Practical Project Management
Practical Project Management
Project
Management
Practical
Project
Management
The Secrets of Managing
Any Project on Time
and on Budget
Michael Dobson
SkillPath Publications
Mission, KS
1996 by SkillPath Publications, a division of The Graceland College
Center for Professional Development and Lifelong Learning, Inc., 6900
Squibb Road, Mission, Kansas 66202. All rights reserved. No part of this
publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written prior
permission of SkillPath Publications.
ISBN: 1-57294-015-8
10 9 8 7 6 04 05 06
vii
What Is a
Project?
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2 Practical Project Management
Q uiz
Answer the following questions T for True or F for False.
T F
My boss always gives me all the money I need to
get my projects done the right way.
My boss always gives me all the time I need to get
my projects done the right way.
My boss always gives me all the people and
resources I need to get my projects done the right
way.
My boss always gives me enough authority to get
my projects done the right way.
My bosses and customers always know what they
want the project to accomplish, and they state it
clearly.
If you answered false to nearly all these questions, youre a
normal project manager.
4 Practical Project Management
Define
Plan
Execute
Complete
Evaluate
Celebrate
Exercise #1:
Looking Back
To prepare for your next project, write an evaluation of the last
project you worked onwhether you completed it or not.
Answer the following questions as you write. If you respond no
to any question, explain why and jot down what you can do to
avoid this pitfall on your next project.
1. Did you have a clear idea of what the project was supposed
to accomplish?
Yes No
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
2. Did you identify the customers and originators of the project
and determine what exactly they wanted, needed, and
expected?
Yes No
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
18 Practical Project Management
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
7. Were your team members committed to the project goals?
Yes No
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
8. Were you able to build consensus and effective agreement
among your team members?
Yes No
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
20 Practical Project Management
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22 Practical Project Management
The military genius Karl von Clausewitz reminds us, This above
all: the principle of the objective. To manage any project
successfully, you must be absolutely clear about the objective.
More projects fail because they lack fully and correctly defined
objectives than for any other reason.
Take the simple quiz that follows to see if you have an
objectives definition problem.
Q uiz
1. Can you define your project objective right
now in twenty-five words or less? Yes No
2. Can you list all the potential customers of
this project? Yes No
3. Do your projects avoid frequent
last-minute change orders? Yes No
4. Do you know what the project is designed to
improve for your customers? Yes No
If you have any no answers, you may have an objectives
problem. Read on to find out how to define your project
objectives and solve problems early.
Focus on the Objective 23
You can picture the response. In this project, the driver was
clearly Performance.
In the Moon Project, the answer may not be so obvious. Try the
following quiz to see if you can identify the driver.
Q uiz
Of the three constraints, which will you select as the driver?
Check the correct answer.
A. Time constraint
B. Performance criteria
C. Budget constraint
Obviously, C is wrong because its already been defined as the
weak constraint. Most people choose B, Performance. After all,
getting the astronauts safely back to Earth seems very important.
Whats the right answer? Actually, its D, none of the above. This
is a trick question, but it leads to the next insight you must have
to be an effective project manager:
The project manager doesnt determine the ranking of the
constraints. The project originator and the project goal do.
In other words, you must be careful about jumping to conclusions
here. You must determine what the project originator thinks as
well as what the ultimate project goal requires.
How will you find out what President Kennedy thinks?
The first way to discover the driver is to askbut be careful how
you ask. Dont say: Hey, boss! On that new project, did you
want it fast, cheap, or good? The answer will almost always be
All three! Now, get back to work!
30 Practical Project Management
Be more subtle. One technique that may help you is the forced-
choice question. To do this, offer a hypothetical situation that
forces a choice among two of the objectives and ask for the
originators preferred approach.
Mr. President, you might begin, as you know, its impossible to
eliminate all risk on something as complex as a moon shot. What
if we had these two choices? First, that we go ahead and make
the moon shot before the end of the decade with a 60 percent
chance of getting the astronauts back alive. Second, we could
delay the moon shot until, say, 1972 and by doing so get the
safety chance up to 90 percent? If this were the case, which
choice would you want us to make?
This is a perfectly fair question, although you may not always get
a straight answer. If you do get a straight answer, it will normally
tell you what the driver is. For example, the President might say,
Well, you cant make an omelet without breaking eggs. Lets get
there ASAP. Then the driver is Time. Or, the President might say:
We just cant take the political hit from casualties. Be careful out
there. Then the driver is Performance.
Once you know the driver, you can design your project around
that as your Number One priority.
If you dont get a straight answer, look to the overall project goal.
Lets put the space program in its historical context. The primary
reason for making the space program the national priority it
became had to do with the Cold War. Imagine that Apollo 11 had
landed after the Soviets had reached the moon. You could make
it before the end of the decade but after the Soviet Unionbut
you know that wouldnt have been good enough. The United
States had to beat the Soviet Union; therefore, the driver had to
be Time. Performance criteria became the middle constraint.
The middle constraint is the Triple Constraint that is stronger than
the weak constraint and weaker than the driver. It comes in the
middle.
Focus on the Objective 31
Does this mean that the United States was prepared to risk
astronaut lives to get to the moon first? The historical answer was
an unqualified yes. Astronaut safety was important, but getting
there before the Soviets was even more important. How much the
project cost came third.
The revised Triple Constraints for the project now read like this:
Project: Put a man on the moon
Time constraint: By the end of the decade
Performance criteria: Safe return to Earth
Budget constraint: By spending what is technically necessary, but
no more than Congress is likely to approve
Driver: Time constraint
Middle constraint: Performance criteria
Weak constraint: Budget constraint
Can the Triple Constraints change during a project? Yes, but
rarely. If your Triple Constraints seem to change on a daily basis,
this normally means that you havent properly defined them in
the first place. Sometimes its hard to pin people down, but you
must. Get the Triple Constraints wrong, and everything else in
your project will suffer.
Major organizational changes often produce changes in the Triple
Constraints.
For example, after the success of the Apollo mission, NASAs
organizational culture continued to rank the Triple Constraints in
their traditional order of time/performance/budget, although the
rationale for this order had vanished with the success of the lunar
mission. NASA didnt fully integrate a change until the Challenger
disaster. Even then, Performance criteria didnt become the new
driver. Instead, the negative press coverage of NASA (as well as
the Hubble telescope debacle) resulted in elevating Budget from
32 Practical Project Management
vital and you have my utmost support. I only have one question.
Where exactly in Tennessee do you think we should place this
project?
Besides regional economic issues, there was (and is) a
constituency for pure science and space exploration. Although
this constituency was not large enough to affect Congress, notice
that many NASA employees and contractors joined because of
their personal belief and passion for space exploration.
There was also a press and public relations issue. There were
complaints about spending money on space exploration when
there were pressing local needs. There were egos to soothe. In
other words, the Moon Project was just like any other project
only more so.
Make a list of other goals, who has those goals, and what it
would take to meet those goals. Notice that some people may
have a goal thats incompatible with your project, just like those
who felt that spending any money on space exploration was
wasteful. Be on the lookout for any constituency devoted to
keeping your project from success and, early on, try to anticipate
and deal with the obstacles they may present.
First, interview people with disparate goals. Sometimes its
possible to achieve their goals along with the main project goals
with no extra cost and time. Wouldnt it be a shame and a waste
to have problems from these people when they could so easily
have been avoided? A computer firm once installed a $2 million
system for a company, and achieved every one of the Triple
Constraints. During training, however, they found out that the
people who had to operate the system hated it. It didnt do
anything they wanted. One of the programmers realized, If wed
known about their needs, we could have integrated them into our
project with no extra cost or time. But we didnt ask.
Second, identify potential conflicts. If you can meet everybodys
needs within the same project time and budget, wonderful! If you
Focus on the Objective 35
cant, perhaps you can meet all the needs with extra time and/or
extra money. You should at least askyou just might get the
resources, and the organization will benefit.
Third, work with conflicts. If you have needs you cant meet with
your resources and no additional resources are available, or if you
cant achieve all the goals that your project constituency has, you
must make a decision. Use this three-step process:
1. Get the affected parties together to try to achieve their own
consensus; act on the consensus. If this fails
2. Make the decision based on the overall goals of the company
to the best of your ability. Get advice from management if
you need it. If this fails
3. Make the decision based on who has the most power to help
or hurt you. (Notice that this is not based exclusively on rank.
Sometimes the actual users have tremendous power: the
power to make the project fail.)
Step 8: Refine your project goals and test them with the
affected parties. The final project constraints read as follows:
Project: Put a man on the moon
Time constraint: Before the Soviet Union does, or by the end of
the decade, whichever comes first
Performance criteria: Safe return to Earth. Secondary: Provide as
much infrastructure for future space exploration as possible.
Deliver quality, pure scientific information.
Budget constraint: What is technically necessary, but no more
than Congress is likely to approve. Secondary: Emphasize work in
key congressional districts and technology spin-offs
Driver: Time constraint
Middle constraint: Performance criteria
Weak constraint: Budget constraint
36 Practical Project Management
This isnt to suggest that you should say no, or even that you
have the option of saying no. You can, however, ask questions
and dig, all the time making positive noises, up until youre ready
to accept the assignment. Will this cause problems with your boss
or customer? Not necessarily. Many bosses would have more
respect for certain members of their staffs if these people did ask
a few more questions at the beginning of a project rather than
waiting until disaster strikes.
