This document discusses project monitoring and control. It explains that monitoring involves assessing project performance over time through collecting and analyzing numerical and qualitative data. Control involves restoring performance when variances from the project plan are detected. The document outlines different aspects of projects that can be monitored and controlled, including scope, time, costs, quality, and human resources. It provides examples of monitoring and control techniques for each aspect.
2. 1. Introduction
2. Designing the organisation
3. Project life cycle
4. Project tools and techniques
5. Resourcing and budgeting
6. Implementation
7. Communication and culture
8. Variance and change
9. Risk management and uncertainty
10. Project outcomes
3. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
4. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
5. 1. Managers need patterns to guide their
actions.
2. A project is a machine with moving parts ....
3. ... in a fast-changing world.
4. Variance from plan must be detected and
mitigated.
5. Stakeholders need a clear view of project
performance.
6. Participants need structure and stable
frameworks.
7. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
8. 1. Monitoring: assessment of performance.
◦ Over time
◦ Both the project and the environment
◦ Numerical or qualitative data
◦ Collection of data, followed by analysis
◦ Trending
2. Control: restoring performance.
◦ Objective is to reduce variance to acceptable levels
◦ Based on the results from monitoring
◦ Formal or informal mechanisms
◦ Several different dimensions of a project can be
controlled
9. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
11. 1. Selection of performance measures
2. Baseline, data collection & analysis
3. Reporting the results
4. Quality control
5. Configuration control
6. Overhead control
13. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
15. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
16. 1. Activity definition
2. Activity sequencing
3. Activity duration estimating
4. Schedule development
5. Schedule control
17. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
20. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
22. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
25. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
26. 1. List the most important groups of internal
and external stakeholders who have an
interest is ensuring good monitoring and
control of a project.
2. Taking each of these in turn, list the
measurements they are most likely to be
interested in.
27. 1. About this lecture
2. Why is this important?
3. What are monitoring and control?
4. Approaches to control
5. Management of scope
6. Management of time
7. Management of cost
8. Management of quality
9. Management of human resources
10. Exercises
28. 1. Introduction
2. Designing the organisation
3. Project life cycle
4. Project tools and techniques
5. Resourcing and budgeting
6. Implementation
7. Communication and culture
8. Variance and change
9. Risk management and uncertainty
10. Project outcomes