Monday, May 28, 2012

Project Management Alerts 05.28.2012

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These News Alerts relating to Project Management just happened to come to my attention this morning, and I wanted to share them with our readers. - Douglas E. Castle
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BOT International Honors Ricardo Ferrero of Baker Hughes with PMO Manager ...
Virtual-Strategy Magazine
"The PMO Manager Leadership Award recognizes individuals that have not just excelled at implementing project management methodology and tools, but that have also excelled in the demonstration of business acumen and enterprise leadership in the ...
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PMI founder charts winning course
Ultimate Pasadena
by Paul R. Kopenkoskey | May 28, 2012 9:12 am AJ Collier first became a member of the non-profit Project Management Institute when he joined the Los Angeles chapter in 1972. AJ Collier estimates he's cruised to Cozumel, Mexico, at least 20 times.
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IFRS RPP Project Manager
Here Is The City
A Project Manager role in the Change the Bank function designed to support and drive IFRS change within the business. This role will look at updates and amendments of this specific project and will lead the finance work stream and set up up a new ...
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Why Marketing Project Managers Should Invest in Design
Noobpreneur.com
It is practically impossible to separate Marketing Project Management and design in business. Marketing Project managers need to integrate design thinking into management to establish an inclusive and iterative style of work.
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Project Manager / Relationship Manager
Here Is The City
Project Manager / Relationship Manager – London – Financial Services A Business Solutions Manager is currently required for permanent position with a leading London based Financial Services Company. A Business Solutions Manager is currently required ...
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Sunday, May 27, 2012

Cost Creep! How Budgets Balloon. - Overruns And Missed Deadlines

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A budget is a matrix of objectives in terms of cost, tasks, certain quality parameters and time frames. It is not a best-case, worst-case or most probably case scenario, a forecast to wow investors or a means at winning a contract. A budget is a rule book. Any deviation from budget (i.e., a negative variance) is something that emerges from any of the following sources of error. And these errors lead to missed deadlines, cost overruns, and quality control deficiencies if:

1) A budget is created as selling tool or as a means of winning financing or a contract;

2) A budget does not provide sufficient margin for contingencies and other critical path issues, interruptions and deviations from trajectory;

3) A budget is put together with the thought in mind that once the project is sufficiently underway, the client, investor or manager will be sufficiently emotionally invested that he or she will not regard the project as a failure, and that additional resources (such as time and funds) will be made available;

4) A budget is put together without adequate input from the end-user (or client), and from the project team responsible to produce it within budget and on time;

5) Exogenous forces and unforeseen circumstances (natural disasters, supply shortages, labor disputes, commodity price fluctuations, and the like) intervene beyond the scope of the project team's control;

6) The outcome or target is too generally defined so results cannot meet expectations -- a classic expectation management failure;

7) The project becomes infested with scope creep and becomes ambiguous or nebulous, rendering the initial budget irrelevant;

8) The actual costs, time and quality are not monitored at frequent enough intervals to intervene in the earliest stages of error;

9) Management fuels the fire of inefficiency by becoming overly accommodating or obsessed with making the product either different then or better than that which has been specified in the budget;

10) The is a lack of clear project leadership and accountability.

The conditions cited above, any one alone or several in combination, are a recipe for falling short of a quantitative, quantitative or temporal goal. Poor budget formulation, or improper adherence to a defined budget will cause something, or someone to suffer. Whether it's the use of cheaper components, inadequate quality standards, failure to timely deliver at deadline or failure to complete.

Some additional topics worthy or exploring, or revisiting are zero-based budgeting and cost-plus budgeting; interestingly, the first is a powerful concept that offers every business or project manager a periodic, fresh insight into cost elements and ROI, while the second is often the beginning of a free-floating venture into the unknown. The idea is to avoid ballooning and missed deadlines by identifying and limiting as many "uncertain variables' or wild cards as possible.

On a closing note, sometimes cost-plus budgeting is analogous to hitching a ride with a stranger - and if you've you've watched enough late-night television, you'll understand the insinuation.

As for major government agency awards and contracts, perhaps a picture is worth several billion words...

Hey, Fellas. We CAN'T stop now! We're Theeeeese Close...

The Business And Project Planning And Management Blog

p.s. Take a look at all of our different Twitter Feeds, and choose the ones you'd like to follow. We have the best mixture of informational feeds of any aggregating source. Use us! Just visit The Twitterlinks Hubspot Blog. I hope to see you there.





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Monday, May 21, 2012

IT: Aging Infrastructure's Hidden Costs - Don't Be Fooled...