You may be thinking that this is an enormous amount of work to
do just to get the goal right. But consider this: You havent even
begun to plan, much less manage your project. But doing the
objective and goal-setting part perfectly is the most critical phase
of the project. Do this stage right and everything else will be
easier. Do it wrong, and nothing else will save you.
After all, if you dont have time to get it right in the first place,
when exactly do you expect to find the time to do it over?
38 Practical Project Management
Exercise #2:
Ranking the Triple
Constraints
Try identifying and then ranking the Triple Constraints for the
following project. The answers are on the next page.
Project: The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, the
worlds most popular museum, was a Federal government project
accomplished ahead of schedule and under budget.
The goal of the project was to build a world-class aviation and
space museum for a budget of $30 million and open it on July 4,
1976.
1. Identify the Triple Constraints.
Project: _______________________________________________
Performance criteria: ___________________________________
Budget constraint: _____________________________________
Time constraint: _______________________________________
2. Rank the Triple Constraints.
Driver: _______________________________________________
Middle constraint: _____________________________________
Weak constraint: ______________________________________
Focus on the Objective 39
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42 Practical Project Management
Unless the project is so small and simple that you can guarantee
you wont forget anything, use the brainstorming process to
identify tasks. Here are the steps:
1. Assemble your project team, or at least key members who
represent the different major functional areas of your project.
2. Brainstorm every task you can think of. Write the tasks down
on individual sticky notes so you can move them around
and group them later.
3. Refine your tasks. As your team brainstorms, individual
members will think of tasks based on their own conceptions
of the project. You may identify several different approaches
to take, but you will need to choose one approach. Doing so
will eliminate some tasks. Other tasks may be able to be
combined into larger tasks. Still other tasks will be best
managed by breaking them into smaller tasks. Use your
judgment.
4. Identify possible categories you can use to organize the tasks.
5. Group the tasks into those categories. (If youre using sticky
notes, you can actually move the notes into categories.)
6. Review the list several times for any tasks you may have
forgotten.
7. As you continue with the planning process, be alert for
discoveries of forgotten tasks.
8. Review the final plan for logical workflowand check again
for anything you may have forgotten.
Starting to Plan 45
Exercise #3:
Bottom-Up Task
Identification
You can do this exercise as an individual or with a group.
Imagine that youre responsible for planning your companys
summer picnic. Brainstorm all the tasks you must do.
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Note: If you did this as an individual exercise, try it again with a
group to see how many more items you can come up with.
Check the answer key on the next page for items that others who
have completed this exercise frequently forget.
46 Practical Project Management
Answers to Exercise #3
Here are the picnic tasks people frequently forget:
Providing toilet facilities
Scheduling a rain date
Providing beverages
Providing utensils
Arranging cleanup
Acquiring cooking supplies
Buying paper plates
Did you forget any of these? What would be the fate of the picnic
if you had?
Fig. 3.1. The first level of the WBS is always the project.
48
Company Picnic
Fig. 3.2. The second level of the WBS consists of the subprojects, which can also illustrate the management structure of
your project.
Starting to Plan 49
Its worth taking the time to think about your subproject structure.
The subproject structure for the picnic WBS is set up by
functional area. Other possibilities are:
Chronological/Phased. The NASA moon project was set up
using a roughly chronological approach to the WBS (see fig.
3.3). You can also conceive of this as grouping by phases.
Discipline. Often, a building construction project will group
tasks by skilled trade area (see fig 3.4).
Cross-departmental. Sometimes, a project uses the existing
organizational structure. If the jobs on the project will each be
done by an existing department (e.g., Marketing does some
tasks, Engineering others), youll naturally use the
departments as your Level 2 subprojects (see fig. 3.5).
If your WBS subproject structure helps you to understand and
assign the work, youve done it right.
Put a man on
the moon
Office Plaza
WBS Shortcut
The advantage of listing your tasks on sticky notes is that
you can easily create your WBS using a whiteboard. Make a
new sticky sheet for the project itself. Thats Level 1. Make
sheets for each subproject. (Tip! Use a different color for
each subproject, and use the same color for the tasks that go
under it. Color-coding the WBS makes it easier to track
whos responsible for each task, and even what category of
task it is.) Finally, group the task sticky note sheets under
each subproject. Youre finished!
WBS Level 1 Project
Company Picnic
WBS Level 2 Subprojects
Evaluate previous Article for employee Kids games Select site Cooking
picnics newsletter supplies/equipment
Fig. 3.6. The third level of the WBS consist of tasks assigned to subprojects.
54 Practical Project Management
Exercise #4:
Installing a LAN System
as a Sample Project
For this exercise, create a sample project and follow it through
the planning process. So far, youve learned to develop a good
objective and a WBS.
Project: You have been assigned to manage a project to install a
local area network (LAN) in an office of twenty-five people, each
of whom has an individual computer station. The LAN will consist
of a single server (host computer), the wiring to connect the
individual computers scattered around the office, and the software
to operate the LAN. The LAN should provide the following
features: e-mail, file sharing, and cost reductions (people will be
able to use the same printers and peripherals). Your boss has
given you a budget of $40,000 and told you the project must be
completed before the start of the new fiscal year (September 30),
which is 16 weeks away, to keep the budget authority.
Part 1
1. Identify the Triple Constraints.
Project: _______________________________________________
Performance criteria: __________________________________
Budget constraint: _____________________________________
Time constraint: _______________________________________
2. Rank the Triple Constraints.
Driver: _______________________________________________
Middle constraint: _____________________________________
Weak constraint: ______________________________________
Starting to Plan 57
Part 2
Brainstorm and group the tasks. Use sticky notes (or simply an
additional piece of paper or the blank WBS on the next page) to
brainstorm the tasks necessary for this project. Create your groups
and prepare a preliminary WBS using the groups as your second
level and your tasks as the third level.
One version of the WBS for this LAN project is shown in figure
4.1. It will likely differ from yours; this doesnt mean your answer
is wrong. Different project managers will inevitably organize the
same project in a different fashion, and theres nothing wrong
with that. Do compare the two versions. Does yours have
reasonable subprojects? Are your tasks complete? Did you forget
anything?
Now that you have experience in creating a WBS, turn to the next
chapter to learn how to turn the WBS into a plan.
Starting to Plan 59
Install LAN
Laying Out
the Project
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62 Practical Project Management
Now that youre armed with a completed WBS, youre ready for
the next step in the planning process: determining the sequence
of activities. As you learned earlier, one of the characteristics of a
project is that it can be broken into tasks that can be sequenced.
How you choose your task sequence has a substantial impact on
the outcome of your project.
Return to your sample LAN project. You have prepared your
version of a WBS by identifying and grouping tasks. Remember,
the version in figure 4.1 is not necessarily more correct than
yours.
The WBS in figure 4.1 identifies four subproject areas: project
management, purchasing, installation and testing, and training.
The logic here is a combination of functional breakdown and
rough chronological (purchasing comes before installation,
installation comes before training). This does not mean, however,
that the tasks in each WBS subproject will happen in the order
shown on the WBS. Thats the next step of project planning:
creating a Dependency Sequence.
Install LAN
Connect
Acceptance Purchasing Network
Test/Debug
Laying Out the Project
63
Planning as a Task
Why isnt the activity of planning shown as a task on the
WBS? Although planning is a time-consuming activity, it
normally doesnt go into the WBS. After all, the WBS and
other planning documents are the result of the planning
process. Planning is finished when the project begins.
If youre running a project with unusually complicated and
difficult planning issues, you can make planning a separate
project, with the result of the project being a plan to
accomplish the next project.
A lag task is a task that must be shown in the work flow although
it has no work associated with it. For example, when you pour
the concrete for your swimming pool, the concrete must cure
before you can paint and seal it. Although that takes waiting, or
lag, time, it doesnt require any work. Some project
management authorities show lag tasks merely as gaps in the
schedule; however, its best to show these tasks so you wont
accidentally forget them.
A dummy task in the planning technique known as activity-on-
arrow PERT is an arrow that shows a dependency relationship
between two otherwise parallel tasks. Youll learn about that type
of dummy task in greater detail later in this book.
A milestone task is a task that requires no time or budget, but
must be shown in the work flow. Milestones are often
checkpoints, starting lines, finishing lines, or report dates. For
example, a milestone in the swimming pool project could be
Start Swimming! This task would simply mark the moment when
people could dive in. Theres no work or time involved, just a
milestone. In a project timeline, a milestone is often shown with a
diamond symbol ().
In Chapter 3, you were strongly encouraged to use sticky notes in
different colors to create your WBS. In this chapter, you will learn
how to use those colored note sheets as a valuable shortcutone
thats nicknamed Sticky Note PERT. PERT, or Program
Evaluation and Review Technique, is a powerful and
sophisticated tool for planning projects. Usually, only skilled
project managers running large projects use PERT. Managers of
smaller projects often avoid it because of its reputation for
complexity; they use the Gantt chart technique instead.
While the Gantt chart (covered in Chapter 7) is extremely useful
for small projects, you should still learn the basics of PERT project
layout, no matter how small your projects are.
Laying Out the Project 67
To create a Sticky Note PERT chart, take your Level 3 task notes
from your WBS and place them in the order you think they
should be performed. Draw lines or arrows between the notes.
The resulting drawing is called a PERT chart.
You can gain many insights about your project by completing a
PERT chart. Youll normally discover that while some tasks can
only be put together in a single sequence, you often can make a
strategic choice that has a profound impact on the ultimate
outcome of your project.
Figure 4.2 shows a Sticky Note PERT chart created from the Install
LAN WBS.
