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Planning can we do with out it?
1. Planning, can we do without it?
Kevin Parry FAPM
Programme Director, NHS Digital
Corporate Portfolio Office
24 January 2018
2. Format
Planning is here to stay.
It isn’t going anywhere.
But first let’s consider the pros and cons starting
with why we shouldn’t waste time doing it
Primavera P6 example schedule
The objective of this presentation is to provoke discussion not to
teach the answers
3. Planning vs Scheduling
Scheduling is the sequencing of events and dates back to the pyramids
as a craft system
– Pacific railroads (1850s)
– Henry Gantt invents Gantt Chart (1911)
Job Specification leads to Work Breakdown Structure
– Hoover Dam construction (1931-36)
– Manhattan Project (1942-1945)
1950s invention of PERT, PPS and Critical Path Method
Planning includes other aspects of project and programme management
success factors, such as costs and benefits
Now includes management science, economics, statistical and
behavioural aspects of delivering and enabling change
Has evolved to reflect the speed, complexity and dynamics of modern
projects in a globally-connected world
But there are still reasons not to do it…
5. Reason 1 - The future is unpredictable
Natural
disasters
Political
uncertainty
Macro-
economic
impacts
Climate
change
6. Reason 2 – the scope of projects is
often unclear
Key
Milestones?
Primary
Deliverables?
Project
Goals?
Business
Purpose in
general terms
only
Project Work
Statements
not known
Scope
Add constraints and exclusions….
Cost
TimePerformance
7. Reason 3 – insufficient resources
Programme
Director
Project
Manager
Lead Business
Analyst
Technical
Architect
PMO Lead
Acting
Programme
Director
Junior Project
Manager
0.5 of Business
Analyst
Vacancy
Technical
Architect
Vacancy
The vision
The reality
8. Reason 4 – we use a “to-do” list
Human beings are very good at short term planning
using our cognitive skills, we can imagine the
immediate future quite well and handle several
simultaneous tasks.
“We work in a tactical way and so are more
adaptive”
10. Reason 6 – estimating is hard and always wrong
“Estimates are commonly poor predictors of the actual value and viability of
projects, and cannot be trusted as the basis for informed decision-making.
These forecasts frequently misinform decision makers on projects instead of
informing them”
Professor Bent Flyvbjerg, Oxford University Centre for Major Programme Management. Said Business School
12. Let’s consider what the evidence says
So, it’s not just about planning?
Strong, consistent leadership, coherent vision,
planning and timescales, E2E investment
= Organisational Capability
+
Accountability (engaging stakeholders+
ensuring sustainability) = Successful change
13. The future is unpredictable
It is. But without a plan we don’t know how much it has changed
And, unless we understand the scope of the project we can’t react to
events
– The #1 reason that projects fail is lack of scope clarity
To harness the knowledge of the team
– And your team aren’t mind readers
To manage complexity, time isn’t the only constraint
– Project planning breaks down the problem (and the thinking)
Digital technology is about bringing about fundamental change which is
exponential but we think in linear ways without planning
– 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 16, 32, 64 how we think vs
– 1, 2, 4, 16, 256, 65,536, 264, 257, 536 the impact of change
14. Get the scope clear
Scope drives everything else:
• Objectives
• Approach
• Structure and size of team
• Timescales
• Budget and contingency
• Risk
• Constraints
• Lead times
• Build or buy decisions
However, recognise that it will normally change and that the wrong
solution perfectly delivered is still a failure
15. Insufficient resources are the normal
state in projects
New technology Unforeseen events
Higher priority projects Poor planning
Current
situation
1. Identify the situation
2. Re-consider approach,
team structure, task
order, build vs buy
3. Consider reducing the
scope, breaking down
the stages into smaller
sections or use Agile
4. Negotiate with the
Project Owner or SRO
5. Escalate to your Project
Board, but show that
you have taken the
steps above first
16. Working on a task-directed basis
Without an estimate everything is a surprise
– Humans are quite good at managing short term tasks in their heads but
not at managing longer term activities. IT can help extend human
mental capacity via planning tools and analysis
Without a baseline, you don’t know how far the work has drifted off
plan and so can’t take corrective action
Without tracking you don’t know how far you have come- or still
have to go. In some cases, the consequences can be very serious
17. Agile planning
“Agile projects embrace the idea that change is inevitable and estimates are just that. ”*
However, they need planning as much as any other form.
*Dr Peter Parkes, Certified Practitioner in AgilePM and Agile Digital Services
Project Magazine, Winter 2017
Mo- Must Have – The Minimum Usable Subset
S- Should Have – Requiring painful work-arounds if not delivered
CoW-Could Have - Business benefits and return on investment
Build
Internal
Testing
The use of time-boxes for
Build, Internal Testing and
Assurance
Assurance
The Project Manager serves
the team
18. Estimation – is it just guesswork?
All estimates should be based on scope and requirements, using
established standards where possible
They can be based on a number of methods, broadly split between
approximate and definitive approaches:
– Specific analogies (using a previous project as a basis for estimation)
– Parametric estimating (using historical data to find correlations between cost
drivers or other system parameters)
– Delphi technique (estimates from experienced practitioners on a panel)
– Activity-based costing (based on organising work into team activities)
– Task analysis (breaks activity into discrete, estimated resource types)
– Level of effort prelims (where the resources are fixed at a minimum level, such
as support activities)
– Using a Work-breakdown structure (WBS) to derive a Resource-breakdown
structure (RBS) and dependencies plan
Final thought, the fact that your estimate will certainly be wrong should not
stop you from writing it down and reviewing it regularly
A
D
19. What gets in the way is rarely
knowledge
Cognitive
dissonance
Reinforcement
systems
Lack of
skills
Inconsistent
role models
Leadership
“No-one else is using
what they teach on
the courses here”
“Senior management
aren’t interested in
plans they are
interested in delivery”
“I’ve never really
understood how to use
concepts like WBS or
dependant tasks”
“Our executives made
their names from
presenting the positive
story and keeping
stakeholders onside”
“My Programme Manager/Project
Director/Programme Director tells
me what he or she needs.
We don’t plan together”
20. The future of planning is likely to be
global and virtual
Robots and AI – we already use computers to extend our minds
Information modelling and Big Data – will enable new insights
Working in global teams – from off-shoring to global collaboration
Virtual worlds – the death of the Gantt Chart
Solving the world’s problems – Complex dependency
management will become the norm
Sustainability and the environment – projects in construction and
energy are leading the way but every project has its carbon
footprint and legacy impact
21. Planning isn’t optional
“The core of the illusion is that we believe we understand the past, which
implies that the future should also be knowable, but in fact we understand
the past less than we believe we do.”*
This is something which affects our hindsight and availability bias.
We give too much weight to what we think we know now.
* Thinking Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman, Winner of the Nobel Prize for
Economics Sciences, 2002
22. Credits
Professor Bent Flyvbjerg, Oxford University
Centre for Major Programme Management
APM Planning, Monitoring and Control SIG
10 Golden Rules of Planning, Vince Hines
Wellingtone
Directing Agile Change, APM Publications,
2016
Project Management Journal, Elevier
(2015)
University of Manchester Library
APM Guide to Planning, Scheduling
Monitoring and Control (2015)