Montag, 24. November 2014
TV is education
from chess.com ;)
Freitag, 14. November 2014
Donnerstag, 13. November 2014
The gift of time - dont waste it
- Think about the gift of time. Time seems like such an endless commodity, because we never see a gauge that’s showing how much we have left. But it’s like reaching into a huge vat of cookies and pretending it will never run out. One day, you’ll feel around inside that vat and the cookies will be gone. Cookies, in this clumsy metaphor, are days in your life. Once you appreciate the limitedness of these cookies, you realize that you have to savor them, and not waste them. Each one is precious! So make the most of it: do you want to create something new, or spend your remaining time doing email and social media?
Sonntag, 9. November 2014
management typically commits only to year one; in the context of years two through five, “strategic” actually means “impressionistic.”
https://hbr.org/2014/01/the-big-lie-of-strategic-planning/ar/1
Freitag, 7. November 2014
Mittwoch, 29. Oktober 2014
"Herumhummeln"
Jemanden Motivieren?
Motivieren kann ich nicht - das muss aus jedem selber heraus kommen.
"Rudeldichten"
Dienstag, 28. Oktober 2014
Zeit ist nicht Geld
Aus Zeit Wissen Nr. 6/2014 von Marcus Rohwetter
Donnerstag, 9. Oktober 2014
On consumption
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XRPbFIN4lk&index=48&list=WL
Mittwoch, 8. Oktober 2014
Leadership
http://www.spiegel.de/karriere/berufsleben/karriere-glosse-nach-diktat-verreist-motivation-statt-fuehrung-a-995586.html
Dienstag, 30. September 2014
handlungszwerge
Freitag, 26. September 2014
Smartness
Donnerstag, 25. September 2014
"protect me from what i want"
"Das neoliberale Herrschaftssystem ist ganz anders strukturiert. Hier ist die systemerhaltende Macht nicht mehr repressiv, sondern seduktiv, das heißt, verführend. Sie ist nicht mehr so sichtbar wie in dem disziplinarischen Regime. Es gibt kein konkretes Gegenüber mehr, keinen Feind, der die Freiheit unterdrückt und gegen den ein Widerstand möglich wäre."
"Jeder ist heute ein selbstausbeutender Arbeiter seines eigenen Unternehmers. Jeder ist Herr und Knecht in einer Person. Auch der Klassenkampf verwandelt sich in einen inneren Kampf mit sich selbst. Wer heute scheitert, beschuldigt sich selbst und schämt sich. Man problematisiert sich selbst statt der Gesellschaft."
"Ineffizient ist jene disziplinarische Macht, die mit einem großen Kraftaufwand Menschen gewaltsam in ein Korsett von Geboten und Verboten einzwängt. Wesentlich effizienter ist die Machttechnik, die dafür sorgt, dass sich Menschen von sich aus dem Herrschaftszusammenhang unterordnen. "
"Wogegen protestieren? Gegen sich selbst?"
"Diese paradoxe Situation bringt die amerikanische Konzeptkünstlerin Jenny Holzer mit ihrem "truism" zum Ausdruck: "Protect me from what I want.""
"Das unterworfene Subjekt ist sich hier nicht einmal seiner Unterworfenheit bewusst." (Hier liegt der Schlüssel - die Selbstreflektions- und abstraktionsfähigkeit der Individuen. Ein extremes hohes Level ist nötig zum Glück in dieser Welt.)
"Caring is Killing" (siehe Entwicklungspolitik)
Donnerstag, 18. September 2014
Lifehack
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=uz6rjbw0ZA0
Folding Shirts in under 2 seconds
Fighting online/Computer addiction
Think about the limitedness of your life. We’re only on this Earth for a short while, and it’s an exceedingly miraculous gift. Don’t waste it. Make something. Do something. Learn something. Go outside. Make friends. Drink the juices of life. Don’t allow your life to seep away through digital distraction. Live consciously by deciding how you want to spend your time.
Become intentional. When you open up your computer, start by pausing, noticing your urges, and then taking a few seconds to set an intention for this session: I’m going to write an article, or read for 10 minutes about Mt. Everest (or whatever). Then do that, and get up and away from your computer. Take a break, stretch, do a couple yoga poses, drink some water. Then before you go into your next computer session, set an intention again. You might deviate from that intention sometimes, but practice at least setting the intention, then practice trying to stick to it. You’ll get better with practice, as with anything.
Dienstag, 16. September 2014
Auszeiten / Work-Life Balance / Wichtiges-Nicht-Dringendes erledigen
Quelle: www.spielraum.xing.com/2014/09/xing-klartext-raus-aus-der-dringlichkeitsfalle-fuenf-wertvolle-tipps-zum-digitalen-ueberleben
What's the point of you?
What comes into your mind? Positive things!
------------------------------------------------------
Similar excercise: Tell someone what your best friend/partner would tell someone else about you. Did you start with positive things? Shows how you think about yourself.
Knowledge and Power
Power over someone/something
... or Power with someone?
=> Share
Challenge
Find the opportunity in the challenge
Sonntag, 6. Juli 2014
Dienstag, 17. Juni 2014
über das glück IV
Unbekanntes verständlich machen und damit Beunruhigendes ausschalten, Unerreichbares als irrelevant betrachten, Unvermeidbares hinnehmen, Jagd nach Lustgewinn vermeiden. Nicht an Vergangenem und der Zukunft hängen.
Sich von den alltäglichen Beeinträchtigungen des Lebens innerlich distanzieren, um ihnen so beizukommen, über den Dingen stehen, und in der Gegenwart wahre Lust/Glück empfinden (führt zu Ruhe, Gelassenheit, Seelenfrieden).
über das glück III
Die Selbstzucht (Selbstdisziplin) ist nicht um ihrer selbst willen erstrebenswert, sondern weil sie der Beruhigung der Seele dient.
über das glück II
Glück basiert auf Sinn, nicht auf Bedürfnisbefriedigung.
Der Sinn ist ständig neu zu finden und kann auch in jeder Situation gefunden werden.
über das glück
"Wer Glück/Lust direkt anpeilt, vertreibt sie in diesem Maße. Dies ist die Paradoxie des Glücks."
wie man sein leben führt sagt nach aussen wie man sieht das jeder sein leben führen sollte
"wenn er sich entschließt, monogam zu leben, möchte er damit ausdrücken, dass alle monogam leben sollen; denn jeder wählt für sich selbst grundsätzlich das Gute (Annahme Sartres)."
Deshalb fühlen sich andere "betroffen" durch die eigene lebensweise. Wenn man sich "anders" entscheidet als "normal", als die mehrheit.
z.b.
- nein ich gehe nicht auf die party sondern lerne
- ich trinke keinen alkohol
Montag, 26. Mai 2014
Drei Meinungen
1) Falsch
2) Richtig
3) Maßgeblich (i.S.v. z. B. Hierarchie)
Dienstag, 13. Mai 2014
its your "not wanting" that is the issue
Freitag, 9. Mai 2014
Habits
http://lifehacker.com/the-myth-of-creative-inspiration-great-artists-dont-w-1555399957
- It's the mastering of daily habits that leads to creative success, not some mythical spark of genius.
- Habits and schedules are important because they "free our minds to advance to really interesting fields of action."
- In other words, if you're serious about creating something compelling, you need to stop waiting for motivation and inspiration to strike you and simply set a schedule for doing work on a consistent basis.
Dienstag, 6. Mai 2014
right or wrong. black or white. or is it...grey?
Sonntag, 4. Mai 2014
die brücke - manfred gregor
Dienstag, 29. April 2014
PMP Vokabeln / Lernkartei / vocabulary / learning cards
My collected PMP vocabulary which I used for the exam preparation.
Responsibility, Respect, Fairness and Honesty
|
The four values of the code of ethics
|
aspirational and mandatory
|
The two standards of the code of ethics
|
our duty to take ownership for the decisions we make or fail to make,
the actions we take or fail to take, and the consequences that result
|
Definition Responsibility in code of ethics
|
our duty to show a high regard for ourselves, others, and the
resources entrusted to us .Resources entrusted to us may include people,
money, reputation, the safety of others, and natural or environmental
resources.
|
Definition of respect in code of ethics
|
our duty to make decisions and act impartially and objectively. our
conduct must be free from competing self interest, prejudice, and favoritism.
|
Definition of Fairness in code of ethics
|
A conflict of interest occurs when we are in a position to influence
decisions or other outcomes on behalf of one party when such decisions or
outcomes could affect one or more other parties with which we have competing
loyalties.
|
Definition conflict of interest in code of ethics
|
our duty to understand the truth and act in a truthful manner both in
our communications and in our conduct.