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Left-click to see a much larger version of the embedded image.
FUTURAMA!



Following are 5 fabulous downloadable whitepapers from the IT Whitepapers Newsletter, an excellent source of information relating to IT, project management and program management.

While the orientation of the information is decidedly (and appropriately) technical, just skimming through these summaries offers meaningful insight into emerging technologies, cost-benefit analyses of various IT solutions and data center and data communications, storage, security and backup management.

The article which immediately hooked me concerned the hidden costs of retaining (patching and pasting, duct-taping and bandaging) aging IT systems in order to "continue to squeeze out productivity without making any further capital investment or incurring any further expense for as long as possible.

At first blush, this would seem to make sense, but the hidden costs, while piling up and steeply increasing with time and technological advancement, ultimately far outweigh the shorter-term cash-flow benefits. Some of these costs relate to: increasing corruption of processes and of database files; growing inefficiency; increasing incompatibility in terms of communications and compliance with the systems of other companies with which you may need to interact; and, of course, the opportunity costs and increasing exposure to a systems breakdown and a halt in production.

The Business And Project Planning And Management Blog is delighted to provide you with access to these whitepaper summaries and links.
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ITwhitepapers Featured Five
IDC: The Cost of Retaining Aging IT Infrastructure
Is your company facing budget challenges that continue to delay the purchase of new platforms and technologies? A pattern of extending the useful lifecycle of servers may appear to have short-term financial benefits, but create long-term business impact. If the transition to new technologies has been deferred too long, your company may start experiencing hidden costs. Understand the true cost of keeping your aging IT infrastructure to make more informed decisions and meet your business needs.

2012 Endpoint Security Best Practices Survey: Key Findings
The threat landscape is evolving as cybercriminals become more sophisticated, stealthy and insidious with their attacks. The traditional endpoint security tool - antivirus software - is no longer effective on a stand-alone basis. The 2012 Endpoint Security Best Practices Survey assessed how IT is coping with endpoint security. Download this white paper to review the findings.

15 Top Paying IT Certifications for 2012
When the conversation amongst IT professionals turns to IT Certifications, one of their first thoughts is of high salaries - dollar signs dancing in their heads. While some certifications do command a six-figure salary, this is not true for all. With the recent completion of the annual IT Skills and Salary report, it is a great time to look at some of the more popular certifications - and their associated pay.

What Do Redeploys and Application Restarts Mean for Developers?
Could you imagine having to completely restart your computer every time you wanted to write, receive or send an email? When Java developers want to see the results of their code changes (e.g. adding a new feature, or fixing a bug), they have to redeploy their application, or restart their application server - a process that takes an average of 10.5 minutes away from each coding hour, according to a recent survey. This white paper reviews the costs of turnaround time in development teams and suggests a solution for eliminating this unnecessary process.

Backup and Recovery Performance and Best Practices for Oracle Exadata Database Machine
One of the key operational aspects of deploying a Sun Oracle Database Machine is to ensure that database backups are performed and restoration of the Oracle Database is possible if disaster strikes. This paper describes the best practices for setting up the optimal backup and recovery strategy to protect your mission-critical data.

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Thank you, as always, for visiting with us. You might wish to visit The Twitterlink Hubspot Blog to find several very interesting twitter feeds to follow regarding project management, business planning, technology, business trends, capital sourcing, and other relevant topics to those with a current career path or a future focused in PM, Program Management, Organizational Engineering, Strategic Planning or Entrepreneurship.

Douglas E. Castle

p.s. You can also follow me directly on Twitter at http://twitter.com/DouglasECastle1



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Saturday, May 12, 2012

7 Keys To Maximum Profitability - For Business Planners, Project Managers, And Other Successfully-Inclined Individuals

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Maximizing profits (within ethical, legal and quality control parameters) is one of the very fundamental objectives of an for-profit enterprise. Yes, we'd like to build value for stakeholders, mitigate and contain risk, and meet other objectives -- but none of these can be attained without profit maximization.

As a working tool for any professional involved in either starting, building or improving a business, I have distilled a rather extensive process into seven simple keys. While this list is by no means all-inclusive, it provides what I believe is an excellent analytic, evaluative and planning framework. These keys may be customized to suit the particular needs of your enterprise or industry sector.

We aren't speaking of Six Sigma or anything else which is technical or which requires significant training and possible certification. We are just utilizing common sense (logic) and a systematic means of organization. If the table which follows seems elementary to you, that's fine. Then simply ask yourself, "Am I implementing these steps?" If the answer is no, then consider this article a call to action.

