Lessons from Project Recoveries

To really understand what is important for controlling a project, let's review what occurs during a typical project recovery. For clarification, a project recovery is an attempt to turn around a troubled project. If there is ever a case where project control is absolutely critical, it is when you are trying to heal a sick project.

The first thing that senior management will do to recover a project is to make sure there is an effective project manager in charge. This may mean anything from validating the current project manager, bringing in someone new, pulling someone up from the project team, or providing a mentor to the current project leadership. After the project leadership is solidified, most recovery missions will involve the following activities:

The Absolute Minimum

At this point, you should have a solid understanding of the following:

  • The principles of project control are prevention, detection, and action.
  • Project control consists of the information systems and the management procedures that allow us to answer the key questions regarding project performance.
  • Key components of project control include performance reporting, change control management, configuration management, issue management, risk management, quality management, procurement management, and requirements management.
  • The key management fundamentals of project control include focus on priorities, scale to project needs and organizational culture, set up natural control processes, expect project changes, be consistent, and pay particular attention to early project performance.
  • Powerful project control techniques include using small work packages, managing to project baselines, conducting regular and effective status meetings, establishing clear completion criteria for each deliverable (and the project), conducting proper reviews, tracking requirements, and getting formal signoffs.
  • Performance reporting should communicate status in regard to critical success factors, any variances, and any changes to the performance forecast.
  • The possible responses to an identified variance include taking corrective action, accepting it, resetting the performance baselines, and canceling the project.
  • Earned Value Management (EVM) is the best project control technique for early detection of project performance variances.

The map in Figure 10.4 summarizes the main points we reviewed in this chapter.

Figure 10.4. Overview of controlling a project.

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