|
Definition of honesty in code of conduct
|
Initiating
|
Select Project Manager
|
Initiating
|
Determine company culture and existing systems
|
Initiating
|
Collect processes, procedures and historical information
|
Initiating
|
Divide large project into phases
|
Initiating
|
Identify stakeholders
|
Initiating
|
Document business needs
|
Initiating
|
Determine project
objectives
|
Initiating
|
Document assumptions and
constraints
|
Initiating
|
Develop project charter
|
Initiating
|
Develop preliminary scope
statement
|
Planning
|
Determine how you will do planning - part of management plans
|
Planning
|
Create project scope
statement
|
Planning
|
Determine team
|
Planning
|
Create WBS and WBS dictionary
|
Planning
|
Create activity list
|
Planning
|
Create network diagram
|
Planning
|
Estimate resource
requirements
|
Planning
|
Estimate time and costs
|
Planning
|
Determine critical path
|
Planning
|
Develop schedule
|
Planning
|
Develop budget
|
Planning
|
Determine quality standards, processes and metrics
|
Planning
|
Determine roles and
responsibilities
|
Planning
|
Determine communications
and requirements
|
Planning
|
Risk idenification, qualitative and quantitative risk analysis and
response planning
|
Planning
|
Iterations - go back
|
Planning
|
Determine what to purchase
|
Planning
|
Prepare procurement
documents
|
Planning
|
Finalize the how to execute and control aspects of all management
plans"
|
Planning
|
Create process improvement
plan
|
Planning
|
Develop final PM plan and performance measurement baselines
|
Planning
|
Gain formal approval for plan
|
Planning
|
Hold kickoff meeting
|
Executing
|
Acquire final team
|
Executing
|
Excute the PM plan
|
Executing
|
produce product scope
|
Executing
|
Recommend changes and corrective actions
|
Executing
|
Send and receive
information
|
Executing
|
implement approved changes, defect repair, preventive and corrective
actions
|
Executing
|
Continuous improvement
|
Executing
|
Follow processes
|
Executing
|
Team building
|
Executing
|
Give recognition and
rewards
|
Executing
|
Hold progress meetings
|
Executing
|
Use work authorization
system
|
Executing
|
Request seller responses
|
Executing
|
Select sellers
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Measure against the performance measurement baselines
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Measure according to the management plans
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Determine variances and if they warrent corrective action or a change
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Validate Scope
|
Monitor and Controlling. A subsystem of the overall pm system. it is a
collection of formal documented procedures used to appply technical and
administrative direction and surveillance.
|
Configuration management
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Recommend changes, defect repair, preventive and corrective actions
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Integrated change control
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Approve changes, defect repair, preventive and corrective actions
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Risk audits
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Manage reserves
|
Executing .
|
Use issue logs
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Facilitate conflict
resolution
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Measure team member
performance
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Create forecasts
|
Monitor and Controlling
|
Administer contracts
|
Closing
|
Develop closure procedures
|
Closing
|
Complete contract closure
|
Closing
|
Confirm work was done according to requirements
|
Closing
|
Gain formal acceptance of the product
|
Closing
|
Final performance reporting
|
Closing
|
Index and archive records
|
Closing
|
Update lessons learned knowledge base
|
Closing
|
Hand off completed product
|
Closing
|
Release resources
|
2 (Close Project and Close Procurement)
|
How many closing processes are there?
|
Communication
|
What is the most important interpersonal skill for a PM?
|
A program is a group of projects managed in a unified manner
|
How does a "Program" differ from a "Project"?
|
At the beginning of a project or phase of a project
|
When do you use the Develop Project Charter process?
|
In order to have a uniform way of reporting progress
|
Why would you use rules for progress reporting on a project?
|
Define Scope
|
In what process is the scope statement created?
|
Level 2
|
At what level of the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) do work packages
generally start?
|
Cost Control
|
What process would you use to make a change to the project budget?
|
Involving non-management team members in planning
|
What is defined as a preferred team building activity?
|
Withdrawing
|
What is the weakest conflict resolution technique?
|
6 (Plan Scope Management,
Collect Requirements, Define Scope, Create WBS, Validate Scope, Control
Scope)
|
How many processes are there in Scope Management?
|
Defined by stakeholders, completion of a major deliverable, and has a
schedule duration of...
|
What are three characteritics of a project milestone?
|
Adding additional value without Return on Investment or quality not
required for the project...
|
What is gold-plating?
|
Power takes 8 forms: Expert, Reward, Punishment, Referent, Title,
Information, Charismatic...
|
What types of power can a Project Manager have?
|
Organizational Process Assets Updates and Change Reqests
|
What are the main outputs from the Quality Assurance process?
|
It shows resource hours planned by time period and can be improved as
a burn rate chart which...
|
What is a resource histogram? How can it be improved?
|
Temporary, Unique,
Progressive
|
What three things make up the definition of a project?
|
Failure to have and follow an agenda
|
What is the most common reason for a meeting that fails to be
effective?
|
1969
|
What year was the PMI founded?
|
60 PDU's
|
How many PDU's do you need to recertify your PMP certification every
three years?
|
Using expert, non-collocated resources in a blind technique to
identify risks
|
Describe the Delphi technique for risk identification?
|
To approve the Project Plan
|
What is the purpose of a project kickoff meeting?
|
By controlling the project
|
How does Project Management provide value to the enterprise?
|
Physiological
|
What is the lowest level defined on Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
|
All the planning process outputs
|
What are the inputs to the Develop Project Plan process?
|
Schedule, Priority, and
Ressources
|
What are the top three reasons for conflict on a project?
|
Plan Procurements
|
During what process does the "make or buy" decision occur?
|
Time, Cost, Scope and then Risk, Quality, Customer Satisfaction
|
What are the main constraints to be considered on a project?
|
Mandatory and Aspirational
Responsibilities
|
The PMI Code of Ethics cites two types of responsibilities. What are they?
|
The Scope Management Plan
|
What is the main output from the Scope Planning process?
|
Mitigate, transfer, avoid,
accept
|
Name one of the four risk responses for a negative risk?
|
Non-verbal
|
What is para-lingual communication?
|
People don't want to work, they need to be watched
|
What does MacGregors theory of "X" state?
|
A form of expert judgment that uses previous similar activities as a
basis for estimates
|
What is the definition of "analogous estimating"?
|
EAC=AC+BAC-EV
|
What is the formula for EAC, assuming variance are atypical?
|
EAC=AC+ETC, Estimate at completion, predicts the total cost of your
project
|
What is the formula for EAC, assuming there are no variances?
|
Perform Quantitative Risk
Analysis
|
During what risk process are "probabilities of outcomes"
predicted?
|
Expert Judgment
|
What is a probability and impact assessment most likely based upon?
|
Offer, Acceptance, Consideration, Legal Intent, and Legal Capacity
|
What five things must be present for a contract to exist?
|
Multiply the Probability by the Impact
|
How do you obtain a risk score for a risk being analyzed?
|
Organizational Process
Assets Update
|
What is another term for "lessons learned"?
|
Ordinal (=ordnend)
|
A risk scale that uses terms such as "low, medium, or high"
is what type of scale?
|
As part of "plan cost management"
|
When would you determine how you are going to measure Earned Value on
a project?
|
Creation of the Cost Management Plan
|
What hidden process is part of Cost Management?
|
No. A range of possibilities can be estimate potentially with
probability of occurrence
|
Are activity duration estimates always expressed as a single value?
|
Lag dictates a delay to a successor activity
|
How is project "lag" defined?
|
The budget, i.e. the Cost Baseline
|
What is the primary output from the process of Determine Budget?
|
Fixed Price
|
What type of contract requires the most detailed statement of work?
|
To resolve isues and the understanding of communicated information
|
What is the main purpose that the process of "Manage Stakeholders
Expectations" is applied...
|
Plan Risk Management
|
During what process do you create the risk matrixes?
|
Time and Materials, Fixed Price, or Cost Re-imbursible
|
What types of contracts might you use on a project?
|
Communications Management
Plan
|
What is the main output from the Plan Communications processes?
|
An uncertain event, that if it occurs has a positive or negative
effect on a project objective
|
What is the definition of "risk" that PMI uses?
|
During Monitor & Control
Risks
|
When would you monitor and re-assess risk for a project?
|
45
|
How many lines of communication will you have if the team contains10
persons?
|
Plan Risk Management
|
During which risk process do you determine your risk tolerance?
|
Tabular (spreadsheet) or
Graphical
|
Performance reporting can be done in what two formats?
|
To ensure the understanding of information communicated and to resolve
any commuications isues
|
What is the purpose of the Manage Stakeholders Expectations process?
|
Cardinal
|
A risk scale that uses numbers such as ".1, .3, .5" is what
type of scale?
|
It requires a detailed statement of work or change orders will occur
and raise the price
|
What is the main disadvantage of theFixed Price contract?
|
Accept, Enhance, Exploit,
or Share
|
Which risk response might you use to respond to a positive risk?
|
The Functional Manager
|
Who would assist the PM with team member issues for persons that they
assigned to the project?
|
Directing, Facilitating, Coaching, Supporting, Consultative,
Autocratic and Consensus
|
What are the seven leadership styles?
|
Hygiene factors (basic employment factors) and motivating agents
(things that make the worker...
|
What two management theories are given by Herzberg?
|
Precedence Diagramming Method (Activity on Node)
|
Which tool for activity sequencing allows for four types of
dependencies?