Here are the SEVEN STEPS [Note: you may wish to increase the magnification of your screen in order to make the rather fine print somewhat easier to read in this table]:
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SEVEN STEPS TO INCREASED PROFITABILITY

For Use In Planning, Evaluating And Re-Engineering For-Profit Companies For Success.
Copyright 2012 by Douglas E. Castle

IMPORTANT NOTE: The Term “Profitability” As It Is Used Below Means “Incremental Revenue Increase” or “Incremental Expense Decrease”.


NUMBERDESCRIPTION AND ACTIONBRIEF EXPLANATION AND SIMPLIFIED EXAMPLE
1Maximize profitability per square foot  or cubic foot of space.Explore how much profit your physical premises generates, and find means of  increasing it through productivity and efficiency increases, ergonomically, logically, and otherwise. If you work entirely in cyberspace, this might not apply to you.
2Maximize profitability per “run” or “cycle”.If your production works in shifts, cycles or runs, explore how much you can increase profitability per operation through minimizing waste, exploiting byproducts, better machine and personnel utilization and application, etc.
3Maximize profitability per every dollar invested (every single dollar spent!).For every dollar invested for any reason, explore and attempt to maximize the return which it yields. The mindset here is to look at every dollar or currency unit expended as an investment which must be justified by the return it generates -- no expense should be overlooked or simply assumed to be recurring or unavoidable. Remember “Zero-Based Budgeting?” This is an approach to doing that latter process dynamically and in increments.
4Maximize profitability per hour overall.Your business is open, or possible to be open , 24 hours per day, seven days weekly. If you are real-estate based, this might mean looking at taking on subcontracted work, running more shifts, or subletting some space.
5Maximize profitability per asset category.Divide your business assets into general categories such that every asset is categorized. Then look at each category with a view toward eliminating waste, redundancies, creating better interconnectivity and synergies.
6Maximize profitability per campaign or event.
If you are issuing a press release, running commercials, having a contest, issuing discount coupons.
7Maximize profitability per customer or per client relationship.This is a marketing and CEM (Customer Expectation Management) Issue. It would seem to be self-explanatory, but it warrants serious evaluation, in terms of customer engagement, customer acquisition, customer satisfaction, customer retention, customer referrals, as well as TQM and product/service differentiation.


Do not be "turned off" by its inherent simplicity. The 7-step chart above is based upon timeless, success-proven fundamentals and will, at very least set your mind on the proper course for thinking about the components and the decisions that account for any business or project's success or failure. If you can use this chart on a team-based evaluative or planning effort, so much the better.







Douglas E. Castle for The Business And Project Planning And Management Blog



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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

S.W.O.T. Analysis - Made Simple

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If you are preparing a business or project plan, it is likely that you will be requested to perform some type of S.W.O.T. analysis, which is a very simple, subjective and qualitative analysis of the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats to which your business, strategy, project or team shall be subject.

You may also perform a periodic self-SWOT analysis on a personal level, wherein you evaluate yourself as a leader or performer. If you know your own SWOT, it can be a fabulous self-education tool.

While its use in presentations to outside parties is principally as an additional selling opportunity (i.e., you enhance your S and O, while you show how you will mitigate your W and T through intelligent, anticipatory risk mitigation and containment). You generally use it as a tool to show that your research has been thorough and that you have made contingency plans to offset or contain any problems. It is seen by evaluators as a measure of your thoroughness and possibility thinking.

Used internally, SWOT is a fabulous common-sense analysis tool to be deployed at the very outset of any business decision which you intend to make. Even more useful is a periodic re-evaluation of your SWOT factors.

What follows is excerpted from Wikipedia:

"SWOT analysis (alternately SLOT analysis) is a strategic planning method used to evaluate the Strengths, Weaknesses/Limitations, Opportunities, and Threats involved in a project or in a business venture. It involves specifying the objective of the business venture or project and identifying the internal and external factors that are favorable and unfavorable to achieve that objective. The technique is credited to Albert Humphrey, who led a convention at Stanford University in the 1960s and 1970s using data from Fortune 500 companies.

Setting the objective should be done after the SWOT analysis has been performed. This would allow achievable goals or objectives to be set for the organization.
  • Strengths: characteristics of the business, or project team that give it an advantage over others
  • Weaknesses (or Limitations): are characteristics that place the team at a disadvantage relative to others
  • Opportunities: external chances to improve performance (e.g. make greater profits) in the environment
  • Threats: external elements in the environment that could cause trouble for the business or project
Identification of SWOTs is essential because subsequent steps in the process of planning for achievement of the selected objective may be derived from the SWOTs.

