project portfolio management consulting

Video - Project Portfolio Management - What Exactly is Value, Balance and Strategic Alignment?

In this three-part video series Jamal will talk about the three pillars of project portfolio management: project value, portfolio balance and portfolio strategic alignment. Topics include:

 

 

About the Author

Jamal Moustafaev, MBA, PMP – president and founder of Thinktank Consulting is an internationally acclaimed expert and speaker in the areas of project/portfolio management, scope definition, process improvement and corporate training. Jamal Moustafaev has done work for private-sector companies and government organizations in Canada, US, Asia, Europe and Middle East.  Read Jamal’s Blog @ www.thinktankconsulting.ca

Case Study - Project Portfolio Model - Global Satellite Operator and Manufacturer

 

Yet another company to be presented in our ongoing project portfolio management series is a satellite operator and producer that operates several dozen satellites providing communication services to businesses and government agencies, and broadcast TV and radio channels to audiences worldwide.

Despite an acceptable financial performance the executives of the company felt that there were several challenges awaiting the organization in the near future. One of the potential problems were saturated existing markets and stiff competition from other satellite operators.  As a result the company could not assure the same growth rates as were achieved in the previous years.

The organization needed to move into the new emerging markets and develop new products and services for both developed and developing countries.

 

Strategy

As a result of the analysis of the challenges facing the organization the executive management created the following strategic plan for the upcoming five years:

  • Maintain market shares in developed countries
  • Increase investments in the developing countries
  • Improve innovation
  • Improve vertical integration of the organization (develop end-to-end solutions)

 

The Scoring Model

The scoring model developed by the company management consisted of the following six variables (see also Table 1):

  • Strategic Alignment
  • Customer Need
  • Synergies with the Existing Business
  • Technical Feasibility
  • Profitability (Payback)
  • Commercial/Technical Risk

 

Table 1

Sat-op-portfolio.JPG

The first variable added to the model was the popular "strategic alignment" category. The points have been allocated in the following fashion:

  • Fits 1 of the criteria - 1 point
  • Fits 2-3 of the criteria - 5 points
  • Fits  4 of the criteria - 10 points

The strategic fit variable has been deemed to be a "kill" category. If the project reflected none of the company strategies it would be automatically removed from the list, unless it was designated as "joker" or a regulatory project.

Article - Dangers Of Relying On Purely Financial Methods When Prioritizing Your Projects

 

There are many different approaches to project prioritization, but the most popular ones are the financial method and the scoring model. In this posting let us examine the financial methodology. In a nutshell it implies choosing some kind of a financial criterion – be it a net present value, internal rate of return or some other formula – and calculating a value for each project. Once the ROI for each project has been calculated, the projects are ranked according to their ROIs in the descending order.

Let us look at an example of how it may happen. We have a company that wants to implement 10 projects and has 200 man-months in their resource pool (roughly speaking 20 people working together for one year including vacation time, and allowances for sick days, etc.)

The list of projects together with their expected ROIs is presented in Table 1:

Table 1

Dangers Of Relying - T1.JPG

Next, the company needs to estimated the efforts required for each project and rank the projects according to their ROIs (see Table 2):

Table 2

dangers-of-relying-t2.JPG

It is clear from Table 2 that the company in question can do projects H, E, A, F, C, I and G assuming their projections regarding the projects’ ROIs and efforts required were correct. Adding Project B to the mix will force the company to exceed their effort threshold.

While the purely financial models are very good at instilling the sense of discipline and accountability they all suffer from a couple of inherent problems. One can argue that every financial formula out there can be presented in the following form:

Financial value = f(Revenues/Costs)

In other words any financial value is positively correlated with the expected cash inflows from the project and negatively correlated with the cost of the project.

Video - Project Portfolio Management - What Is PPM?

In this three-part series Jamal will talk about the basics of project portfolio management. The topics included are:

About the Author

Jamal Moustafaev, MBA, PMP – president and founder of Thinktank Consulting is an internationally acclaimed expert and speaker in the areas of project/portfolio management, scope definition, process improvement and corporate training. Jamal Moustafaev has done work for private-sector companies and government organizations in Canada, US, Asia, Europe and Middle East.  Read Jamal’s Blog @ www.thinktankconsulting.ca

Article - Project Portfolio Model - Rail Transport Engineering Company

 

The next company to be discussed in our ongoing project portfolio management series is a rail transport engineering company that has encountered several challenges in the past several years. The organization has been reporting heavy losses from its operations for the past decade with no sign of potential improvement.

The analysis of the company's operations has shown that one of the main reasons for the poor performance of the company was the large number of products produced by the organization as a result of various customization requests from their customers.

This in its turn led  to a very large number of concurrent projects with a lion's share of them being customization rather than new product development ventures. As a result the quality of the project products has also declined leading to major delays in the product delivery to the customers.