|
CPI=EV/AC
|
What is the formula for CPI?
|
The value of a risk times the probability of it's occurance
|
What is "Expected Monetary Value"?
|
To predict likely time and cost outcomes
|
What would a Monte Carlo Simulation be used for?
|
During Perform Quality
Control
|
When do you inspect the output of the project?
|
3 Sigma - (99.73%)
|
What is the common accuracy level for a Control Chart?
|
Hierarchical organization charts, matrix charts, and text based job
descriptions
|
What types of role charts or definition can a PM use?
|
The promotion of a good Subject Matter Expert to manager
|
What is halo effect?
|
People are willing to work and want to achieve
|
What does MacGregor's theory "Y" state?
|
Minimize them
|
What should a PM do regarding project changes?
|
Self-actualization
|
What is the highest level defined on Maslow's hierarchy of need?
|
Conduct Procurements may precede Cost Budgeting (where the project
cost baseline is set)
|
Name one executing process that might precede a planning process?
|
Quality Control Measurements and Recommended Corrective Actions
|
What are the main outputs from the Quality Control process?
|
The Scope Statement and the Scope Management Plan
|
What specific inputs are required to create the
Work-Breakdown-Structure (WBS)?
|
TCPI - calculating the remaining work versus the remaining budget
|
What formula is used to determine performance levels required to
finish the project within...
|
Create WBS (work breakdown structure) - this is the baseline for the
project scope
|
Project scope is fully defined in which process?
|
6 (dvlp project charter, dvlp pm plan, direct & manage project
work, monitor & control project work, perform integrated change control,
close project)
|
How many processes are there in Integration Management?
|
Managing the specifications of the product of the project
|
What is configuration
management?
|
RFP - we want to know how a vendor intends to accomplish project
objectives
|
What type of procurement document is normally associated with a Fixed
Price contract?
|
An unplanned response to a risk that was unanticipated or accepted
without action
|
What is a
"Workaround"?
|
POET: Project Management, Organizational, External, and Technical
|
What categories of risk must be considered on a project?
|
N * (N-1) / 2
|
What is the "lines of coummunications" formula?
|
To measure a process
|
Why do you use control charts?
|
No, they are intended to conform to other definitions and processes
for quality
|
Are the PMI definitions of quality intended to be proprietary?
|
No. Grade refers to certain products specifications. A product can be
low grade and high quality
|
Are low grade and low quality the same thing?
|
Human Resource Plan
|
What are the primary outputs from the Develop Human Resources Plan
process?
|
The Project Manager
|
Who is the main person who controls the project and is responsible for
outcomes?
|
In order to document your intentions while planning
|
Why should you document assumptions as part of project boundary
definition?
|
7500 (4500 with bachelor)
|
How many hours of PM experience does a high school graduate have to
have to apply for PMP?
|
Identify Stakeholder
|
In addition to Develop Project Charter - what other process is done in
Initiating?
|
Integrating
|
What is the main role of the PM?
|
1
|
How many persons should sign a Project Charter?
|
The Project Charter authorizes the Project and assigns the PM
|
What two purposes does the Project Charter serve?
|
Estimate Activity Duration
|
During what process would you begin to consider project time reserve
needs?
|
To identify and approve (or decline) needed project changes
|
What is the purpose of Integrated Change Control?
|
4 (Plan Cost Management, Estimate Costs, Determine Budget, Control
Costs)
|
How many Cost Management processes are there?
|
Control Schedule
|
What process should be used to change the project schedule?
|
Schedule Performance Index. SPI defines what work has been
accomplished against plan
|
What does SPI signify?
|
No, Feasibility Studies are separate projects that occur before a
project is authorized
|
Is a Project Feasibility Study considered part of Develop Project
Charter process?
|
Develop Schedule
|
During what process does the baseline schedule for the project get
created?
|
Creating a schedule based on resource limitations
|
What is resource leveling?
|
Critical chain method: the critical path is calculated - then resource
availability is entered...
|
What tool for schedule development is most widely used?
|
Three-Point Estimating, aka: PERT
|
What activity duration estimating method is based on interviews to
predict durations?
|
Straight line
|
which type of depreciation would allow the same amount to be
depreciated annually?
|
Expert Judgment
|
What is the most common method for activity duration estimating?
|
Lessons learned is part of the Organizational Process Assets Updates
but is not a named tool...
|
During what process is the "lessons learned process" used?
|
Brainstorming, Delphi Technique, Interviewing, Root Cause Analysis
|
What are the four tools used as information gathering techniques
during Identify Risks?
|
Yes, it is a one-way communication that creates a contract
relationship
|
Is a purchae order considered a contract?
|
Perform Qualitative Risk
Analysis
|
During what risk process do you populate a risk matrix with data?
|
Status, Progress, Forecasts, Scope, Quality and Risks.
|
What should be reported on when doing performance reporting?
|
There is a sender, receiver and message. Sender encodes, determines
media and confirms understanding....
|
What is the Communications Model?
|
Risk Contingency Costs, Quality Costs, and Project Management Costs
|
What administrative cost elements must be considered for a project?
|
Acquisition Project Human
Resource Management - Tool/Technique - Acquire Project Team
|
Acquisition
|
Activity Attributes Project Time Management - Output - Define
Activities Project Time Management...
|
Activity Attributes
|
Activity List Project Time Management - Output - Define Activities
Project Time Management...
|
Activity List
|
Activity resource requirements Project Time Management - Output -
Activity resource requirements...
|
Activity resource
requirements
|
Adjusting leads and lags Project Time Management - Tool &
Technique - Control Schedule
|
Adjusting leads and lags
|
Define Scope. Alternative identification is a planning process to find
alternatives to completing the project scope
|
Alternative identification
|
Assumptions analysis Project Risk Management - Tool & Technique -
Identify Risks
|
Assumptions analysis
|
Benchmarking Project Quality Management - Tool & Technique - Plan
Quality
|
Benchmarking
|
Bidder conferences Project
Procurement Management - Tool & Technique - Conduct Procurements
|
Bidder conferences
|
Business Case Project Integration Management - Input - Develop Project
Charter
|
Business Case
|
Change request status updates Project Integration Management - Output
- Perform Integrated...
|
Change request status
updates
|
Checklist analysis Project Risk Management - Tool & Technique-
Identify Risks
|
Checklist analysis
|
Claims administration
Project Procurement Management - Tool & Technique - Administer
Procurements
|
Claims administration
|
Co-location Project Human Resource Management - Tool & Technique -
Develop Project Team
|
Co-location
|
Communication management plan Project Communications Management - Output
- Plan Communications
|
Communication management
plan
|
Communications technology
Project Communications Management - Tool & Technique - Plan
Communications
|
Communications technology
|
Conflict management Plan Human Resource Management - Tool &
Technique - Manage Project Team
|
Conflict management
|
developed in advance and designed to be used only if the risk event
occurs.
|
Contingent response
strategies
|
Control charts Project Quality Management - Tool & Technique -Plan
Quality, Perform Quality...
|
Control charts
|
Cost aggregation Project Cost Management - Tool & Technique -
Determine Budget
|
Cost aggregation
|
Cost of quality Project Cost Management - Tool & Technique -
Estimate Costs Project Quality...
|
Cost of quality
|
Cost-benefit analysis Plan Quality Management - Tool & Technique -
Plan Quality
|
Cost-benefit analysis
|
Critical chain method Project Time Management - Tool & Technique -
Develop Project
|
Critical chain method
|
Critical path method Project Time Management - Tool & Technique -
Develop Project
|
Critical path method
|
Decomposition Project Scope Management - Tool & Technique - Create
WBS Project Time Management...
|
Decomposition
|
Deliverables Project Integration Management - Output - Direct and
Manage Project Execution Project...
|
Deliverables
|
Dependency determination Project Time Management - Tool &
Technique - Sequence Activities
|
Dependency determination
|
Design of experiments Project Quality Management - Tool &
Technique - Plan Quality
|
Design of experiments
|
carried out for getting ideas on risks that may be existing/ foreseen
in the project. Documentation reviews involve reviewing the project
documentation, including plans, assumptions, project files, and other
information in order to identify areas of inconsistency or lack of clarity.
|
Documentation reviews
|
Earned value management Project Cost Management - Tool & Technique
- Control Costs
|
Earned value management
|
Prozesschart
|
Flowcharting
|
Focus Groups Project Scope
Management - Tool & Technique - Collect Requirements
|
For what do you use "Focus Groups"?
|
Funding limit reconciliation Project Cost Management - Tool &
Technique - Determine Budget
|
Funding limit
reconciliation
|
Ground rules Project Human Resource Management - Tool & Technique
- Develop Project Team
|
Ground rules
|
Determine Budget - A good way to check the validity of your budget is
to compare it with any historic data or industry data that show cost
relationships. For example, organizations that do similar projects and use a
defined lifecycle can tell you what percent of the budget should be spent in
each lifecycle phase. You can compare the historic information with your
project lifecycle to make sure that they’re aligned.