First, the decision makers have to determine whether the objective is attainable, given the SWOTs. If the objective is NOT attainable a different objective must be selected and the process repeated.

Users of SWOT analysis need to ask and answer questions that generate meaningful information for each category (strengths, opportunities, weaknesses, and threats) in order to maximize the benefits of this evaluation and find their competitive advantage.[1]"
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For our summary at The Business And Project Planning And Management Blog , suffice it to say that SWOT analysis is a wonderful tool for internal analysis at the outset of a project, and at periodic intervals thereafter; while for presentation purposes it is more of a selling opportunity which demonstrates that we've researched our plan of action, and that we have anticipated our potential problems and have solutions or countermeasures "waiting in the wings."

Douglas E. Castle




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Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Austerity Never Works; But Cost Containment Does. Know The Difference.

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We recently discussed the notion of Breakeven Analysis, and actions of increasing contribution margin (price less variable costs) per unit; increasing the number of units sold, and trying to reduce fixed costs (our minimum hurdle) without injuring the profit-producing mechanism.

Nonproductive fixed costs are purely wasteful and they accumulate in the business budget like dust over time. Productive fixed costs (those costs which are in some form or fashion related to or necessary to the production of revenues and/or the production of the business' product or service have to be separated from non-productive fixed costs.

If we try to eliminate a productive fixed cost, we will damage our business - perhaps irreversibly. If we take the time to cull out all of those non-productive business costs, we will reduce our breakeven point and increase our potential possibility.

Cost containment is the key to success at this surgical trimming.

It begins with evaluating a proposed expenditure or expense in terms of "Is this necessary? Will it increase revenues or reduce other costs? How long will the anticipated additional margin of profit take before we recover the capital cost of this 'thing'?," i.e., a large piece of machinery, a new building, a new information or communications system. A rudimentary ROI or cost recovery analysis must be done before undertaking a new cost on a whim.

It continues, with an ongoing periodic re-evaluation (remember zero-based budgeting?) of each of these costs and whether each is actually necessary and/or productive. If it is not necessary and/or productive, find a manner of eliminating it. A renewal of a fresh perspective is necessary.

Austerity, as a general policy, generally just de-motivates people, and makes their work less rewarding and more challenging. It sets a philosophy of mitigating losses instead or increasing profits, and puts in place a psychology or shortage instead of abundance. A blanket policy of austerity is not remotely the same as prudent, diligent cost containment.

Broad brush austerity doesn't help a business, and it has never turned a failing economy around. Most people immediate associate the very term "austerity" with damage control or slowing down an inevitable failure -- cost containment, by way of contrast, is a means of finding "lost" money and increasing ongoing profitability.

More follows from an article which I co-authored about Critical Factors Needs Analysis ("CFNA") with Bruce Newman of the Productivity Institute, LLC in 2009. It's wisdom is applicable today as it was then. If it makes you more comfortable, CFNA is merely a methodical philosophy and system of cost containment.

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Every business generates its profits, subject to the same basic methods and constraints - regardless of the nature of the products it sells or the services which it renders.

It takes in revenues from sales or service activity, pays out variable costs, meets (by paying) its fixed cost obligations, and ends up with either a pre-tax profit, or a pre-tax loss. In a Not-For-Profit organization, the same dynamics apply, but the nomenclature is different: they collect contributions or donations (in lieu of revenues), and pay out variable and fixed costs. For the purposes of this article, we will address all organizations as if they functioned in a For-Profit environment.

The objective of every going concern is to collect more money than it pays out. Simply put, this means maximizing revenues and minimizing costs, thereby increasing the spread.  As business organizations evolve, they become so filled with complexities, diversions and conflicts, that they lose sight of these simple basics.

There is a need to re-evaluate these business basics periodically – to take a fresh look at the business of the organization instead of at the entire organization as a socially complex entity with a variety of objectives, many of which conflict with or constrain profitability. Stripped of all these factors, one can examine the inherent profitability structure of the business.

At the risk of being politically incorrect, and of sounding callous, CFNA™ (Critical Factor Needs Analysis) does not focus any of its energies on corporate citizenship, environmentalism, jobs creation, and the like. CFNA works precisely because it deliberately eliminates all of these largely qualitative factors from its evaluation approach, working to effectively evaluate a corporation’s well-being and make accurate recommendations.

CNFA also looks at cash inflows and outflows, rather than theoretical accounting constructs such as accruals, amortization and the like. These are good tools for properly matching expenses to the revenue-generating process, but they are not representative of “in the trenches” reality.

