The organizational culture
was based on punctuality, honesty, and a strict adherence to deadlines. The DMRC
successfully managed the various stakeholders in the project like the general public,
government bodies, etc., and also ensured that the project was environmentally safe. With
Phase I of the Delhi Metro project nearing completion, the GoI decided to extend the metro
network and work on Phase II of the Delhi Metro project was set to commence in
September 2006.
In the process of implementing the project, the DMRC had gained a lot of
technological expertise, which would be used by other cities in India and abroad to build
metro systems similar to the Delhi Metro.
In order to implement the Delhi Metro project, the GoI and the GNCTD set up a
50:50 joint venture company called the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation Ltd. (DMRC). The
company was incorporated under the Companies Act in May 1995. The DMRC was to
complete Phase I of the project within 10 years, i.e., by the end of 2005.
With the funding for the project being finalized, the next step was to constitute a
project team. E. Sreedharan was appointed as project manager and managing director of
the DMRC in November 1997. A technocrat, he had had a long stint in the Indian Railways
(IR) and had retired in 1990. During his service with IR, he had earned a reputation for
completing major projects on time and within the budget constraint. In India, major
infrastructure projects are often stalled because of a lack of funds, political interference,
lack of professionalism and accountability, property disputes, corruption, etc. Therefore,
even before the commencement of the project, the DMRC attempted to put in place
effective systems to ensure the smooth progress of the project. Funding was not an issue in
the case of the Delhi Metro project because it was settled even before the project
commenced.
In order to steer clear of political interference, the DMRC sought autonomy on all
major matters and the GoI promised to give it this autonomy. Construction work on the
project commenced on October 1, 1998. The entire project was divided into three lines.
Further, these lines were divided into sections. Phase I commenced with the Shahdara-Tis
Hazari section of Line 1, covering a distance of about eight kilometers. The work involved
utility diversions, barricading, and actual civil construction. A major part of this section was
on elevated tracks. All tracks in the elevated corridor were laid on concrete (ballast less).
The tracks were supported on single piers.
Effective project management involved not only completing the project on schedule
and within the budget, but also managing the project's stakeholders. The stakeholders
included the governments, the contractors, the funding agencies, and the general public.
Despite assurances that the DMRC would enjoy autonomy, it faced political pressure not
only in its recruitment processes, promotions, and contract awarding but also in land
acquisition. The successful completion of the project effectively silenced the critics who had
been skeptical about the ability of an Indian public sector organization to complete any
project, let alone one as complex and costly as the Delhi Metro, on time and within the
budget.
1. Prepare a detailed report with reference to the points secretary asked you in paragraph
1 above.
2. List out similarities between the two projects and dissimilarities.
3. List out the activities required immediately. You can imagine data and figures wherever
necessary.
Assignment-C
Marks: 10
1. Risks will be identified during which risk management process(es)?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
Project engineer
Project manager
Quality manager
Team member
3. A project manager has just been assigned to a new project and has been given the
preliminary project scope statement and the project charter. The first thing the project
manager must do is:
a)
b)
c)
d)
4. You are taking over a project during the planning process group and discover that six
individuals have signed the project charter. Which of the following should most concern
you?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
Temporary
Definite beginning and end
Interrelated activities
Repeats itself every month
8. A buyer extends a formal invitation that contains a scope of work that seeks a response that
will describe the methodology and results that will be provided to the buyer. This is called:
a)
b)
c)
d)
Invitation to bid.
Request for information.
Request for proposal.
Request for bid.
9. A project manager must have some work done by an outside contractor. This work has a
great deal of risk associated with it, and it has become very difficult to find a contractor
willing to take on the job. Which of the following types of contract would offer the greatest
incentive to the contractor?
a)
b)
c)
d)
11. In which project management process group is the detailed project budget created?
a)
b)
c)
d)
Initiating
Before the project management process
Planning
Executing
12. Contract closure is different from administrative closure in that contract closure:
a)
b)
c)
d)
13. During the full life cycle of the project, a plot of the projects expected expenditures will
usually follow a characteristic..S.. shape. This indicates that:
a)
b)
c)
d)
14. What conflict resolution technique is a project manager using when he says, "I cannot deal
with this issue now!"
a)
b)
c)
d)
Problem solving
Forcing
Withdrawal
Compromising
15. A group of related projects that are managed in a coordinated way that usually include an
element of ongoing activity is called a:
a)
b)
c)
d)
Major project.
Project office.
Program.
Group of projects.