|
Historical relationships
|
Conduct Procurements, the procurement department estimates costs and
compares to offers of vendors
|
Independent estimates
|
Inspection Project Scope
Management - Tool & Technique - Verify Scope Project Quality
Management...
|
Inspection
|
Inspections and audits
Project Procurement Management - Tool & Technique - Administer
Procurements
|
Inspections and audits
|
Negotiated settlements
Project Procurement Management - Tool & Technique - Close Procurements
|
Negotiated settlements
|
Negotiation Project Human Resource Management - Tool & Technique -
Acquire Project Team
|
Negotiation
|
Payment systems Project
Management Procurement - Tool & Technique - Administer Procurements
|
Payment systems
|
Performance reports Project
Communications Management - Output - Report Performance Project...
|
Performance reports
|
Pre-assignment Project
Human Resource Management - Tool & Technique - Acquire Project Team
|
Pre-assignment
|
Precedence diagramming method (PDM) Project Time Management - Tool
& Technique - Sequence...
|
Precedence diagramming
method (PDM)
|
Probability and impact matrix Project Risk Management - Tool &
Technique - Perform Qualitative...
|
Probability and impact
matrix
|
Process analysis Project Quality Analysis - Tool & Technique -
Perform Quality Assurance
|
Process analysis
|
Process improvement plan Project Quality Management - Output - Plan
Quality
|
Process improvement plan
|
Procurement contract award
Project Procurement Management - Output - Conduct Procurements
|
Procurement contract award
|
Product analysis Project
Scope Analysis - Tool & Technique - Define Scope
|
Product analysis
|
Project document updates Project Integration Management - Output -
Direct and Manage Project...
|
Project document updates
|
Project funding requirements Project Cost Management - Output -
Determine Budget Project...
|
Project funding
requirements
|
Project Statement of Work Project Integration Management - Input -
Develop Project Charter
|
Project Statement of Work
|
Used in Conduct
Procurements
|
Proposal evaluation techniques
|
Prototypes Project Scope
Management - Tool & Technique - Collect Requirements
|
Prototypes
|
Qualified seller list
Project Procurement Management - Input - Conduct Procurements
|
Qualified seller list
|
Quality audits Project Quality Management - Tool & Technique -
Perform Quality Assurance
|
Quality audits
|
Quality checklists Project Quality Management - Output - Plan Quality
Project Quality Management...
|
Quality checklists
|
Questionnaires and surveys
Project Scope Management - Tool & Technique - Collect Requirements
|
Questionnaires and surveys
|
Recognition and rewards Project Human Resource Management - Tool &
Technique - Develop Project...
|
Recognition and rewards
|
Reporting systems Project Communications Management - Tool &
Technique - Report Performance
|
Reporting systems
|
Requirements documentation
Project Scope Management - Output - Collect Requirements Project...
|
Requirements documentation
|
Requirements management
plan Project Scope Management - Output - Collect Requirements
|
Requirements management
plan
|
Resource leveling Project Time Management - Tool & Technique -
Develop Schedule, Control Schedule
|
Resource leveling
|
Risk assessment Project Risk Management - Tool & Technique -
Monitor & Control Risks
|
Risk assessment
|
Perform Qualitative Analysis. A Group of Potential Causes of Risk. to
systematically identify risks in a consistent manner and organize them so
that they can be better managed. It also helps to identify the root causes of
these risks in a better way. A Risk Breakdown Structure or RBS is a classic
example of this Risk Categorization idea.
|
Risk categorization
|
Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis - This tool focuses on making sure
that the information we are using to perform the risk analysis activities is
unbiased and credible.
|
Risk data quality
assessment
|
Risk management plan Project Risk Management - Input - Identify Risks,
Perform Qualitative...
|
Risk management plan
|
Risk register Project Risk Management - Output - Identify Risks
Project Cost Management -...
|
Risk register
|
Risk urgency assessment Project Risk Management - Tool & Technique
- Perform Qualitative Analysis
|
Risk urgency assessment
|
Plan Risk Response. Contractual decisions made to mitigate risk. For
example, insurance contracts can effectively transfer risk to the insurer
|
Risk-related contract
decisions
|
Define Activities. Rolling wave planning is the process of planning
for a project in waves (phases) as the project progresses and things become
more clearer.
|
Rolling wave planning
|
Perform Quality Control - a graph that displays observed data in a
time sequence.
|
Run chart
|
Scatter diagram Project Quality management - Tool & Technique -
Perform Quality Control - Punktdiagram
|
Scatter diagram
|
Schedule network analysis Project Time Management - Tool &
Technique - Develop Schedule
|
Schedule network analysis
|
Source selection criteria
Project Procurement Management - Output - Plan Procurements Project...
|
Source selection criteria
|
Stakeholder register Project Communications Management - Output -
Identify Stakeholders Project...
|
Stakeholder register
|
SWOT analysis Project Risk Management - Tool & Technique -
Identify Risks
|
SWOT analysis
|
Procurements. simply legal contracts between two or more companies that
jointly want to offer / answer an RfP
|
Teaming agreements
|
Three-point estimates
Project Time Management - Tool & Technique - Estimate Activity Durations
Project...
|
Three-point estimates
|
Training Project Human
Resource Management - Tool & Technique - Develop Project Team
|
Training
|
Variance Analysis Project
Scope Management - Tool & Technique - Control Scope Project Time. A
technique for determining the cause and degree of difference between the
baseline and actual performance.
|
Variance Analysis
|
Virtual teams Project Human
Resource Management - Tool & Technique - Acquire Project Team
|
Virtual teams
|
The agreement to be able to
assign project resources, make project decisions, and spend project...
|
Authority
|
A team-building technique
in which team members are located together or as close to each other...
|
Co-location
|
Any internal or external
organization variables that can influence te project success. Ex:...
|
Enterprise Environmental
Factors (output/Input)
|
The coordination of
personnel and additional resources to implement the project management...
|
Executing Process
|
A manager of a department
or unit in a functional organization.
|
Functional Manager
|
A structure within a
company where people are grouped by similar skill set (e.g., accounting,...
|
Functional Organizational
Structure
|
Products that have been
created and are available for purchase.
|
Goods
|
Information from previous
projects that can be used to learn from success and failure.
|
Historical Information
|
A person or organization
that is not necessarily directly related to the project but can influence...
|
Influencer
|
An organization or
individual authorized and capable of starting a project.
|
Initiator
|
The day-to-day repeatable
activities that a company performs.
|
Operations
|
The various process-related
assets from the organizations involved in the project work;...
|
Organizational Process
Assets (Output/Input)
|
The entity whose personnel
are most directly involved in performing the work of the project.
|
Performing Organization
|
A group of programs or
projects related and managed in a coordinated way to achieve specific...
|
Portfolio
|
A group of related projects
that are managed to obtain synergistic benefits and control.
|
Program
|
The management of projects
in a coordinated way to achieve better results than if managed separately.
|
Program Management
|
The process of beginning a
project and, as more information is discovered, adjusting the plan...
|
Progressive Elaboration
(Technique)
|
The central group of
project management at a company; can be a centralized group of Project...
|
Project Management Office
|
The group of processes that
complete a project (Initiating, Planning, Executing, Monitoring...
|
Project Management Process
Groups
|
The elements needed to
manage a project; processes, tools, methods etc.
|
Project Management System
|
An organization which
authorizes the project manager to assign resources to the project, to...
|
Projectized Organization
|
A requirement developed by
a government organization.
|
Regulation
|
Work performed without
resulting in a physical product.
|
Service
|
The capability to execute
project-related activities based on individual subject matter expertise...
|
Skill
|
Person or group who
provides the financial resources for the project.
|
Sponsor
|
Person or entity whose
interests are positively or negatively affected by the project or whose...
|
Stakeholder
|
A smaller piece of the
project, as a result of decompostion; is usually created as a reuslt...
|
Subproject
|
A partially filled-out
document that can serve as a shell for completion of project documents.
|
Template
|
A phrase that describes a
war room or close environment for the team; can also be used as a...
|
Tight Matrix
|
An approach for measuring
the variance associated with the scope, time, or cost of the project.
|
Variance Analysis
(Technique)
|
A planning technique used
to provide products, services, and results that truly reflect customer
requirements by translating those customer requirements into the appropriate
technical requirements for each phase of project product development
|
Voice of the Customer (VOC)
|
A room shared by project
personnel that can be used for planning and meetings, and display...
|
War Room
|
Total project budget;
amount of money planned to be spent by the time the project is complete;...
|
Budget at Completion (BAC)
|
A structure used to monitor
project cost that usually aligns with a company's accounting...
|
Chart of Accounts (Tool)
|
A point where scope, time,
budgeted cost, and actual cost come together to measure performance...
|
Control Account (Tool)
|
The difference between what
has been built (EV) and what the cost was to build it (AC);...
|
Cost Variance (CV)
|
The process of applying the
overall cost estimates to the individual work elements to...
|
Determine Budget
|
Represents the value of the
work that has actually been accomplished or completed up to...
|
Earned Value (EV)
|
The technique associated
with measuring the amount of completion of a work breakdown structure...
