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Unit 4: Programme Management & Project Evaluation




          Program Planning                                                                      Notes

          For program planning, most managers will typically use a bottom-up approach that identifies
          and executes planning iterations for the program’s individual component projects. First, each
          project manager constructs a plan that estimates and allocates resources required to deliver the
          project’s products or results, using the same techniques and practices they would employ in
          planning a standalone project.
          Then, in the next planning iteration, managers identify connections and dependencies among
          the program’s projects, and refine and rework their project plans to integrate them with others.
          Often this integration effort requires adjustments to the products planned for each project, the
          numbers and types of resources required, and — naturally — the  schedule. The managers’
          ability  to continuously  manage and  adjust to  inter-project  dependencies  is  a  significant
          determinant  of  program  success.  This  ability  is also  a  major  differentiator  between  the
          requirements of project planning and program planning.

          The Program Plan

          Once the individual project plans are integrated, it is time to initiate the program  planning
          effort. What exactly is  a program  plan? American Heritage Dictionary defines a plan as “A
          scheme, program, or method worked out beforehand for the accomplishment of an objective: a
          plan of attack.” But when we look at how we develop and use program plans, we discover that
          they do not fit neatly into this definition.
          First of all, in contrast to the planning for the program’s projects, the program plan typically is
          not developed through a series of iterations. Instead, the planning effort involves conducting a
          series of reviews of the individual project plans, and then creating a digest of their contents.
          During this process, conflicts between projects may become apparent and require resolution.
          A goal of the digest effort is to produce a concise, usable view of all program work, timeframes,
          and required results. A program plan describing 10,000 activities, for example, would not have
          these qualities.
          You don’t use the program plan to direct work and allocate resources. That is the purpose of the
          individual project plans. It may be helpful to think of the program plan as a seismograph that
          seeks to detect and measure the potential impact of any trembling in the ground underneath the
          program effort. As component projects proceed and individual project plans record completion
          percentages, expenditure of resources, and interim (or final) dates for work activities, the program
          plan integrates these measures and shows their collective impact. This enables managers  to
          assess the program’s progress against plan and detect potential problems. For example, if a
          client asks for additional functionality in a component that one project is building, that may
          delay the component’s delivery to other projects and slow them down as well.

          In short, the program plan’s integrated representation  of significant  planned activities and
          results of individual projects provides managers with a window into the cumulative work effort
          of the program. Managers use it to verify that the program is moving in the right direction to
          meet business goals, identify  where unplanned changes may be occurring and assess  their
          potential impact, and to model and/or test the impact of possible adjustments and corrections.
          4.1.2 Project Evaluation


          Project Evaluation is a step-by-step process of collecting, recording and organizing information
          about project results, including short-term outputs (immediate results of activities, or project
          deliverables), and immediate and longer-term project outcomes (changes in behaviour, practice
          or policy resulting from the project).




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