Heres how to use the sticky notes to create a PERT chart: Begin
by taking the sheets for Needs Analysis and Project
Management and making those the lead-off tasks in the project.
Remember, Project Management isnt a task in the same sense
as Needs Analysis, since nothing is dependent on its
completion.
68
Needs Connect
Analysis Specs. Purchasing Network
Manuals/ Develop
Procedures Training
Project Acceptance
Mgmt.
If your project begins or ends with more than one task going on
simultaneously, its a good idea to start with an extra dummy
activity so that all the lines come together at both ends of the
project. The Start box in figure 4.2 is an example. You dont
need a Finish box in this example because all lines connect up
in the final Acceptance box.
Once the Needs Analysis is complete, you can develop project
specifications, so Specs is one item that follows Needs
Analysis in the chart. So far, most project managers would lay
out this project in the exact same way. However, the next step
isnt so straightforward and clear.
When you have an option in laying out project tasks, first list all
the possibilities and analyze their pros and cons. Then and only
then, make your strategic decision. As you continue with your
planning process, you may uncover additional information to
support or conflict with your previous decision. Revisit your
layout decision as necessary until youve made the best choices
for your project.
Select Select
Server Cables
Needs Specs
Analysis
Select
Software
Select
Server
Select
Cables
Fig. 4.3. Four options for shopping for LAN equipment. When you have
more than one option for when to perform a project task, you have a
strategic choice.
Laying Out the Project 71
None of these options is right and the others wrong. Any one of
these options might be the right one for your project
circumstances. The point is this: Only when you list and study the
options do you have the power to pick the best one for your
project.
For the sake of this example, Option 3 was chosen. Why? First,
the Time constraint has been established as the driver. Parallel
tasks save time. Why not Option 4, then? Heres one rationale:
Selecting the cables before selecting the server is risky, so the
small amount of time parallel tasking would save wouldnt be
worth it. Notice that this is just one opinion. Yours need not be
the samewhen youre the project manager.
To finish your project layout, youll make similar decisions
throughout the network. Heres the logic behind some of the
decisions for the PERT chart shown in figure 4.2.
1. To Train Users, you need Develop Training and Connect
Network to be complete. Arguably, you could do the training
off site at the vendors location, using the vendors LAN. This
is a quality versus time trade-off decision.
2. Test/Debug will need to be done in two phases. The first
phase will consist of the testing that must be completed to
allow the Train Users task to begin. The second phase
consists of additional work that can parallel and follow Train
Users. This phase will include issues the users themselves
identify, plus minor problems that can be fixed at any time.
We have a choice of breaking Test/Debug into two separate
tasks, or of setting up the schedule so the tasks overlap.
3. Project Management actually ends after the Acceptance
phase is over. Sometimes, a milestone () for End of Project
is placed in the plan so that Project Management will have
something to connect to.
Laying Out the Project 73
Risk Management
Some tasks are inherently riskier than others. Risk means
likelihood of task failure, which can come in any of the Triple
Constraints: a task can be late, over budget, or fail to achieve its
performance requirements.
The placement of a task in the dependency sequence can
increase or decrease risk. One argument against choosing Option
3 for hardware/software selection (see figs. 4.2 and 4.3) is that its
riskier to have two people off choosing hardware and software
than for one person to do it in a dependent sequence. Making the
tasks parallel arguably increases risk. This doesnt mean that you
shouldnt sequence the tasks in this way, but you should at least
be aware of the risk.
Sometimes, paralleling tasks can lower risk. Lets assume that
selecting the hardware and cables together will take less time
than selecting the software. Parallel tasks need not take exactly
the same amount of time to complete. Since the start of
Purchasing requires that all the selection work has been
completed, you have extra time available to select hardware and
cables, measured by:
Time(Software) - (Time(Server) + Time(Cables)) = Time(Slack)
Slack time is the extra time available to complete the shorter
parallel tasks. Its another hidden resource for the professional
project manager. Youll learn much more about slack time in later
chapters. For now, remember this key point: slack lowers risk.
When theres extra time before the successor task begins, lateness
in a task (as long as it doesnt exceed the available slack) isnt
74 Practical Project Management
Resource Management
Choosing to shop for software parallel to shopping for the server
and cables presupposes that you have the staff available to do
both jobs simultaneously. In reality, you may not. Since making
tasks parallel saves time at the expense of resources, you must
have the resources available in the first place.
For example, if youve set up all your tasks so that they are full-
time equivalent (i.e., every task takes a full-time person for its
duration), and you have three people on your project team, you
cant make more than three tasks parallel at any one time.
You may have a situation in which a dependency relationship
exists between two tasks, not because the tasks are related, but
because the second task cant begin until the person performing
the first task finishes with that task. Resources, then, can force
dependency relationships.
When you manage multiple, simultaneous projects, you may have
cross-project dependencies. If the same team handles multiple
projects, Worker A may do Task A for Project B and then move
on to do Task D for Project C. If Worker A runs overschedule on
Task A, Task D necessarily starts late. Therefore, in a very real
sense, Task D/Project C is dependent on Task A/Project Ba
cross-project dependency.
Laying Out the Project 75
Types of Dependencies
The common understanding of dependency is that if Task B is
dependent upon Task A, then Task B cant start until Task A is
complete. This is called a finish-to-start (FS) dependency. While
its the most frequently-encountered type of dependency, its not
the only one. As you lay out your project, youll encounter
various types of dependencies, including these:
Finish-to-finish (FF) dependency
Start-to-start (SS) dependency
Start-to-finish (SF) dependency
Overlaps
Lag
The rest of this chapter focuses on each of these dependencies.
Overlaps
Sometimes there is a relationship between tasks that doesnt
involve the exact start or finish. You can overlap these tasks. For
example, in figure 4.2, Purchasing may be FS-dependent upon
Select Cables and Select Software for efficiency reasons. (Some
organizations have complex procurement processes, and doing it
all together may be desirable.) But, on the other hand, you might
be able to use an overlap relationship for these tasks. Start the
purchasing process after the starts of Select Server and Select
Software, buying each item in the mix as soon as the selection
Laying Out the Project 77
Lag
Imagine that you purchased your server, cables, and software by
mail order. Now you have a lag between the time when the
purchase is complete and the time when you can begin Wire
Office and Set Up Server. That time lag is the time you spend
waiting for the packages to arrive. Its easy to forget lag when
youre mapping out a project planmake sure you account for
any delays.
Tip: For significant periods of lag, draw it in the project
schedule so you cant forget it.
Remember, at this point, you should consider your project layout
tentative. You need a basic layout so you can continue the
process. By creating a basic layout, youve made some strategic
decisions, but you still dont have all the facts. Revisit the project
layout as you gain greater knowledge of your project, since
decisions about your final layout have a substantial impact on
your projects outcome.
78 Practical Project Management
Exercise #5:
Making Your Own
Sticky Note PERT
Youve been asked to put together a word processing system for
your department secretary. The system is to consist of a
computer, a word processing package, and a printer. Using the
WBS shown below, create a Sticky Note PERT layout. For the
purposes of this exercise, try to make tasks parallel when
possible. Assume all dependencies are FS-type.
You will need some sticky notes or small sheets of paper and a
surface to lay them out on.
WP System
Purchasing Train
Laying Out the Project 79
Answer to Exercise #5
Here is one possible project layout. If youve made different
choices, you havent necessarily completed the exercise
incorrectly. Compare this version to your own version to check
your understanding of the process.
Choose
Computer Train
Needs Purchasing
Choose Install
Software
Analyzing
Your Tasks
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82 Practical Project Management
Task Name:
Predecessor Task(s):
Successor Task(s):
Specifications/Deliverables:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
ResourcesPeople/Department:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Equipment/Supplies:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Time Estimate:
Must Start ____________ Must Finish ____________
Milestones:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Optimistic ________ Pessimistic ________ Most Likely _______
Cost Estimate:
Salaries $____________________
Equipment/Supplies $____________________
Contract Costs $____________________
Overhead @ ____% $____________________
TOTAL $____________________
Fig. 5.1. The success of any project depends on how well you analyze each
individual task. A Task Analysis Form similar to the one shown here can
aid you in analyzing a projects tasks.
86 Practical Project Management
Task Number
Youll find it convenient to number your tasks. You can number
tasks sequentially (1 to X), or you can create your own system.
For the LAN project, the elements of the WBS are numbered first
as follows:
1. Management
2. Purchasing
3. Install/Test
4. Training
Wire Offices is the first task in the third WBS category, making
it Task 3-1 (see fig. 5.2).
Task Name
The Task Name in this example is obviously Wire Offices. You
can simply use the name you gave the task in the third level of
the WBS.
Task No: Task Name:
Specifications/Deliverables:
Cable must connect all 25 workstations to central server.
Wire to be completely encased in wall or ceiling.
Must avoid disrupting department work.
Fig. 5.4. Use the Task Analysis Form to note the vital specifications and
deliverables.
88 Practical Project Management
ResourcesPeople/Department
Claudia Browne, Maintenance
Chad Cowles, MIS Department
Fig. 5.5. Assigning people to the tasks requires thoughtful analysis. If you
dont have enough information at this point to assign actual people, list the
skills team members will need to complete the tasks.
Human Resources
Allocating human resources to tasks is one of the most complex
parts of task analysis. You must take into account the following:
Skills. Can the people you have available to you do the job?
Availability. Can the people you are considering be there
when you need them?
Other obligations. What other responsibilities and
commitments do these people have? These impact availability.
You may find that you dont have enough information to properly
allocate resources to tasks at this stage of the planning process.