16. To control the schedule, a project manager is reanalyzing the project to predict project
duration. She does this by analyzing the sequence of activities with the least amount of
scheduling flexibility. What technique is she using?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
17. A project manager has just been assigned to a project. The document that recognizes the
existence of the project is called:
a)
b)
c)
d)
The
The
The
The
statement of work.
project assignment.
project charter.
product description.
Project manager.
Project expediter.
Program coordinator.
Program manager.
19. If project A has a net present value (NPV) of Rs 30,000 and project B has an NPV of
Rs 50,000, what is the opportunity cost if project B is selected?
a)
b)
c)
d)
Rs 23,000
Rs 30,000
Rs 20,000
Rs 50,000
20. A project manager is using weighted average duration estimates to perform schedule
network analysis. Which type of mathematical analysis is being used?
a)
b)
c)
d)
21. An activity has an early start (ES) of day 3, a late start (LS) of day 13, an early finish (EF)
of day g, and a late finish (LF) of day ig. The activity:
a)
b)
c)
d)
22. Which phase of the project is likely to have the greatest amount of its funding spent?
a)
b)
c)
d)
Initiating
Executing
Planning
Closeout
23. Which of the following represents the estimated value of the work actually accomplished?
a)
b)
c)
d)
24. A project manager is managing a project. The original scope baseline of the project was
budgeted at Rs 100,000. Since works on the project started there have been seventeen
authorized and approved changes to the project. The changes have a value of Rs 17,000
and the cost of investigating them prior to their approval was Rs 2,500. What is the current
budget (in Rs) for the project?
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
100,000
114,500
117,000
119,500
None of the above
25. You are managing a project in a just in time environment. This will require more attention,
because the amount of inventory in such an environment is generally:
a)
b)
c)
d)
45 percent.
10 percent.
12 percent.
0 percent.
26. A task was scheduled to use two persons, full time, and take two weeks to complete.
Instead, the project manager was only able to assign one person to this task. At the end of
two weeks, the person assigned to the task was 75% complete. What is the cost
performance index?
a)
b)
c)
d)
0.75
1.50
0.25
1.15
PERT analysis
GERT analysis
Monte Carlo analysis
Critical path method
28. Project A has an internal rate of return (IRR) of 21 percent. Project B has an IRR of 7
percent. Project C has an IRR of 31 percent. Project D has an IRR of ig percent. Which of
these would be the BEST project?
a) Project A
b) Project B
c) Project C
d) Project D
29. The program evaluation and review technique (PERT) method of scheduling differs from the
critical path method (CPM) because the PERT method:
a)
b)
c)
d)
Uses
Uses
Uses
Uses
30. In attempting to complete the project faster, the project manager looks at the cost
associated with crashing each activity. The best approach to crashing would also include
looking at the:
a)
b)
c)
d)
33. You are asked to prepare a budget for completing a project that was started last year and
then shelved for six months. All the following would be included in the budget except?
a) Fixed costs
b) Sunk costs
c) Direct costs
d) Variable costs
34. During the project life cycle, in which part of the life cycle will risk be the lowest?
a)
b)
c)
d)
Initiation
Planning
Execution
Closeout
35. A project manager managing any project should perform risk analysis at what stage of the
project:
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
36. You are the project manager for a high visibility project. The margin on this project is low,
and it is extremely important that the cost estimates for the work on the project be
accurate. While reviewing the cost estimates for this project you notice that one of the cost
estimates for an element in the WBS is 10% higher than two previous projects for very
similar work. What should you do?
a) Accept the estimate because you trust all of the people on your project team, and they
are responsible for estimates.
b) Reduce the estimate and add the additional budget to the management reserve.
c) Ask the person responsible for the estimate to explain the difference and bring
supporting information to you.
d) Reduce the estimate and add the additional budget to the contingency reserve.
37. The project life cycle differs from the product life cycle in that the project life cycle:
a)
b)
c)
d)
38. A manager and the head of engineering discuss a change to a major work package. After
the meeting, the manager contacts you and tells you to complete the paperwork to make
the change. This is an example of:
a)
b)
c)
d)
39. All of the following are parts of direct and manage project execution except?
a)
b)
c)
d)
Identifying changes
Using a work breakdown structure
Implementing corrective actions
Setting up a project control system
40. A project manager does not have much time to spend planning before the mandatory start
date arrives. He therefore wants to move through planning as effectively as possible. Which
of the following would you recommend?
a) Make sure you have a completed preliminary project scope statement and then start the
WBS.
b) Create an activity list before creating a network diagram.
c) Document all the known risks before you document the high-level assumptions.
d) Finalize the quality management plan before you determine quality metrics.