|
Earned Value Technique
(EVT) (Technique)
|
Represents the total
costs that should have been spent up to a particular point in time;...
|
Planned Value (PV)
|
Ratio of earned value and
planned value that can be used to calculate how a project is...
|
Schedule Performance Index
(SPI)
|
The total amount of money
expected to be spent on a project based on the original cost...
|
Budget
|
The document that explains
how to handle cost estimations, budgeting, variances,and other...
|
Cost Management Plan
|
A ratio that shows
the current efficiency of money being spent on the project; Formula:...
|
Cost Performance Index
(CPI)
|
A cost estimate that
provides the accurate estimation of the project cost; the final...
|
Definitive Estimate
|
Earned value management
technique that factors in cost (AC) and time (PV) along with what...
|
Earned Value Management
(EVM)
|
Represents the projected
total estimate remaining to be spent, based on the current efficiency...
|
Estimate to Complete (ETC)
|
Very early cost estimate
used to give a rough estimate of what the project will cost to...
|
Rough Order of
Magnitude(ROM) Estimate
|
The difference between what
has been built (EV) and the time it should take to build it...
|
Schedule Variance (SV)
|
An estimate used to put
money into a company's (or project's) budget
|
Budgetary Estimate
|
A budget version for a
specific time period that is used as the basis for expenditure...
|
Cost Performance Baseline
|
Cost that is not directly
accrued on the project (Ex: electricity, taxes, rent)
|
Indirect Cost
|
Consideration of not
just project cost, but total ownership (operations and support)...
|
Life Cycle Costing
|
Money set aside to account
for unpredictable items (unknown unknowns)
|
Management Reserves
|
Processes used to complete
the project within the approved budget
|
Project Cost Management
|
Easily measurable cost or
benefit of a project; measured in dollars
|
Tangible Cost/Benefit
|
Creation and delivery of a
product that has met the specified requirements and conformance...
|
Conformance
|
Cost of conformance to
requirements and non-conformance
|
Cost of Quality
(COQ)(Technique)
|
A process that examines
which variables have the greatest outcome on a process or product...
|
Design of Experiments (DOE)
|
Diagrams that break down
possible areas for failure in a process. Ursache Wirkung Diagram
|
Fishbone Diagrams (Ishikawa
Diagrams)
|
Diagrams that display the
connectivity of pieces of a system
|
Flowcharts
|
Evaluating something
created to ensure it meets the desired standards for use and conforms...
|
Inspection (Technique)
|
focus upon continuous
improvement of processes in manufacturing, engineering, and business
management.
|
Kaizen
|
The entire group of similar
criteria (Ex: All Americans, all owners of a particular product)...
|
Population
|
A set of activities
completed in a certain order to create a product, result, or service
|
Process
|
The degree to which a set
of inherent characteristics fulfill requirements
|
Quality
|
A technique that is used to
discover what is an underlying problem, defect, or variance...
|
Root Cause Analysis
|
A measurement of
acceptability of a product or process
|
Sigma
|
The area on the sides of a
mean of a control chart that the customer has established as...
|
Specification Limits
|
A predictable source of
variation in a system
|
Common Cause
|
Cost associated with not
meeting quality expectations of the project or product
|
Cost of Nonconformance
|
The characteristics that
the user desires built into a product
|
Features
|
Developed by the
International Organization for Standardization (ISO). 9000 ff are quality
management norms
|
ISO 9000
|
Säulendiagram wobei die
Säulen der Größe nach geordnet sind. Die größten links. Somit stehen die
wichtigsten dinge (80/20 Regel) zuerst.
|
Pareto Chart (Tool)
|
The processes required to
ensure that the result of the project is satisfactory: establishing...
|
Project Quality Management
|
Actions used to
modify/repair defective products to come within specification of the
desired...
|
Rework
|
The measurement of
variation within a distribution
|
Standard Deviation
|
Selecting a section of the
population to use for a measurement (instead of the entire...
|
Statistical Sampling
|
A problem or error in the
creation of the work of the project
|
Defect
|
FMEA reviews a process step
by step and asks, “What can go wrong?”
|
Failure Mode and Effect
Analysis (FMEA)
|
A product that can be
used as it was intended when designed
|
Fitness for Use
|
Adjustments made to modify
the output of a process to achieve a better degree of quality...
|
Process Adjustments
|
A part of the population
used for a measurement (instead of the entire population)...
|
Sample
|
A non-random or
intermittent variable in a system / control chart in quality control
|
Special Cause
|
An organization chart that
displays which group is responsible for each work item and...
|
Organizational Breakdown
Structure (OBS) (Tool)
|
Sticking to the target of
the negotiations or project; involves holding on and working...
|
Persistence Power
|
A description of the roles
and responsibilities of a team member
|
Position Description (Tool)
|
Being professional and
practical when working with others; helps to foster a win/win relationship...
|
Professionalism Power
|
An organization chart that
displays which group is responsible for each work item and...
|
Project Organization Chart
(Output/Input)
|
Possessing comfort or a
harmonious relationship with someone
|
Rapport
|
People, supplies,
equipment, and other items used in the work of the project
|
Resource
|
The hiring and applying of
the needed resources to the project
|
Staff Acquisition
|
The creation of individual
and team skills to maximize project output
|
Team Development
|
Directly dealing with a
conflict via problem-solving techniques so that the parties can...
|
Confrontation
|
A plan that documents roles
and responsibilities, reporting relationships and staffing...
|
Human Resource Plan
|
A situation in which a
resource is applied to too many activities at the same time to...
|
Over-Allocation
|
Project team members with
direct involvement in project management activities
|
Project Management Team
|
A list of all project team
members, their project roles, and their communication needs...
|
Project Team Directory
|
A matrix that connects the
work of the WBS to the personnel assigned to it in the OBS...
|
Responsibility Assignment
Matrix (RAM) (Tool)
|
A conflict resolution
technique in which the focus is on areas of similarity and focus...
|
Smoothing
|
A role that relates back to
the overall picture of what the project is focusing on
|
Summarizers
|
A conflict resolution
technique in which you withdraw from the disagreement (or source...
|
Withdrawal
|
A type of power that uses
negative approaches including threatening and punishment to...
|
Coercive/Penalty Power
|
A conflict resolution
technique in which a solution involves (typically) a little of what...
|
Compromise
|
The process of improving
the project management team to optimize project performance
|
Develop Project Team
|
Listening with the goal of
understanding what the sender is trying to communicate...
|
Empathetic Listening
|
Applying an all or nothing
(win/lose) to get the desired result
|
Forcing
|
A pyramid representation of
Maslow's Theory that a person's motivation is based on needs...
|
Hierarchy of Needs
|
Matching behavior
characteristics of another person or group
|
Mirroring
|
Determining, assigning, and
documenting responsibilities, roles, and reporting relationships...
|
Organizational Planning
|
A structure that shows the
decomposition of the resources being used on the project; can...
|
Resource Breakdown
Structure (RBS)
|
The process of applying
resources to a schedule and its activities
|
Resource Loading
|
A document used to describe
when resources will start and finish the project
|
Staffing Management Plan
|
Process of using a previous
project of similar characteristic (size, cost, scope) to estimate...
|
Analogous Estimates
|
Estimate/plan that the
project tries to achieve (cost, scope, time, etc.).
|
Baseline
|
A detailed estimating
approach that usually involves team input - As the team builds the pieces...
|
Bottom-Up Estimating
|
The total amount of money
expected to be spent on a project based on the original cost estimates...
|
Budget
|
Total project budget;
amount of money planned to be spent by the time the project is complete;...
|
Budget at Completion (BAC)
|
An estimate used to put
money into a company's (or project's) budget.
|
Budgetary Estimate
|
A structure used to monitor
project cost that usually aligns with the company's accounting system
|
Chart of Accounts
|
A numbering system used in
project management to identify pieces of the work breakdown
|
Code of Accounts
|
The document that explains
how to handle cost estimations, budgeting, variances, and other...
|
Cost Management Plan
|
A budget version for a
specific time period that is used as the basis for expenditure comparison.
|
Cost Performance Baseline
|
A ratio that shows the
current efficiency of money being spent on the project; Formula:
|
Cost Performance Index
|
The difference between what
has been built (EV) and what the cost was to build it (AC); Formula:...
|
Cost Variance (CV)
|
A cost estimate that
provides the accurate estimation of the project cost; the final estimate...
|
Definitive Estimate
|
Represents the value of the
work that has actually been accomplished or completed up to a particular...
|
Earned Value (EV)
|
The technique associated
with measuring the amount of completion of a work breakdown structure...
|
Earned Value Technique
(EVT)
|
Represents the projected
total estimate remaining to be spent, based on the current efficiency...
|
Estimate to Complete (ETC)
|
Cost that is not directly
accrued on the project.
|
Indirect Cost
|
A theory which states that
the more of something that is produced, the lower the unit cost. -
Stückkostendegression
|
Learning Curve Theory
|
Consideration of the not
just project cost, but total ownership (operations and support) cost...
|
Life Cycle Costing
|
Money set aside to account
for unpredictable items (unknown unknowns).