Instead of assigning people, assign skills. For example, instead of
Claudia, you could write: 60 people-hours of work requiring
skills in wiring and building maintenance. Assign team consisting
of maintenance and MIS people. As the planning process
continues, you can choose the actual team members
(see fig. 5.5).
Analyzing Your Tasks 89
Equipment/Supplies
Forcing yourself to think about the supplies and equipment can
help avoid costly surprises later. Be sure to consider every aspect
of the task. Recall from Chapter 2 how easy it was to forget such
essential items as utensils and paper plates when planning for the
company picnic. Dont overlook the obvious! (See fig. 5.6.)
Equipment/Supplies
Stepladder, wire fish equipment, cable, outlet boxes,
standard toolbox.
All tools available in-office except for cable and outlet boxes.
Fig. 5.6. Notice that in addition to listing the tools needed, its a good idea
to note where they can be obtained.
Time Estimate
Must Start N/A____ Must Finish N/A____
Milestones
50 percent of offices wired (2.5 wks.)
100 percent of offices wired (3.5 wks.)
Outlet boxes installed and wiring connected (4 wks.)
Optimistic 2 wks. Pessimistic 9 wks.
Most Likely 4 wks.
Fig. 5.7. Estimating the time required to complete a task isnt an exact
science, but you can learn to make fairly accurate estimates. Record them
on the Task Analysis Form.
Cost Estimate
Salaries $ __________________________
Equipment/Supplies $ __________________________
Contract Costs $ __________________________
Overhead @ ____% $ __________________________
TOTAL $ __________________________
Fig. 5.8. Project costs can include fixed costs and variable costs. Salaries
are a variable cost, while equipment and supplies are a fixed cost.
Analyzing Your Tasks 93
Fig. 5.9. A Control Point Identification Chart can help you anticipate problems early on and solve them before theyre
beyond your control.
Analyzing Your Tasks 97
Exercise #6:
Prepare a
Task Analysis
A. In the previous chapter, you put together a Sticky Note PERT
chart for a word processing system. Now, prepare a mini-task
analysis for one of the tasks on that PERT Chart. Youll notice
that some elements on the Task Analysis Form have been
eliminated because they arent necessary on a project of this
size.
Task No:
Task Name:
Predecessor Task(s):
Successor Task(s):
Specifications/Deliverables:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
ResourcesPeople/Department:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Equipment/Supplies:
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Since this is a sample project and you dont know the names
of specific people, describe skills in the Resources section.
Analyzing Your Tasks 101
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104 Practical Project Management
Fig. 6.1. The best caseT(o)is usually closer to T(m) than the worst
caseT(p)is.
Even though the curve in figure 6.1 shows the shape of the time
distribution, it doesnt reflect the relative probability of T(o) and
T(p) actually happening. Although Murphys Law would indicate
Managing Time and Cost 109
that T(p) is more probable than T(o), it really isnt. You dont
know the relative probability. On all tasks in all projects, the
relative probability of the extremes should be about even. This
gives the standard bell curve distribution.
Fig. 6.2. Although you dont know the relative probability of T(p) or T(o)
occurring, it should be even for the extremes. This produces a bell-shaped
distribution.
Third, you get into the liars contest with your boss or client.
Thats when you always add two weeks to each estimate to be on
the safe side. Your boss learns this and automatically cuts two
weeks off any time estimate you submit. So you start adding four.
That way adds madnessor dismissal.
A B C
Task T(e) m m2
A 5.17 1.17 1.36
B 8.67 3.00 9.00
C 2.00 0.33 0.11
Using the values in Table 6.2, the total time for Tasks A, B, and C
is equal to the sum of T(e) for A, B, C, which works out to 15.84
weeks.
What, then, is the standard deviation for A, B, C? At first glance, it
looks like 4.5, which is the answer when you add up the m
values. But that cant be the answer, since the chance of all three
tasks running late must be less than the chance of any one task
running late. If 4.5 is too high, the average sigma (m) value (1.5)
is too small, since the standard deviation must be greater than the
greatest individual m value.
To calculate the sigma (m) value for A, B, C, you must first square
the standard deviations for each task, add them up, and then take
the square root of the sum (the square root of the sum of the
squares).
116 Practical Project Management
t
Fig. 6.4. Crash analysis is a way of estimating the effect of applying
additional resources to a project.
Exercise #7:
PERT
Time Exercise
The easiest way to complete this exercise is to use a spreadsheet
program. Set up the information shown in the table on the next
page. Then calculate T(e), m, and m2 for all the tasks A through J.
Next, assume that theres a sequence of tasks, A, C, E, F, and G,
to be completed in that order.
What is the T(e) for all those tasks?
What is the sum of the squares of the standard deviations of
the individual tasks?
What is the standard deviation of the path sequence (the
square root of the sum of the squares)?
Write your answers in the boxes provided in the table.
Managing Time and Cost 121
For Tasks A, C, E, F, G
T(e)
- m2
m
Formulas:
For Tasks A, C, E, F, G
T(e) 33.17
- m2 20.31
m 4.506
How to Make
and Use a
Gantt Chart
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124 Practical Project Management
Gantt Chart
Weeks
Task 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1. Needs Analysis
2. Choose Computer
3. Choose Software
4. Purchase
5. Train
6. Install
Fig. 7.1. A Gantt Chart showing the tasks involved in buying a word
processor.
126 Practical Project Management
The only tricky part here is coming up with time estimates for
Task 1, Project Management. You need to know how to
determine the Critical Path, which will be covered in detail in the
next chapter. As a quick preview, to calculate the time for
Project Management, you have to put the task times in the
Sticky Note PERT outline (see fig. 4.2). You need to look for the
longest path, and add up the times for those tasks. In other
words, the time it takes to manage the project is equal to the time
the project itself takes. The longest path in your project is called
the Critical Path.
Armed with the Task Table, the next job is to draw the Gantt
Chart itself. The Gantt Chart in figure 7.2 was drawn by project
management software rather than by hand. (For a brief discussion
of the pros and cons of project management software, see the
accompanying sidebar, titled Computers and Project
Management.)
As you study the Gantt Chart of the sample project, remember
that the project was due in 16 weeks, or by the end of the fiscal
year (September 30, lets assume). According to the draft Gantt
Chart, the project will be finished at the end of the week of
October 1 a week behind schedule! (You could also determine
this by looking at the duration of the Project Management task. If
there are 80 available days16 weeksand the estimated
duration is 85 days, the project clearly is not on track for the
planned deadline.)
Has a mistake been made? Not at all. Its extremely difficult to see
how long a project will take until the Task Table is prepared and
the first Gantt Chart is drawn. The odds are that your first draft
will tend to be over-deadline. Dont worryno Gantt Chart is
ever wrong until its the version you make official.
The job now is to see how you can shorten the duration of the
project without affecting quality.
June July August September October
ID Name Duration Predecessors 6/11 6/18 6/25 7/2 7/9 7/16 7/23 7/30 8/6 8/13 8/20 8/27 9/3 9/10 9/17 9/24 10/1 10/8
Fig. 7.2. A Gantt Chart for installing a LAN, drawn with project management software.
132 Practical Project Management
Task T(e) m m2
Needs Analysis 11.33 2.00 4.00
Specifications 6.67 1.67 2.78
Select Software 14.17 2.50 6.25
Purchasing 4.00 2.33 5.44
Wire Offices 23.33 5.00 25.00
Connect Network 5.33 1.33 1.78
Test/Debug 15.00 6.67 44.44
Acceptance 5.50 1.17 1.36
Totals 85.33 91.06
Square Root of std. dev. = 9.54
2m = 19.08
95% Confidence 104 days
Available 80 days
NEED TO CUT 24 days
ID Name Duration Predecessors 6/11 6/18 6/25 7/2 7/9 7/16 7/23 7/30 8/6 8/13 8/20 8/27 9/3 9/10 9/17 9/24
10 Set Up Server 5d 7
11 Develop Training 16d 8
12 Install Software 5d 10
13 Connect Network 5d 9, 12
14 Train Users 10d 11, 13
15 Test/Debug 15d 13,
16 Acceptance 6d 14, 15
Task T(e) m m2
Needs Analysis 11.33 2.00 4.00
Specifications 1.67 1.67 2.78
(-5 days for
overlap)
Select Software 14.17 2.50 6.25
Purchasing 4.00 2.33 5.44
Wire Offices 13.54 4.38 19.14
Connect Network 5.33 1.33 1.78
Test/Debug 15.00 6.67 44.44
Acceptance 5.50 1.17 1.36
Totals 70.54 85.20
Square Root of std. dev. = 9.23
2m = 18.46
95% Confidence 89 days
Available 80 days
NEED TO CUT 9 days
still need 89 days for 95 percent certainty. Since you only have
80, youre somewhere between 67 percent and 95 percent
confident of meeting the goallets say around 75 percent. Thats
without extra effort on your part. Figure 7.3 shows a Gantt Chart
based on the revised task table, and Table 7.7 shows the total
project duration.
(If the math still seems confusing, use this section as a reference
guide on your next project. Do each step in the process one at a
142 Practical Project Management
time, using your project. Youll find that the answers will make
better sense to you when theyre based on work you have
experience with.)
Fig. 7.4. Gantt Chart showing staff requirements for each week of the LAN installation project.
144 Practical Project Management
As you can see from the Gantt Chart in figure 7.4, your staff
requirements for this project break down as follows:
Two people during three weeks of the total project
Four people during two weeks of the project
Three people during all the remaining weeks
How many people do you need? Two is too few, four is wasteful,
and three is sometimes insufficient.