CFNA™ does not delve into the world of best accounting practices.
The thought here is that substantial stakeholders and directors must understand the nature of a) their market, revenues, price sensitivity, and contribution margins, and b) the structure and nature of their fixed costs.   People are not in business to cover overhead – especially accumulated, non-productive “legacy” overhead.  Rather, they are in business to generate profits by exerting control on every possible and reasonable variable.

Another important thought is that, generally speaking, the more established a business becomes, the more fixed costs are perceived as if they were actually the bottom line – especially where matters of personnel costs, perquisites, esthetically-pleasing offices and other categories of fixed costs are seen as compensatory to some of the business’ management. These fixed costs begin to take over the priority position of actual profits. Companies begin seeing revenues as a way to merely subsidize continued wastefulness or excess.

How businesspersons look at business

Businesspersons have several ways of looking at business, and these mindsets ultimately will affect potential profitability. Here are the several different “schools” of thought:
  • We have high fixed costs. We have to generate enough contribution to cover them. We had better generate enough cash flow to meet these “given” costs. Bottom line: We work to pay fixed costs.
  • We have high revenues. We don’t have to monitor fixed costs too closely…in fact we can afford the luxury of a growing fixed cost threshold as we become a bigger revenue-generator. Let’s get bigger offices. Let’s get some corporate aircraft (to make a good impression when traveling to meet financiers and [gulp] legislators in Washington, D.C. Life is good. The business should exist to support our improved standard of living (e.g., our growing fixed-cost structure). Bottom line: We will continue to generate increasing revenues, so fixed costs (even a bit of excess) will not hurt us.
  • We have to make a profit. Let’s keep the fixed costs to a minimum just in case revenues take a dive. In fact, to be conservative, let’s accumulate some reserves of liquidity in the event that revenues decline significantly. But whatever we do, let’s not get obligated to a high contractual fixed-cost structure. After all, every dollar that goes toward paying off fixed costs would be better if it could be part of profit. The lower the fixed cost threshold, the greater our profit. Bottom line: We should minimize our fixed cost structure, so that we have latitude if revenues decline, and increased profits if revenues increase.
Each of these schools of thought actually exists, but the CFNA™ evaluative model requires that we think in the third way. Fixed costs must continually be evaluated and controlled – especially if we are in a business where:

1. Our product or service is price-sensitive, and we must be prepared to cut prices (and decrease revenues) in order to compete in our marketplace. We are not a monopoly, and cannot exert pressure on prices. Revenues are sensitive, and only partially under our control.

2. Our product or service is considered a luxury or discretionary expenditure by our client or customer base, and we may sell fewer units (and decrease revenues) if market demand decreases. Revenues are sensitive, and, price notwithstanding, are not under our control if the economy turns downward or if our product loses its market share, or market desirability.

3. Our contribution margin is thin (the price per unit is not much greater than the variable cost per unit). Revenues are doubly-sensitive, in that if we lose either some sales, or if prices drop, we will be victimized.

4. Our profit is significant.  However, because of market factors – including increased costs, an economic downturn and/or increased competition, we might not be able to maintain this margin – which can quickly decrease.  To maintain this cushion and not be victimized, we must maximize profits and remain agile.

The thought here is that substantial stakeholders and directors must understand the nature of a) their market, revenues, price sensitivity, and contribution margins, and b) the structure and nature of their fixed costs.

We are not in business to cover overhead – especially accumulated, non-productive “legacy” overhead. We are in business to generate profits by exerting control on every possible variable upon which we may reasonably do so.

Another important thought is that, generally speaking, the more established a business becomes, the more fixed costs are perceived as if they were actually the bottom line – especially where matters of personnel costs, perquisites, esthetically-pleasing offices and other categories of fixed costs are seen as compensatory to some of the business’ management. These fixed costs begin to take over the priority position of actual profits. Companies begin seeing revenues as a way to merely subsidize continued wastefulness or excess.

Conclusion

We cannot heal until we know that we are ill, and until we understand the nature of the illness. In all circumstances, objectivity is required, fixed costs must be perceived as an enemy, and not as a hurdle to be met, or as a target objective. This pattern of thinking and associated conduct leads to a mere “breakeven” or “minimal survivalist” conduct that destroys companies. Companies are not in business to cover overhead: the core objective is to be profitable – in both the short and long term, for without profitability everything else becomes merely academic.
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The key to business success is not to merely cover increasing costs -- it is to ceaselessly innovate in order to generate increasing profits. Cost containment is a part of profitability process, but not quite as high on the consciousness priority list as increasing sales revenues and profit margins.

Douglas E Castle for The Business And Project Planning And Management Blog




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