|
Management Reserves
|
A value used in capital
budgeting, in which the present value of the cash inflow is subtracted...
|
Net Present Value (NPV)
|
The cost associated with
giving up one opportunity for another.
|
Opportunity Cost
|
Application of a
mathematical model used to estimate project components (time, cost, scope)...
|
Parametric Modeling
|
Represents the total costs
that should have been spent up to a particular point in time; also...
|
Planned Value (PV)
|
Money made after expenses
have been subtracted from revenue.
|
Profit
|
Processes used to complete
the project within the approved budget.
|
Project Cost Management
|
Monet set aside in a budget
used for items that are difficult to predict; also known as contingency...
|
Reserves
|
Very early cost estimate
used to give a rough estimate of what the project will cost to complete;...
|
Rough Order of Magnitude
(ROM) Estimate
|
Ratio of earned value and
planned value that can be used to calculate how a project is progressing.
|
Schedule Performance Index
(SPI)
|
The difference between what
has been built (EV) and the time it should take to build it (PV);...
|
Schedule Variance (SV)
|
Money that already been
spent on a project; should not be considered when selecting or evaluating...
|
Sunk Cost
|
Easily measurable cost or
benefit of a project. a plausible quantitative value can be computed
|
Tangible Cost/Benefit
|
Planning
|
Estimate time and costs
|
Planning
|
Determine critical path
|
Planning
|
Develope schedule
|
Planning
|
Develope budget
|
Closing
|
Gain formal acceptance of
the product
|
Closing
|
Final performance reporting
|
Closing
|
Index and archive records
|
Closing
|
Update lessons learned
knowledge base
|
Closing
|
Hand off completed product
|
60 PDU's
|
How many PDU's do you need
to recertify your PMP certification every three years?
|
Using expert,
non-collocated resources in a blind technique to identify risks
|
Describe the Delphi
technique for risk identification?
|
By controlling the project
|
How does Project Management
provide value to the enterprise?
|
Physiological
|
What is the lowest level
defined on Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
|
Schedule, Priority, and
Resources
|
What are the top three
reasons for conflict on a project?
|
Plan Procurements
|
During what process does
the "make or buy" decision occur?
|
People don't want to work,
they need to be watched
|
What does MacGregors theory
of "X" state?
|
A form of expert judgment
that uses previous similar activities as a basis for estimates
|
What is the definition of
"analogous estimating"?
|
EAC=AC+BAC-EV, estimate at
completion (etimated toal cost of completing all work), forecast, actual cost
+ budget at completion (from beginning of the project) - earned value
|
What is the formula for
EAC, assuming variance are atypical?
|
EAC=AC+ETC
|
What is the formula for
EAC, assuming there are no variances?
|
Lead allows acceleration of
the successor activiity with respect to a predecessor activity.
|
How is project
"lead" defined?
|
Perform Quantitative Risk
Analysis
|
During what risk process
are "probabilities of outcomes" predicted?
|
Expert Judgment
|
What is a probability and
impact assessment most likely based upon?
|
Offer, Acceptance,
Consideration, Legal Intent, and Legal Capacity
|
What five things must b
present for a contract to exist?
|
Directing, Facilitating,
Coaching, Supporting, Consultative, Autocratic and Consensus
|
What are the seven
leadership styles?
|
Hygiene factors (basic
employment factors) and motivatng agents (things that make the worker...
|
What two managment theories
are given by Herzberg?
|
Precedence Diagramming
Method (Activity on Node)
|
Which tool for activity
sequencing allows for four types of dependencies?
|
CPI=EV/AC
|
What is the formula for
CPI?
|
Quality Control Meaurements
and Recommended Corrective Actions
|
What are the main outputs
from the Quality Control process?
|
TCPI - calculating the
remaining work versus the remaining budget
|
What forumla is used to
determine performance levels required to finish the project within...
|
6
|
How many processes are
there in Integration Management?
|
RFP - we want to know how a
vendor intends to accomplish project objectives
|
What type of procurement
document is normally associated with a Fixed Price contract?
|
The Project Manager
|
Who is the main person who
controls the project and is responsible for outcomes?
|
In order to document your
intentions while planning
|
Why should you document
assumptions as part of project boundary definition?
|
Collect Requirements
|
Requirements traceability
matrix is an output of what?
|
Six Thinking Hats
|
General mgt technique to
generate different approaches to doing work
|
Lateral Thinking is part of
Alternative Identication which is tools and technique of Scope... Querdenken.
Kreativitaetstechnik
|
Lateral Thinking
|
Training, team building,
and ground rules.
|
Tools and techniques
recommended for developing a project team
|
define activity
process.
|
Milestone List is an
output of ....
|
3 or 99.73%
|
Control chart upper/lower
limits are usually set at +/- ? sigma
|
an iterative four-step
management method used in business for the control and continuous improvement
of processes and products. It is also known as the Deming circle/cycle/wheel
|
Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA)
|
estimate activity resources
|
Sequence activities ->
?? -> estimate activity durations.
|
a grouping of tasks that
"hang" between two end dates it is tied to
|
Hammock Activity
|
tornado diagram
|
One typical display of
sensitivity analysis is the _______, which is useful for comparing...
|
(BAC - EV) / (BAC - AC),
i.e. remaining work vs. remaining budget
|
To Complete
Performance Index (TCPI) (Formula)
|
the range of such an
estimation is +/- 50%
|
Rough Order of Estimate
(ROE oder ROM estimate)
|
Hard Logic
|
Mandatory dependencies are
also refered to as
|
Assignable causes. These
are errors, anormal variance
|
Special causes of variance
are also known as...
|
The procees of
accumulating, finishing, and interpreting information to achieve
completion...
|
Administrative Closure
|
A request for a change on a
project that has been approved via formal or informal change request.
|
Approved Change Request
(output/input)
|
A technique to determine if
the project assumptions are accurate, consistent, and complete...
|
Assumption Analysis
|
The formal or informal
process of reviewing changes associated with a project; will result...
|
Change Control
|
A plan that defines the
process for controlling change to configurable items that require formal...
|
Configuration Management
Plan
|
A document which tracks
items that occur during a project (Ex. change, issue, and defect).
|
Log
|
A set of records that
correctly describe and document the history of the project.
|
Project Archives
|
A formal request for a
change to the project that is submitted for approval via the Perform...
|
Requested Change
|
define the measures of
performance and acceptable variables during project implementation.
|
Technical Performance
Measurement (Technique)
|
A project-selection
technique in which criteria are defined and a weight given to it. Each...
|
Weighted Scoring Model
|
Tools and techniques used
to create the foundation for information transfer on a project...
|
Communications
Infrastructure
|
Deliver needed project
information to stakeholders in an appropriate timeframe
|
Distribute Information
|
A report that includes
significant variations from the planned activities
|
Exception Report
|
Estimates related to future
project performance that are based on historical information...
|
Forecasts
|
The process of
communicating with the stakeholders to determine their expectations...
|
Manage Stakeholder
Expectations
|
An integrated
scope-schedule-cost plan that is used as the basis for execution
measurement...
|
Performance Measurement
Baseline
|
A report that states what
has been accomplished in a specific amount of time on the project...
|
Progress Report
|
The standards we use to
determine what is right and wrong; varies for everyone
|
Ethics
|
An attitude that one's
group is superior to others
|
Ethnocentrism
|
Money or other items of
value that are "earned" via improper activities
|
Inappropriate Compensation
|
The process of managing the
relationship between buyer and seller
|
Administer Procurements
|
A Bill of Materials (BOM)
defines the complete set of physical elements required to manufacture a
product.
|
Bill of Materials (BOM)
|
A contract that reimburses
the seller for cost, plus a negotiated percentage of the total...
|
Cost-plus-percentage of
Cost (CPPC) Contract
|
The SOW is the seed or
kernel of the idea for the project which is then developed at a high level
for the purpose of approval of the project during the Initiating Process
Group
|
Statement of Work (SOW)
|
A clause in the contract
that allows both the buyer and the seller to end the contract...
|
Termination Clause
|
The person or group in an
organization that acquires products, services, or results
|
Buyer
|
A demand for consideration,
under the terms of a contract, by a buyer from a seller or...
|
Claim
|
The process of receiving
proposals, quotes, and bids, selecting a seller and establishing...
|
Conduct Procurements
|
A contract in which the
supplier receives payment for allowable costs plus a fixed fee...
|
Cost-plus-fixed-fee
(CPFF)Contract
|
A contract in which the
supplier receives payment for pre-aligned costs (budget). the cost in excess
of the target cost is only partially paid according to a Buyer/Seller ratio
|
Cost-plus-incentive-fee
(CPIF) Contract
|
A real fixed price
contract.
|
Firm-fixed-price
(FFP)Contract
|
An initial part of the
procurement process in which a decision is made to either create the...
|
Make-or-buy Decision
|
The process of determining
what to buy, the optimum method to make the purchase...