Because three is the most common resource requirement, start
with a team size of three, counting the project manager. This
brings up two problems.
First, what do you do in the weeks in which you employ more
people than you need? Is that wasteful? Not if you are proactive.
The extra, or slack, resources, may be able to do extra work to
speed up other tasks. This is an essentially free way to crash-time
tasks. Slack resources may also be used to reduce project risk
you have resources you can keep in reserve for emergencies. Or,
they may be assigned useful organizational work that doesnt
involve your project. However you decide to use your reserves,
consider yourself lucky: few project managers ever have to worry
about not having enough work for their staff to do.
The second, and more serious, problem with creating a three-
member team is what to do in weeks when the staff requirement
is greater than project team size. Remember, during two weeks of
the project, youll require four team members. There are two
potential solutions:
1. Adjust the resources to fit the schedule. Theres no rule
that all team members must be start-to-finish members of
the project team. You may have a core of team members who
remain with the project throughout its lifespan, and others
who come in as needed, either to supplement the team or to
supply specialized talents. Plus, theres always overtime
another way to add resources to meet peak demand.
How to Make and Use a Gantt Chart 145
Lets assume Bob does have the necessary skills. You assign all
his tasks, but find out that theres nothing else for him to do after
he finishes training users. Hes now a slack resource. Slack at
the end of the project is not as useful as slack during a project,
but it does mean he is available for crash support at the end of
the project. Since you dont have as much margin in your
schedule as you ideally wanted, he may be a good emergency
resource for later. Perhaps he can help with the end of Test/
Debug and Acceptance. Or, he can be released early, lowering
project salary costs.
Now, assign work to your temporary employee, Claudia (see fig.
7.7). Inspect the Project Gantt Chart for the overload period,
looking for tasks that fit together, both in terms of their schedule
location and the skills required. The two construction-trade jobs,
Wire Office and Connect Network seem like good back-to-
back possibilities. (Notice that these jobs require specialized
skills, so you must recruit a temporary resource with those skills.)
Assign those to Claudia Geary.
June July August September
ID Name Duration Predecessors 6/11 6/18 6/25 7/2 7/9 7/16 7/23 7/30 8/6 8/13 8/20 8/27 9/3 9/10 9/17 9/24
Slack
Resource
Time
How to Make and Use a Gantt Chart
Fig. 7.6. Resource Gantt Chart for Bob Hancock. His slack resource time is shown by the arrows.
150 Practical Project Management
That leaves Rey Harter. Assign his work as you did Bobs, looking
for potential skill and task conflicts. Assume you dont find any.
Unfortunately, you do find a different problem: there are no tasks
available for him to perform from the middle of the week of 8/6
to the beginning of the week of 8/20 (see fig. 7.8). Rey is now a
slack resource for that period.
This situation is actually desirable, because Rey can serve as
emergency support for any problems that occur during the
Connect Network and Develop Training tasks assigned to that
period. Again, the presence of slack resource time lowers project
risk, because Rey and Bob can be shifted to speed up key project
tasks or to handle emergencies as they crop up. Although slack
resource time is not infinitely flexible, its still an asset.
(Tip! Though it sometimes seems sensible to schedule less
qualified or productive employees as slack resources, remember
that your slack resources are also your emergency reserve. More
flexible employees may be a better choice. Also, if you are a
working project manageryou must do technical tasks on your
own projectsschedule yourself as the slack resource to the
extent possible to improve your flexibility and ability to meet
changing demands.)
June July August September
ID Name Duration Predecessors 6/11 6/18 6/25 7/2 7/9 7/16 7/23 7/30 8/6 8/13 8/20 8/27 9/3 9/10 9/17 9/24
3 Specifications 7d 2FS-5d
4 Select Server 8d 3
6 Select Cables 5d 4
7 Purchasing 4d 5, 6
10 Set Up Server 5d 7
12 Install Software 5d 10
15 Test/Debug 15d 13
16 Acceptance 6d 14, 15
Slack
Resource
Time
How to Make and Use a Gantt Chart
Fig. 7.8. Resource Gantt Chart for Rey Harter. His slack resource time is shown by the arrow.
154 Practical Project Management
Exercise #8:
Create Your Own
Gantt Chart
Create a Gantt Chart from the following Task Table.
Task Table
Task Duration Dependency
A 2 N/A
B 1 A
C 2 A
D 1 B, C
E 2 D
F 1 D
G 1 E, F
156 Practical Project Management
Gantt Chart
Weeks
Task 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
How to Make and Use a Gantt Chart 157
Gantt Chart
Weeks
Task 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
G
Using PERT
and CPM
Charts
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160 Practical Project Management
1 2w 2 1.08w
6/6/95 6/19/95 6/20/95 6/27/95
Fig. 8.1. Activity on node charting for sample LAN installation project.
Select Cables is dependent on Select Server.
162 Practical Project Management
Figure 8.2 shows that Select Software and Select Server are
both dependent on Specifications. They are parallel to one
another.
1 1.5w 3 3w
6/6/95 6/15/95 6/15/95 7/6/95
Select Server
2 2w
6/15/95 6/29/95
Fig. 8.2. Both the Select Software task and the Select Server task are
dependent on Specifications, but theyre parallel to each other.
Using PERT and CPM Charts 163
1 3w 3 0.92w
6/6/95 6/26/95 6/27/95 7/3/95
Select Cables
2 1.08w
6/6/95 6/13/95
Fig. 8.3. Activity on node charting for sample LAN installation project.
Purchasing is dependent on both Select Software and Select Cables.
They are parallel to one another.
164 Practical Project Management
1 3w 4 3w
6/6/95 6/26/95 6/27/95 7/17/95
2 1.08w 3 0.92w
6/6/95 6/13/95 6/27/95 7/3/95
Fig. 8.4. Both Manuals and Purchasing are dependent on two tasks:
Select Software and Select Cables. Further, both sets of tasks are parallel
to one another.
Using PERT and CPM Charts 165
2 1.29w 4 3w
6/6/95 6/14/95 6/14/95 7/5/95
1 2w 3 2.17w
6/6/95 6/19/95 6/20/95 7/4/95
Fig. 8.5. In this phase, Test/Debug and Train Users are dependent on
Connect Network. There are two sets of parallel tasks: Connect Network
and Develop Training, and Test/Debug and Train Users.
166 Practical Project Management
Select Select
Server Cables
Select
Software
Specification
Select
Server
Select
Software
Purchasing
Select
Cables
Select Manuals
Software
Select
Cables Purchasing
Connect Test/
Network Debug
14
16
15
Dummy
13
12
11
9
10
1
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
Fig. 8.8. The entire project network using activity on arrow charting.
Using PERT and CPM Charts 171
Paths
A path is a sequence of tasks in a dependent order. A full path is
a sequence that leads from the first task of a project to the final
path of the project. A path segment is a sequence of tasks in
between two tasks that are inside the project; that is, not
including both the first and the last task.
The length of a full path or a path segment is the sum of the
times of the tasks on that path.
The Critical Path is the longest full path in a project. You may
have multiple critical paths if more than one path is tied in length
for the longest path.
Tasks
A critical task is a task on the critical path.
A noncritical task is a task on any path or path segment that isnt
critical.
Slack
Slack and float are synonyms (this book uses slack) that refer to
the extra time available to perform noncritical tasks. Slack comes
in two varieties: total slack and free slack. Total slack is the
amount of time a task can be delayed without delaying the end of
the project. Free slack is the amount of time a task can be delayed
without delaying the start of the next task.
172 Practical Project Management
Project Mgmt.
1 71d
6/12/95 9/18/95
2 11d 3 7d 5 14d
6/12/95 6/26/95 6/20/95 6/28/95 6/29/95 7/18/95
4 8d 6 5d 7 4d
6/29/95 7/10/95 7/11/95 7/17/95 7/19/95 7/24/95
Manuals
8 8d
7/19/95 7/28/95
Wire Offices
9 14d
7/25/95 8/11/95
10 5d 12 5d 13 5d 15 15d
7/25/95 7/31/95 8/1/95 8/7/95 8/14/95 8/18/95 8/21/95 9/8/95
11 16d 14 10d 16 6d
7/31/95 8/21/95 8/22/95 9/4/95 9/11/95 9/18/95
Path Times
2-3-5-7-9-13-15-16 71
2-3-5-7-9-13-14-16 66
2-3-5-7-10-12-13-15-16 67
2-3-5-7-10-12-13-14-16 62
2-3-4-6-7-9-13-15-16 69
2-3-4-6-7-9-13-14-16 64
2-3-4-6-7-10-12-13-15-16 66
2-3-4-6-7-10-12-13-14-16 61
2-3-4-6-8-11-14-16 64
For each task, if the early start and late start dates are identical,
the task is on the Critical Path. If there is a difference between the
early start and late start dates, the difference is the available slack
for that task.
Here is a table of early start and late start dates prepared by
software for the sample LAN installation project. It shows
available free slack and total slack in elapsed days (ed).