Strategy

As a result of the above-mentioned events the executives of the company came up with the following strategy:

  • Implement rigorous project portfolio management system in order to (a) prioritize projects and (b) cut low-priority ventures
  • Create platform products in order decrease the degree of customization and to eliminate complexity
  • Increase sales and margins per product category
  • Expand the markets to China, Africa, South America
  • Improve customer care
  • Improve product quality

The Scoring Model

The scoring model developed as a result of the project portfolio management initiative has consisted of the six variables (see also Table 1):

  • Market attractiveness
  • Fit to existing supply chain
  • Product and competitive advantage
  • Technical feasibility
  • Time to break even
  • NPV

Table 1

Rail-Scoring.JPG

Interestingly enough the company management decided not to include the strategic fit as one of the variables in the model, arguing that the combination of the variables selected would address all of their strategic initiatives in a more efficient way.

Article - How to Negotiate on Projects: Inventing Options for Mutual Gain

 

One of the prevailing superstitions in project management is the "fixed pie" assumption. In other words, both sides assume that the project results, speaking mathematically, are binary - either the team delivers the project on time or it doesn't; either the project is on budget or over, etc. Fortunately, negotiations are typically not like NBA Finals when team A meets team B in a seven-game series where the winner gets the Larry O'Brien Championship Trophy and the loser goes home empty-handed.

In my experience, situations on most projects are similar to the fable involving two kids quarrelling over the ownership of an orange. Finally, their father enters the room and, operating under the fixed pie assumption, cuts the orange in two equal halves distributing the fruit between the brother and the sister. Interestingly enough, the brother eats the orange and throws away the peel. The sister uses the peel from her half as an ingredient in pastry while disposing of the fruit.

The situations between customers and project teams are often similar to the fable described previously: the underlying interests, constraints and risk tolerances of both parties are rarely identical. The proverbial pie usually looks quite different to each party. Hence, a good project manager can increase the size of the pie by looking for things that are of low cost to him and his team and high value to the customers (and vice versa).

Consider the following interaction between an experienced construction project manager and a customer:

Customer: “I would like to add another clause to our contract. If the work on the new mall is not finished by the deadline in the contract, I want your company to pay a penalty of $5,000,000”

PM: “Hmm, we have already signed the contract without the late penalty clause; I am not sure how our management would react to that …”

Customer: “I am sorry, but I have been instructed by my boss not to proceed ahead without this modification to the contract”

PM: “And may I ask you why you guys feel the need to add this clause?”

Article - Mistakes Analysis: How Not to Handle Project Negotiations

 

As a part of my project and portfolio management consulting practice I frequently get involved in advising various companies on how to run their real-life projects. In my previous article "How Not to Handle Project Negotiations" I shared a discussion that took place between three project stakeholders and invited the readers to find the mistakes that happened in that conversation. Today I am providing my proverbial two cents on the situation at hand ...

Sheila: You know about the problems we had with the release 4.0 of this product. You guys were late by 3 months, went almost 50% over budget and delivered way less features that we expected. Besides even the stuff you did deliver had serious quality issues.

Aha! So the previous similar project has been a failure on all three fronts: late, over budget and delivered less scope than expected. I wonder if optimistic estimation had anything to do with that?

Dan: Yes, and because of all these problems we lost two of our customers and several others warned us not to contact them until we have e-Merchant 5.0 ready with all the necessary features …

And these failures are beginning to have a strategic impact on the company's well-being ...

John: Yes, I understand your concerns and that is why we decided to invest a bit more time in scope definition in order to be able to better estimate project size, risks and duration.

Sounds like a very smart move to me. After all it is impossible to come up with any meaningful estimates until one knows the scope of work.

Dan: How much time are you planning to spend on requirements gathering?

John: We estimated that we would need about four weeks to elicit and document all the requirements and another week to for the team to conduct document inspections and generate estimates.

Again, sounds very reasonable.

Quiz - How Not to Handle Project Negotiations

 

As a part of my project and portfolio management consulting practice I frequently get involved in advising various companies on how to run their real-life projects. Several years ago I was requested by a CEO of one organization to sit in a meeting where several stakeholders were supposed to discuss various aspects of the new "do-or-die" project. The ensuing conversation was so hilarious, that I excused myself from the room as soon as I could and recorded the entire exchange before it escaped my mind.

So, my challenge to you: how many estimation/negotiation handling mistakes were you able to spot in the following conversation?

John the project manager at the ABC Software Inc. a producer of e-Commerce software was preparing for a meeting with Dan, a VP of Sales and one of the original founders of the company and Sheila, a Senior Product Director. They were supposed to discuss the next major release of the company’s e-Merchant product.

Sheila: You know about the problems we had with the release 4.0 of this product. You guys were late by 3 months, went almost 50% over budget and delivered way less features that we expected. Besides even the stuff you did deliver had serious quality issues.

Dan: Yes, and because of all these problems we lost two of our customers and several others warned us not to contact them until we have e-Merchant 5.0 ready with all the necessary features …

John: Yes, I understand your concerns and that is why we decided to invest a bit more time in scope definition in order to be able to better estimate project size, risks and duration.

Dan: How much time are you planning to spend on requirements gathering?