|
Plan Procurements
|
PTA - a point on the cost
line of the Profit-cost curve determined by the contract elements associated
with a fixed price plus incentive-Firm Target (FPI)contract above which the
seller effectively bears all the costs of a cost overrun
|
Point of Total Assumption
|
Document that determines
make vs. buy decisions, establishes required procurement documents...
|
Procurement Management Plan
|
A document used to get bids
or quotes from possible suppliers, usually for commodity type...
|
Request for Quote (RFQ)
|
A contract that provides
for acquiring services at specified fixed hourly rates and materials...
|
Time and Material (T&M)
Contract
|
Compensation in the
planning for unknown items that could occur; typically schedule- or...
|
Buffer
|
Pre-established actions
that the team executes if a known risk event occurs on the project...
|
Contingency Plans
|
The product of multiplying
the monetary value impact and probability of the risk event;...
|
Decision Tree Analysis
(Technique)
|
A type of plan created for
risks with a great impact on project goals, to be executed...
|
Fallback Plans
|
The process of monitoring
known risks, reducing any risks, identifying any new risks,...
|
Monitor and Control Risks
|
Analyze risks and determine
the priority of their effects on the project
|
Perform Qualitative Risk
Analysis
|
The possibility of a
negative (threat) or positive (opportunity) event
|
Risk
|
Eliminating a risk or
threat, usually by eliminating the cause
|
Risk Avoidance
|
Events that may impact the
project (either negative or positive)
|
Risk Events
|
A document that details and
describes the plan for managing risk over the life of the...
|
Risk Management Plan
|
Characteristics which
indicate that a risk event is possibly starting to occur; could...
|
Risk Symptoms
|
Allocating the
responsibility for and impact of the risk event to another party
|
Risk Transference
|
Possessing a low desire or
tolerance for risk
|
Risk-Averse
|
Risks that result from the
execution of a risk response
|
Secondary Risks
|
A risk analysis technique
which considers the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and...
|
Strengths, Weaknesses,
Opportunities, and Threats (SWOT) Analysis
|
Reserves that can help
mitigate schedule or cost issues (risk), in the case of changes...
|
Contingency Reserves
(Output/Input)
|
A technique used to
simulate the outcome of a project many times to determine the range...
|
Monte Carlo Analysis
|
Measure the probability and
impact of the risks and estimate the impact on the project...
|
Perform Quantitative Risk
Analysis
|
Matrix matching Risk
probability and impact. Risks that score high in both or extreme in one will
be prioritized
|
Probability and Impact
Matrix (Tool)
|
Risk that remains after
response strategies have been applied
|
Residual Risk
|
Opting to accept the impact
or consequences of a risk event
|
Risk Acceptance
|
A decomposition of the risk
categorization, and the risks within those categories that...
|
Risk Breakdown Structure
(RBS) (Tool)
|
A data repository that
stores and manipulates information associated with the risk management...
|
Risk Database
|
Numbers representing the
risk of certain events, the likelihood of their occurring, plus...
|
Risk Factors
|
Minimizing the impact of a
risk event by minimizing the likelihood (probability) of its...
|
Risk Mitigation
|
Possessing a higher
tolerance than most for risk
|
Risk Seeking
|
The level of satisfaction
from a potential risk payoff
|
Risk Tolerance
|
See Risk Tolerance.
|
Risk Utility
|
A technique used in risk
management that helps show which risks will likely have the most...
|
Sensitivity Analysis
|
The formal or informal
process of reviewing changes associated with a project; will result...
|
Change Control
|
A group of people formally
recognized to approve or reject requested changes on a project.
|
Change Control Board
(CCB)
|
A documented, formal
process that manages change associated with the project.
|
Change Control System
|
A plan that defines the
project change management process.
|
Change Management Plan
|
A plan that defines the
process for controlling change to configurable items that require formal...
|
Configuration Management
Plan
|
Attaining signature for a
piece of the project or the complete project, where the signature...
|
Formal Acceptance
|
Commitment from the sponsor
and organization to start a project or to continue it to the next...
|
Initiation
|
A document which tracks
items that occur during a project (Ex. change, issue, and defect).
|
Log
|
Apply the change control
process as it relates to all project Knowledge Areas.
|
Perform Integrated Change
Control
|
A set of records that
correctly describe and document the history of the project.
|
Project Archives
|
The process of formally
receiving the work of the project: the work should be complete and...
|
Acceptance
|
Record each idea from
brainstorming on cards or notes.
|
|
Look for ideas that seem to
be related.
|
|
Sort cards into groups
until all cards have been used.
|
Affinity Diagram
|
A component of the work
breakdown sturcture that has known work but no detailed activities.
|
Planning Package
|
Unauthorized request for
change that usually occurs in a project as time evolves.
|
Scope Creep
|
Decision is made via the
consensus of all group members.
|
Unanimity
|
Gaining approval of the
project scope deliverables as they are completed.
|
Verify Scope
|
A network diagramming
method in which actiivties are shown on arrows and connected at nodes. Can
only depict Finish-to-start relationships
|
Activity-on-arrow (AOA)
|
#NAME?
|
Activity-on-node
|
The separation (or
divergence) of activities on network diagram from a central node.
|
Burst
|
The smallest time unit used
in project schedules such as minutes, hours, shifts, days, weeks,...
|
Calendar Unit
|
A duration compression
technique in which more people are added to critical path activities...
|
Crashing
|
A network analysis method
used to calculate total project duration.
|
Critical Path Method (CPM)
(Technique)
|
A zero duration activity
used in the arrow diagramming method (ADM) to show a logical relationship;...
|
Dummy Activities
|
A dependency that lies
outside the control of the project team.
|
External Dependency
|
The amounbst of time an
activity can be delaped (slip) without causing a delay to the successor(s)...
|
Float
|
A network diagram technique
that calculates the early start (ES) and early finish (EF) dates...
|
Forward Pass
|
The amount of time an
activitiy can be delayed without causing slippage (delay) to the early...
|
Free Slack (Free Float)
|
The horizontal bar chart
used in project management to show a time relationship between activities....
|
Gantt Chart
|
A fixed date for an
activity or milestone.
|
Imposed Date
|
A coming together
(convergence) of activities on a network diagram.
|
Merge
|
A high level schedule which
displays summary information associated with activities and milestones.
|
Milestone Schedule (Tool)
|
The connecting of
activities on the network diagram to establish the structure of the
network...
|
Network Logic
|
A point in a schedule
network.
|
Node
|
A burst on the network
diagram where the output of an activitiy goes to more than one activity.
|
Path Divergence
|
An estimating technique
used to take the pessimistic, optimistic, and realistic (most likely)...
|
PERT Weighted Average
|
The logical relationship
between activities as depicted in a precedence diagram.
|
Precedence Relationship
|
An activitiy that
determines when its successor activity can begin.
|
Predecessor Acitivitiy
|
A view of the logical
relationship (sequencing) of project activities.
|
Project Network Diagram
|
A graphical representation
of the logical relationships between project activites.
|
Project Schedule Network
Diagram
|
A progressive elaboration
approach to managing a schedule where the initial phases are defined...
|
Rolling Wave Planning
(Technique)
|
The planned dates,
sequencing, resources, and durations for activities and milestones on a...
|
Schedule
|
The process of shorting the
project schedule without modifying the scope of the project (Ex:)...
|
Schedule Compression
(Technique)
|
Document that decomposes
work packages, establishes the network diagram, determines required...
|
Schedule Management Plan
|
A major event in the
project schedule; typically involves the start or completion of a major...
|
Schedule Milestone
|
The planned finish date for
an activitiy, work package or other piece of the schedule.
|
Scheduled Finish Date
|
The planned start date for
an activity, work package, or other piece of the schedule.
|
Scheduled Start Date
|
A section of a network
diagram; can be associated with a work package or some other type of...
|
Subnetwork
|
A requested project
completion date that can be a constraint for the project.
|
Target Completion Date (TC)
|
The date that the project
(or activity) is anticipated to be completed.
|
Target Finish Date (TF)
|
A preliminary schedule that
can be used during initial stages of Planning; could differ from...
|
Target Schedule
|
The planned start date of
the project or activity.
|
Target Start Date (TS)
|
An estimating technique
that can be applied to schedule or budget; uses three estimates for...
|
Three Point Estimate
(Technique)
|
The maximum amount of time
an activity can slip without causing a delay to the project finish...
|
Total Float (TF)
|
The amount of time an
activity can slip (be delayed) from its early start date without delaying...
|
Total Slack (Total Float)
|
Data associated with the
completion of work on the project; can include deliverable status,...
|
Work Performance
Information (Output/Input)
|
Earned Value Technique
|
EVT
|
Planned Value
|
PV
|
Actual Cost
|
AC
|
Start to Finish
relationship between two activities. The completion of the successor is
dependent on the initiation of its predecessor.
|
SF
|
A finish-to-start (FS)
relationship between two activities implies that the initiation of successor
is dependent on the completion of predecessor.
|
FS
|
A finish-to-finish (FF)
relationship between two activities implies that the completion of successor
is dependent on the completion of predecessor.
|
FF
|
A start-to-start (SS)
relationship implies that the initiation of successor is dependent on the
initiation of predecessor.
|
SS
|
Program Evaluation and
Review Technique. A technique for estimating that applies a weighted average
of optimistic, pessimistic and most likely estimates when there is
uncertainty with the individual activity estimates.
|
PERT
|
(P+O+4M)/6. P =
pessimistic, 0 = optimistic, M = most likely estimate
|
PERT formula
|
Any systematic approaches
used to analyse the value of a proposed project. The evaluation may be formal
or informal.
|
What is "Project
Selection Method"?
|
To complete Performance
Index
|
TCPI
|
Earned Value Technique. The
EVT continuously monitors the planned value , earned value and actual costs
expected to produce the work of the project.
|
EVT
|
Planned value. The
authorized budget assigned to scheduled work.
|
PV
|
Actual cost is money that’s
actually been expended to date for completed work
|
AC
|
Earned value is the value
of the work completed to date compared to the budget. How much work was
actually completed during a given period of time. Derived by measuring actual
work completed at a point in the schedule.
|
EV
|
Cost variance: EV-AC
(Earned Value - Actual Cost)
|
CV (und Formel)
|
Estimate at completion.