Table 8.2 Early Start and Late Start Dates for Sample LAN Installation Project
178
ID Name Scheduled Start Scheduled Finish Late Start Scheduled Finish Free Slack Total Slack
1 Project Mgmt. 6/12/96 8:00 am 9/18/96 5:00 pm 6/12/96 8:00 am 9/18/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
2 Needs Analysis 6/12/96 8:00 am 6/26/96 5:00 pm 6/12/96 8:00 am 6/26/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
3 Specifications 6/20/96 8:00 am 6/28/96 5:00 pm 6/20/96 8:00 am 6/28/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
4 Select Server 6/29/96 8:00 am 7/10/96 5:00 pm 6/30/96 8:00 am 7/11/96 5:00 pm 0.63ed 1ed
5 Select Software 6/29/96 8:00 am 7/18/96 5:00 pm 6/29/96 8:00 am 7/18/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
6 Select Cables 7/11/96 8:00 am 7/17/96 5:00 pm 7/12/96 8:00 am 7/18/96 5:00 pm 1ed 1ed
7 Purchasing 7/19/96 8:00 am 7/24/96 5:00 pm 7/19/96 8:00 am 7/24/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
8 Manuals 7/19/96 8:00 am 7/28/96 5:00 pm 7/25/96 8:00 am 8/3/96 5:00 pm 2.63ed 6ed
Practical Project Management
9 Wire Offices 7/25/96 8:00 am 8/11/96 5:00 pm 7/25/96 8:00 am 8/11/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
10 Set Up Server 7/25/96 8:00 am 7/31/96 5:00 pm 7/31/96 8:00 am 8/4/96 5:00 pm 0.63ed 4ed
11 Develop Training 7/31/96 8:00 am 8/21/96 5:00 pm 8/4/96 8:00 am 8/25/96 5:00 pm 0.63ed 4ed
12 Install Software 8/1/96 8:00 am 8/7/96 5:00 pm 8/7/96 8:00 am 8/11/96 5:00 pm 4ed 4ed
13 Connect Network 8/14/96 8:00 am 8/18/96 5:00 pm 8/14/96 8:00 am 8/18/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
14 Train Users 8/22/96 8:00 am 9/4/96 5:00 pm 8/28/96 8:00 am 9/8/96 5:00 pm 4ed 4ed
15 Test/Debug 8/21/96 8:00 am 9/8/96 5:00 pm 8/21/96 8:00 am 9/8/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
16 Acceptance 9/11/96 8:00 am 9/18/96 5:00 pm 9/11/96 8:00 am 9/18/96 5:00 pm 0ed 0ed
Using PERT and CPM Charts 179
When you identify problems of high m and low (or no) slack, you
can do any of the following:
Redesign the workflow to put those tasks on paths with more
slack.
Add resources to lower risk.
Give more management attention to those tasks.
Redesign the task itself to lower its risk.
Move your resources where the problems are. As youll
recall, a slack resource is a resource on your team who does not
have a current assignment. Perhaps there was no assignment
available at that time. Perhaps the slack resource is performing a
noncritical task and cannot be reassigned to new work until the
path segment is finished. If the resource has the ability to help
out elsewhere in the project, the resource may be assigned either
in advance, as part of your planning, or held in reserve for
emergencies.
For example, Task 6, Select Cables, has one day of slack, both
free and total. If you have assigned a full-time staff member to
that task, that person has one day of slack in his or her schedule.
If there is a problem with Task 5, Select Software, which runs
parallel and is on the Critical Path, the person can be selecting
the software. That person has shifted for one day to get the work
done with no consequence for the project deadline. If there is a
problem in Task 6, that person can be up to one day behind
schedule with no consequence for the project deadline. As you
can see, slack lowers risk.
Adjust task start and finish dates to meet your needs.
Holding some slack in reserve for emergencies is good project
management strategy. Another option is to schedule some tasks
for late start rather than early start. For example, you could start
Install Software on 8/2/96, or deliberately choose to have it start
Using PERT and CPM Charts 181
Exercise #8:
Determine the
Critical Path
Using the chart below, answer Questions 1 to 3 regarding Critical
Path.
2 5 7
Select Delivery
Software Lag Time Installation
5 days 6 days 1 day
1 4 8
Needs
Analysis Purchasing Acceptance
5 days 1 day 1 day
3 6
Select
Computer Training
3 days 3 days
184 Practical Project Management
Ch
ap
te
r
9
188 Practical Project Management
Fig. 9.1. Budget Worksheet for the Sample LAN Installation Project.
198 Practical Project Management
Youll notice immediately that the initial pass puts you more than
$8,000 over budgetand thats before you even get started on the
work! You may have also noticed something else: if you werent
charged the benefits and overhead burdens, youd be nearly
$4,000 under budget!
Although this can be frustrating, it shouldnt be surprising.
Overhead and benefits are real organizational costs, and they
must be accounted for. In a previous chapter, you were able to
lower your time estimate for the project. Now lets see what you
can do to lower budget projections.
One idea you used to save time wont work for money: making
tasks parallel. While time can be paralleled, money cant be.
Money doesnt care if its on the Critical Path or not.
Here are several tools that do work to help create a workable
final budget:
Eliminate nonessential elements. Take a good look at each
task. Does it need to be done at all? Does it need to be done
the way youve designed?
Check crash time results. Because certain costs go away
when a project is shortened, sometimes crashing a given task
can save more than it costs when the entire project is
considered.
Do it a cheaper way. Look at your specifications. Do you
really need the high-priced spread, or will Brand X achieve
the same results?
Move slack resources. Use the reverse crash method to
see if you can save money by using some of your slack.
Spend money that isnt budgeted to your project. If
youre charged for contracts but not for staff work, use staff
work even if the real cost is higher, because that money isnt
charged to your project.
Budgeting for Projects 199
Fig. 9.2. Revised Budget Worksheet for the sample LAN installation project.
202 Practical Project Management
You might want to develop one final tool to help you manage
and track project costs: a Budget Control Chart. The Budget
Control Chart is a graph that shows cumulative project costs over
the life of the project. At the beginning, you know planned costs,
but not actual. As your project progresses, you can enter actual
costs as they are incurred. Use that information to track your
performance and anticipate potential problems (see fig. 9.3).
Week of Cumulative $ 40,00
0
June 11 $ 1,170
35,000
June 18 2,762
June 25 4,635 30,000
July 2 7,210 25,000
July 9 9,785
July 16 17,157 20,000
July 23 19,732 15,000
July 30 22,974
10,000
August 6 26,134
August 13 29,541 5,000
August 20 31,689
0
August 27 35,761
Sept. 3 37,213
S1
Sept. 10 38,383
June 11
July 2
June 18
July 9
August 13
August 20
August 27
Sept. 10
Budgeting for Projects
Sept. 17
203
Fig. 9.3. A sample Budget Control Chart for the sample LAN installation project.
Managing
the Project
Ch
ap
te
r
10
206 Practical Project Management
For example, you need gasoline to power your car. By itself, this
is neither ethical nor unethical. How you get the gasoline is an
ethical choice: you can buy it or you can steal it. The car will run
when you put gasoline in it. By itself, that is neither ethical nor
unethical. How you drive the car is an ethical choice: you can
drive safely or disregard the rules of the road. What you do with
the car is an ethical choice: you can use it as an ambulance or in
a drive-by shooting. Gasoline and the running car by themselves
are ethically neutral. The point? How you acquire and how you
use power, and the purposes for which you use your power are
subject to ethical rules. The mere fact of power considered alone
is morally and ethically neutral.
In the world of people and organizations, the same logic applies.
You need power to get any work done. Because you have a
commitment to principled behavior, you need to know ways to
acquire and use power that are ethical and appropriate.
If you take this as an endorsement of office politics, you are
correct. How can this book endorse office politics, when they are
so often at the core of project manager frustration and failure?
Because theyre real.
Office politics are a reality in any organization of three or more
people. Office politics are simply what we use to describe the
informal and sometimes emotionally-driven process of working
out goals among people with conflicting interests. People want
what they want, and you must deal with that.
Some people prefer the term organizational dynamics to
describe this process, and thats a legitimate term. However, the
more vibrant phrase office politics gives more of the flavor of
the human conflict and personalities at its core. Organizational
dynamics is more formal; office politics are informaland the
informal power structure in the organization is usually where the
action takes place.
To understand how and where you currently fit, and how you
might change your position if necessary, take the following quiz.
Managing the Project 211
Q uiz
The purpose and value of this quiz is to get you thinking
about your current and official level of authority concerning
your own project. Take the time to write your answers to
each question fully, using extra paper. Its important to write
your responses down; youll see your ideas more clearly and
be able to use them more effectively.
1. How would your boss define your current official role in
managing your project? Is your official authority in writing,
or informal?
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
2. List the resources (people, tools, systems) you need to
accomplish the project goal. Then describe, specifically,
how much official control you have over each resource.
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
3. What authority (if any) do you have to make or approve
purchases, to negotiate and approve contracts, or to make
other decisions that bind your organization legally or
financially?
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
___________________________________________________
212 Practical Project Management
Goals
Roles
Expectations
Attitudes
Time
222 Practical Project Management
dont know any better. Learning to fill out the forms right might
take some extra short-term effort, but it will likely speed up forms
completion and will definitely speed up Purchasings response
time.
Managing other departments is the same as managing team
members who dont formally report to you. Always ask Marilyn
Moates Kennedys question: What can I do for you that will make
you want to do it my way?
11
228 Practical Project Management
16. Acceptance 6 0 0 0
TOTALS N/A N/A 204 N/A 0 $39,851 N/A $0
229
230 Practical Project Management
Milestone Chart
You can also build a Milestone Chart. This is a checklist of key
events and their scheduled completion dates. Key events are
either points requiring approval to proceed or measurable and
verifiable accomplishments that tell you the work is going well.
