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Unit 4: Programme Management & Project Evaluation




          4.3 Creating Programme                                                                Notes

          Across the India at the moment there will be hundreds of programmes being run, but how well
          are they being run and how does the sponsor know that his/her programme is in a healthy
          shape? There are a number of ways to find out, most of them costing money from consultants.
          Most  programmes are complex and are being run using  a methodology that fits one of  the
          following descriptions:
          1.   Home grown - the organisation has taught itself how to run large complex change initiatives
               based on its project experience.
          2.   Proprietary methodologies from one of the big consultancies at a significant cost.
          3.   OGC Managing Successful Programmes methodology available for public use and owned
               by the OGC. This is by far the dominant approach in the current market place.
          From our experience there is a thread that runs through most proven methodologies, and is
          often missing from the home grown approach. We call it The Golden Thread, as all the successful
          programmes we have come across use it, whilst less successful ones don’t.

          4.3.1 The Golden Thread

              The Vision Statement: clearly sets out the direction and purpose of the programme.
              Blueprint: A  detailed description  and  understanding  of what  the  future  state of  the
               organisation will be like, an important step often missed. If you don’t know where you
               are going, how will you know when you have arrived?

              Quantified Benefits: A detailed description of the benefits to be delivered, not a set of
               bullet points buried in a business case. This is the core of an effective programme, and
               can’t effectively be done until you know where you are going.
              Project Portfolio: Well structured to maximize the efficient use of resources, designed to
               deliver dividends early and effective control points to stop the programme running away
               with itself.
              Business Transition: Effective plans to minimize the instability caused to the business
               whilst remaining ambitious about the intended achievements.
              Outcomes Achieved: Focus remains, the new systems have been installed and moved to
               the new building, you have reached the new state, but you still will not have achieved the
               benefits.
              Benefits Realization: It’s all too easy to declare  victory before the benefits have  been
               achieved. People still think that a miracle will occur that turns  outcomes into  benefits
               which is wrong - management intervention will still be required.
          With this information, you can do your own health check to test the quality of your programme.
          If the key components of The Golden Thread are not in place you will undoubtedly run into
          trouble. It’s all too easy to bypass the blueprint or benefits through expediency to move forward,
          but if we had £10 for every senior manager who said, if we’d have done this in the first place we
          would have headed off all the problems later, we’d be very rich people by now.




              Task  Most programmes are complex and are being run using a methodology. Discuss






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