Accepted September 19
Monitor and Adjust 231
Reporting System
You can set up a reporting system. Reporting systems, by their
nature, must be customized around the project and organization.
The most important point about a good reporting system is that
people follow it. Use these principles:
1. Dont ask for information you dont need. Think about
how you will use each bit of information in your report.
2. Design your own report formats. Combat the natural
human tendency to tell you what you want to hear, or to
make the reporter look good.
3. Use graphics when possible. A picture is worth a thousand
words, particularly where reports are concerned. People take
money, time, and other quantifiable variables far more
seriously if they are visually striking.
Meeting Schedule
You can set up a meeting schedule, but remember that although
meetings may be necessary, theyre not automatically effective.
Many project managers assume that everyone knows how to have
a meeting, and then theyre frequently surprised. As a manager,
take meetings seriouslyand expect others to do so as well. Use
these principles to plan your meeting schedule.
1. Make sure enough has changed to justify a new meeting.
You can schedule meetings along with milestones or on a
regular basis, but choose the frequency based on progress. If
all your tasks are weekly, daily meetings are suspect.
2. Have an agenda and purpose for each meeting. Although
most managers know that agendas are important, many dont
use them. When people who will be attending the meeting
know what the meeting is for and know how to prepare, they
are more likely to be productive.
232 Practical Project Management
Monitoring System
You can set up a monitoring system, including inspections,
progress reviews, tests, audits, and other techniques. Use your
plan as a guide, and insist that all reviews involve reference to
the plan.
The key issue in monitoring is that you realize its importance to
project success. Keep your eye on the ball from project start to
project finish.
4 Purchasing 1d 0%
6 Training 3d
7 Installation 1d 0%
8 Acceptance 1d 0%
Fig. 11.1. A Tracking Gantt chart for the sample Purchase a Word Processing System project discussed in Chapter 8.
236 Practical Project Management
Plan Actual
Day Cost Cumulative Day Cost Cumulative
1 $100 $100 1 $100 $100
2 $100 $200 2 $100 $200
3 $100 $300 3 $100 $300
4 $100 $400 4 $100 $400
5 $100 $500 5 $100 $500
6 $200 $700 6 $200 $700
7 $200 $900 7 $200 $900
8 $200 $1,100 8 $200 $1,100
9 $100 $1,200 9 $100 $1,200
10 $100 $1,300 10 $100 $1,300
11 $3,100 $4,400 11 $100 $1,400
12 $175 $4,575 12 $100 $1,500
13 $175 $4,750 13 $100 $1,600
14 $175 $4,925 14 $3,100 $4,700
15 $75 $5,000 15 $175 $4,875
16 $75 $5,075 16 $175 $5,050
17 $75 $5,150 17 $175 $5,225
18 $100 $5,250 18 $75 $5,300
19 $100 $5,350 19 $75 $5,375
20 End $5,350 20 $75 $5,450
21 21 $100 $5,550
22 22 $100 $5,650
Fig. 11.2. The Budget Control Chart for the Word Processing System
project.
Monitor and Adjust 237
The second PERT chart shows the impact of going with the -5,
$300 overnight delivery option. The time from Purchasing
through Delivery and Installation to Acceptance is 4 days, but the
time from Purchasing through Training to Acceptance is 5 days.
The Critical Path has changed! It takes five days to get through
these tasks. (The total project time, however, is 18 days: youre
going to end up a day ahead of schedule! See fig. 11.5)
The third PERT chart shows the impact of going with the -4, $200
second-day delivery option. The time from Purchasing through
Delivery and Installation to Acceptance is 5 daysand so is the
time to get there through Training! In other words, there are now
two critical pathsand this project phase takes five days either
way! You still end up with an 18-day total time estimate.
Common sense says that overnight delivery is a day faster than
second-day delivery, but the PERT chart shows that in this case
there is no time difference. (Some project managers might argue
that paying the extra $100 is a good idea because Installation
might be troublesome. Thats a legitimate argument if you feel
that the risk justifies the expense. However, youre not spending
the $100 to save time; youre spending it for a different purpose:
risk reduction.)
$6,000
$5,000
$4,000
$3,000
Plan
$2,000 Actual/Forecast
$1,000
$0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
Monitor and Adjust
Fig. 11.3. Graphical representation of the budget versus actual amounts spent for the Word Processing System project.
239
240 Practical Project Management
Deliver y Installation
Lag
6 days 1 day
Purchasing Acceptance
1 day 1 day
Training
3 days
Deliver y Installation
Lag
1 day 1 day
Purchasing Acceptance
1 day 1 day
Training
3 days
Fig. 11.4b. Paying for overnight delivery. Notice the Critical Path has
changed.
Deliver y Installation
Lag
2 days 1 day
Purchasing Acceptance
1 day 1 day
Training
3 days
Fig. 11.4c. Paying for second-day delivery. Notice there are now two
Critical Paths.
Monitor and Adjust 241
Now consider the budget. In your first option, you spent an extra
$300, but the budget variance is now only $225 over budget. You
got $75 of the overage back in saved labor costs while cutting
your total project time by one day! (See figs. 11.6 and 11.7.)
You spent an extra $200 in your second option to get back on
your planned schedule. Your total budget variance is now only
$175 overto achieve the same outcome! (See figs. 11.8 and
11.9.)
In some cases, youll find that spending extra money you dont
have can actually lower total budget and time. The reason for
this, of course, is that time and money are flip sides of the same
coin.
As you can see, the Tracking Gantt is not only a powerful tool for
monitoring and control, its also an important element in your
problem-solving strategy.
June 18 June 25 July 2 July 9 July 16
ID Name Duration 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
4 Purchasing 1d 0%
6 Training 3d 0%
7 Installation 1d 0%
8 Acceptance 1d 0%
$5,000
$4,000
$3,000
Plan
$2,000 Actual/Forecast
$1,000
$0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Fig. 11.7. Speeding up system delivery using Option 1 reduces budget overage by $75.
Plan Actual
Day Cost Cumulative Day Cost Cumulative
1 $100 $100 1 $100 $100
2 $100 $200 2 $100 $200
3 $100 $300 3 $100 $300
4 $100 $400 4 $100 $400
5 $100 $500 5 $100 $500
6 $200 $700 6 $200 $700
7 $200 $900 7 $200 $900
8 $200 $1,100 8 $200 $1,100
9 $100 $1,200 9 $100 $1,200
10 $100 $1,300 10 $100 $1,300
11 $3,100 $4,400 11 $100 $1,400
12 $175 $4,575 12 $100 $1,500
13 $175 $4,750 13 $100 $1,600
14 $175 $4,925 14 $3,100 $4,700
15 $75 $5,000 15 $375 $5,075
16 $75 $5,075 16 $175 $5,250
17 $75 $5,150 17 $175 $5,425
18 $100 $5,250 18 $100 $5,525
19 $100 $5,350 19 End $5,525
20 End $5,350 20
21 21
22 22
Fig. 11.8. Budget Control Chart reflecting budget variance using Option 2.
246
$6,000
$5,000
$4,000
Practical Project Management
$3,000
Plan
$2,000 Actual/Forecast
$1,000
$0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Fig. 11.9. Speeding up system delivery using Option 2 reduces budget overage by $125.
Monitor and Adjust 247
Problem-Solving Strategies
The first and best way to eliminate project problems is to
thoroughly and carefully plan. Realistically, youll never be able to
plan so perfectly to eliminate all problems. Its when problems
arise that project managers earn their money. Here are some
problem-solving strategies that work:
Define the real problem. The first element in an effective
problem-solving strategy is to define the problem. The real
problem isnt necessarily the core problem. Use the Five Whys
technique to look behind the problem. Ask why the visible
problem occurred. When you get a reason, ask why that
happened, and so on. Five whys will get you closer to the core
problem, the one that must ultimately be solved. (Five is a
guideline, not an absolute number.)
Return to the Triple Constraints and the ultimate reason for doing
the project in the first place. Your problem is a real problem if
and only if it threatens that reason. If the Critical Path has slipped,
and time is not the driver, you might not be too concerned about
correcting it. If you are over budget, and budget is the weak
constraint, being overbudget may be superior to the alternatives.
If a performance standard hasnt been achieved, the question you
have to ask is how that might affect real qualitythat is, what the
customer needs, wants, or expects.
Verify that the driver and weak constraint are still in the right
order. Once youve properly determined constraint order, it
doesnt tend to slip around (if it does, that suggests it may not
have been properly defined in the first place). However, major
changes in the external environment (new owners, change in
customers, a stock market crash) can change constraint order, and
with it the dynamics of your project. Check for flexibility in the
weak constraint and, if possible, use that flexibility as a problem-
solving tool.
248 Practical Project Management
Fig. 11.10. Using Force Field Analysis, team members can evaluate the
reasons for adopting a solution or identifying reasons a recommended
solution may not work.
Monitor and Adjust 251
Exercise #12:
Draw a Tracking
Gantt Chart
Using the data in the Project Control Chart below, create a
Tracking Gantt Chart from the Gantt Chart on page 255.
A 2 2 0
B 1 2 1
C 2 3 1
D 1 1 0
E 2 1 -1
F 1 1 0
G 1 1 0
Monitor and Adjust 255
12
11
10
9
8
Gantt Chart
7
Weeks
6
5
4
3
2
1
Task
G
A
8
7
Weeks
6
5
4
3
2
1
Task
G
A
Schedule variance is 3 days late (end at day 11 rather than day 8).
Special
Techniques for
Managing
Multiple
Projects
12
258 Practical Project Management
If a project and a task are the same, then a portfolio and a project
are also the same. But keep this in mind: The driver of the
portfolio is not automatically identical to the driver of the
individual projects within the portfolio.
That seems impossible, until you look a little further. On a
project/task level, you might have a project with time as the
driver. That would imply that time is the driver for each task in
the project. But what if a task is noncritical? If it has slack, then
time is not the most restrictive constraint. Therefore, the driver of
the task is different from the driver of the project.
The same thing can be true of your portfolio. You must develop
the portfolios Triple Constraints and analyze their ranking to
determine driver/middle/weak constraint order. This allows you
to prioritize the individual projects within the portfolio and make
the right strategic decisions, such as how to allocate resources
across your projects, in order to optimize the driver.
Because the projects arent particularly interrelated, use a Gantt
Chart approach to track them (see fig. 12.1).
Tip! Sometimes youll find that a large magnetic status board
Gantt Chart is a better tool for multiple project tracking than a
computerized one. You can hold staff meetings around it and
make a much stronger visual impact. Use appropriate technology
to solve your problems, not necessarily high technology.
3rd Quarter 4th Quarter 1st Quarter 2nd Quarter 3rd Quarter 4th Quarter
ID Name June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan
1 Productivity Power
2 Total Quality Cust. Service
3 Write It Right!
4 Risk-Taking
5 Mastering/Communication
6 Secrets/Project Mgmt.
7 Supervisors Nightmares
Special Techniques for Managing Multiple Projects
Fig. 12.1. You can use a Gantt Chart approach to track multiple projects.
262 Practical Project Management
Restoration Group #3
11 26w
6/11/73 12/9/73
Fig. 12.2. The creation of the Smithsonian National Air and Space
Museum was an example of both a large project and an interdependent
project portfolio. This Pert chart gives an idea of the scope and
interrelatedness of the work.
Move-In Aircraft Installation Exhibit Installation Audio-Visual Hookups Test Systems/Dry Run Grand Opening
12 4w 13 8w 14 8w 15 8w 16 4w 17 0d
12/8/75 1/4/76 1/5/76 2/29/76 2/9/76 4/4/76 3/15/76 5/9/76 5/10/76 6/6/76 7/1/76 7/1/76
ID Name Duration 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Fig. 12.3. A Gantt Chart for a layout artist who does layouts for several magazines. Notice that the artist cant overlap
tasks because he is the only resourceand he cant do more than one project at a time.
Special Techniques for Managing Multiple Projects 269
If you hire a second layout artist, does that mean you can now
put out 40 issues per year? It depends on whether two layout
artists is still your least resource. Perhaps editors are now more
limited.
Whenever you have the power to add resources, add least
resources first to achieve maximum production. Manage your
least resource carefully, because any time lost or wasted by that
resource cuts productivity of the entire portfolio.
Get and stay organized. Clean your desk at the end of each day.
Write a weekly To Do list. Do a Monday morning update. Build
quiet time or think time into your work schedule. Buy tools to
manage the paper on your desk and learn to use them.
Set and maintain good priorities. Learn to distinguish between
importance and urgency. Rank your assignments in this way:
1. By which generates the most profit for the organization
2. By which yields greatest payoff for your time
3. By letting your management decide when neither of the
above are compelling.
Speak up. Learn to say no when youre overloaded or cant
afford to be distracted. When something happens that may
jeopardize the project, let the affected people know early.
Negotiate. Be assertive.
How to Wrap
Up a Project
13
272 Practical Project Management
Evaluate
Build a mechanism for evaluation into your project. Keep a
project journal and record surprises, problems, and options. Hold
a lessons learned meeting with the project team and brainstorm
ideas for the future.
274 Practical Project Management
Make sure that the evaluation step is proactive and positive rather
than punitive. You dont want to follow the traditional 6 Steps of
the Project:
1. Enthusiasm
2. Disillusionment
3. Panic
4. Search for the Guilty
5. Punishment for the Innocent
6. Praise for Nonparticipants
A good evaluation is never aimed at fault-finding. Try the liked-
best/next-time approach. Using this approach, you first focus on
everything that went right and figure out how to replicate it on
your next project. Only after you focus on the positive aspects do
you proceed to the next time phase. Here you focus on how to
make certain tasks even more successful in the future.
Of all the different techniques for gaining excellence and skill as
a project manager, none is more important than evaluating every
project you complete. You might want to reread this book after
you finish your next project to see whether following the ideas
more closely would have made a significant difference in that
project. Identify skills you might need for the future. Develop an
action plan for making yourself a better project manager next
time.
Celebrate
Morale is an organizational asset. Take the time to glory in your
success. Sit back and look at it. Learn to pat yourself on the back.
Dont overlook the importance of others who contributed to the
project. Write letters of appreciation to outstanding team
members. Say thank you in person. If appropriate, have a party
or celebration.
How to Wrap Up a Project 275
Additional Resources
Project Management Institute, P.O. Box 43, Drexel Hill, PA
19026-3190, (215) 622-1796.
Software Sources. PC Warehouse (800) 367-7080 or
MacWarehouse (800) 255-6227.
Index
286 Practical Project Management
Self-Study Sourcebooks
Climbing the Corporate Ladder: What You Need to Know and Do to Be a
Promotable Person by Barbara Pachter and Marjorie Brody
Coping With Supervisory Nightmares: 12 Common Nightmares of Leadership and
What You Can Do About Them by Michael and Deborah Singer Dobson
Discovering Your Purpose by Ivy Haley
Going for the Gold: Winning the Gold Medal for Financial Independence
by Lesley D. Bissett, CFP
The Innovative Secretary by Marlene Caroselli, Ed.D.
Mastering the Art of Communication: Your Keys to Developing a More Effective
Personal Style by Michelle Fairfield Poley
Organized for Success! 95 Tips for Taking Control of Your Time, Your Space, and
Your Life by Nanci McGraw
P.E.R.S.U.A.D.E.: Communication Strategies That Move People to Action
by Marlene Caroselli, Ed.D.
Productivity Power: 250 Great Ideas for Being More Productive by Jim Temme
Promoting Yourself: 50 Ways to Increase Your Prestige, Power, and Paycheck
by Marlene Caroselli, Ed.D.
Risk-Taking: 50 Ways to Turn Risks Into Rewards by Marlene Caroselli, Ed.D.
and David Harris
Stress Control: How You Can Find Relief From Lifes Daily Stress by Steve Bell
The Technical Writers Guide by Robert McGraw
Total Quality Customer Service: How to Make It Your Way of Life by Jim Temme
Write It Right! A Guide for Clear and Correct Writing by Richard Andersen
and Helene Hinis
Handbooks
The ABCs of Empowered Teams: Building Blocks for Success by Mark Towers
Assert Yourself! Developing Power-Packed Communication Skills to Make Your
Points Clearly, Confidently, and Persuasively by Lisa Contini
Breaking the Ice: How to Improve Your On-the-Spot Communication Skills
by Deborah Shouse
The Care and Keeping of Customers: A Treasury of Facts, Tips, and Proven
Techniques for Keeping Your Customers Coming BACK! by Roy Lantz
Challenging Change: Five Steps for Dealing With Change by Holly DeForest and
Mary Steinberg
Dynamic Delegation: A Managers Guide for Active Empowerment by Mark Towers
Every Womans Guide to Career Success by Denise M. Dudley
Great Openings and Closings: 28 Ways to Launch and Land Your Presentations
With Punch, Power, and Pizazz by Mari Pat Varga
Hiring and Firing: What Every Manager Needs to Know by Marlene Caroselli, Ed.D.
with Laura Wyeth, Ms.Ed.
How to Be a More Effective Group Communicator: Finding Your Role and
Boosting Your Confidence in Group Situations by Deborah Shouse
How to Deal With Difficult People by Paul Friedman
Learning to Laugh at Work: The Power of Humor in the Workplace
by Robert McGraw
Making Your Mark: How to Develop a Personal Marketing Plan for Becoming
More Visible and More Appreciated at Work by Deborah Shouse
Meetings That Work by Marlene Caroselli, Ed.D.
The Mentoring Advantage: How to Help Your Career Soar to New Heights
by Pam Grout
Minding Your Business Manners: Etiquette Tips for Presenting Yourself
Professionally in Every Business Situation by Marjorie Brody
and Barbara Pachter
Misspellers Guide by Joel and Ruth Schroeder
Motivation in the Workplace: How to Motivate Workers to Peak Performance and
Productivity by Barbara Fielder
NameTags Plus: Games You Can Play When People Dont Know What to Say
by Deborah Shouse
Networking: How to Creatively Tap Your People Resources by Colleen Clarke
New & Improved! 25 Ways to Be More Creative and More Effective by Pam Grout
Power Write! A Practical Guide to Words That Work by Helene Hinis
Putting Anger to Work For You! by Ruth and Joel Schroeder
Reinventing Your Self: 28 Strategies for Coping With Change by Mark Towers
Saying No to Negativity: How to Manage Negativity in Yourself, Your Boss, and
Your Co-Workers by Zoie Kaye
The Supervisors Guide: The Everyday Guide to Coordinating People and Tasks
by Jerry Brown and Denise Dudley, Ph.D.
Taking Charge: A Personal Guide to Managing Projects and Priorities
by Michal E. Feder
Treasure Hunt: 10 Stepping Stones to a New and More Confident You!
by Pam Grout
A Winning Attitude: How to Develop Your Most Important Asset!
by Michelle Fairfield Poley
For more information, call 1-800-873-7545.
Notes
Notes