Predict the cost of the project at its completion. (zb Kosten bisher +
forecast)
|
EAC
|
Budget at completion. An
estimate, determined at the start of the project. "how much money you
believe that you will need to complete the project"
|
BAC
|
7 (Plan schedule mgmt,
define activities, sequence activities, estimate activity resources, estimate
activity durations,develop schedule, control schedule)
|
Processes in "Project
Time Management"
|
High level project
requirements, aceptance criteria, Project objectives, Product requirements,
Key milestone dates
|
What does the Project
Charter include?
|
A formal, approved document
that defines how the project is managed, executed, and controlled. It may be
summary or detailed and may be composed of one or more subsidiary management
plans and other planning documents
|
How is the Project
management plan defined?
|
deliverables and work
performance information
|
Output of "direct and
manage project execution
|
n Monitoring and controll:
Takes a look at all the work being done to ensure that the deliverables and
the way they are being done are in line with the plan.
|
What does the process
"Monitor and control work" do?
|
When a change occures, it
is evaluated across the project
|
What does the process
"Integrated change control" do?
|
Evaluating project success
and failure, formal acceptance, project records, lessons learned
|
Content of the "close
project" process?
|
The process of defining and
documenting stakeholders needs to meet the project objectives.
|
Definition process
"collect requirements"?
|
The process of developing a
detailed description of the project and product
|
Definition process
"define scope"
|
The process of subdividing
project deliverables and project work into smaller, more manageable
components
|
Definition process
"create WBS"
|
The process of formalizing
acceptance of the completed project deliverables
|
Definition process
"verify scope"
|
The process of monitoring
the status of the project and product scope and managing changes to the scope
baseline.
|
Definition process
"control scope"
|
The process of identifying
the specific actions to be performed to produce the project deliverables.
|
Definition process
"Define activities"?
|
The process of identifying
and documenting relationships among the project activities
|
Definition process
"sequence activities"
|
The process of estimating
the type and quantities of material, people, equipment, or supplies required
to perform each activitiy
|
Definition process
"Estimate activity resources"
|
The process of
approximating the number of work periods needed to complete individual
activities with estimated resources
|
Definition process
"Estimate activity durations"
|
The process of analyzing
activity sequences, durations, resource requirements, and schedule
constraints to create the project schedule
|
Definition process
"Schedule"
|
The process of monitoring
the status of the project to update project progress and managing changes to
the schedule baseline.
|
Definition process
"Control Schedule"
|
The process of developing
an approximation of the monetary resources needed to complete project
activities
|
Definition process
"Estimate Costs"
|
The process of aggregating
the estimated costs of individual activities or work packages to establish an
authorized cost baseline
|
Definition process
"Determine Budget"
|
The process of monitoring
the status of the project to update the project budget and managing changes
to the cost baseline
|
Definition process
"Control Costs"
|
The process of identifying
quality requirements and/or standards for the project and product, and
documenting how the project will demonstrate compliance
|
Definition process
"Plan Quality"
|
The process of auditing the
quality requirements and the results from quality control measurements to
ensure appropriate quality standards and operational definitions are used.
|
Definition process
"Perform Quality Assurance"
|
The process of monitoring
and recording results of executing the quality activities to assess
performance and recommend necessary changes.
|
Definition process
"Perform Quality Control"
|
Precedence Diagramming
Method. A technique used for constructing a schedule model in which
activities are represented by nodes and are grpahically linked by one or more
logical relationships to show the sequence in which the activities are to be
performed.
|
PDM
|
A technique used to
estimate cost or duration by applying an average of optimistic, pessimistic,
and most likely estimates when there is uncertainty with the individual
activity estimates.
|
Three-Point Estimate
|
Can be included in the
activity list. Can include: activity codes, predecessor activitites,
successor activities, logical relationships, leads and lags, resource
requirements, imposed dates, constraints, and assumptions.
|
Define "Activity
Attributes"
|
monitors and reports on the
status of the project to senior management. This role has no authority. He
acts as a communication coordinator only and cannot enforce any decisions.
|
What is a project expediter
|
The process of identifying
and documenting project roles, responsibilities, and required skills,
reporting relationships, and creating a staffing management plan
|
Definition "Develop
Human Resource Plan"
|
The process of confirming
human resource availability and obtaining the team necessary to complete
project assignments.
|
Definition "Acquire
Project team"
|
The process of improving
the competencies, team interaction, and the overall team environment to
enhance project performance.
|
Definition "Develop
project team"
|
The process of tracking
team member performance, providing feedback, resolving issues, and managing
changes to optimize project performance.
|
Definition "Manage
Project Team"
|
The process of identifying
all people or organizations impacted by the project, and documenting relevant
information regarding their interests, involvement, and impact on project
success.
|
Definition process
"Identify Stakeholder"
|
The process of determining
the project stakeholder information needs and defining a communication
approach.
|
Definition process
"Plan Communications"
|
The process of making
relevant information available to project stakeholders as planned.
|
Definition process
"Distribute Information"
|
The process of
communicating and working with stakeholders to meet their needs and
addressing issues as they occur.
|
Definition process
"Manage Stakeholder Expectations"
|
The process of collecting
and distributing performance information, including status reports, progress
measurements, and forecasts.
|
Definition process
"Report Performance"
|
Includes the processes
required to ensure timely and appropriate generation, collection,
distribution, storage, retrieval, and ultimate disposition of project
information. Project managers spend the majority of their time communicating
with team members and other project stakeholders.
|
Definition "Project
Communications Management"
|
The processes of conducting
risk management planning, identification, analysis, response planning, and
monitoring and control on a project. The objectives of Project Risk Management
are to increase the probability and impact of positive events, and decrease
the probability and impact of negative events in the project.
|
Definition "Project
Risk Management"
|
The process of defining how
to conduct risk management activities for a project.
|
Definition process
"Plan Risk Management"
|
The process of determining
which risks may affect the project and documenting their characteristics.
|
Definition process
"Identify Risks"
|
The process of prioritizing
risks for further analysis or action by assessing and combining their
probability of occurence and impact.
|
Definition process
"Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis"
|
The process of numerically
analyzing the effect of identified risks on overall project objectives.
|
Definition process
"Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis"
|
The process of developing
options and actions to enhacne opportunities and to reduce threats to project
objectives
|
Definition process
"Plan Risk Reponses"
|
The process of implementing
risk reponse plans, tracking identified risks, monitoring residual risks,
identifying new risks, and evaluating risk process effectiveness throughout
the project.
|
Definition process
"Monitor and Control Risks" (5 actions)
|
Includes the processes
necessary to purchase or acquire products, services, or results needed from
outside the project team. The organization can be either the buyer or seller
of the products, services, or results of a project.
|
Definition "Project
Procurement Management"
|
The process of documenting
project purchasing decidions, specifying the approach, and identifying
potential sellers.
|
Definition process
"Plan Procurements"
|
The process of obtaining
seller responses, selecting a seller, and awarding a contract.
|
Definition process "Conduct
Procurements"
|
The process of managing
procurement relationships, monitoring contract performance, and making
changes and corrections as needed.
|
Definition process
"Administer Procurements"
|
The process of completing
each project procurement.
|
Definition process
"Close Procurements"
|
A project is a temporary
endeavor with a beginning and an end that creates a unique product, service,
or result
|
Definition Project
|
Organizational Project
Management. Its an organizational framework which serves as a guide or driver
for projects, programs and portfolios.
|
OPM
|
PMIs organizational project
management maturity model. It helps organizations determine their level of
maturity in project management.
|
What is OPM3?
|
Silo
|
What do you think when you
see the term "functional"? (Organizational)
|
no home (for a FTE, no line
function)
|
What do you think when you
see "projectized" (Organization)
|
2 Bosses
|
What do you think when you
see "Mattrix" (Organization)
|
Matrix
|
Which organization form
should be assumed when not explicitly stated?
|
Company culture and
existing systems.
|
What means "Enterprise
enviromental factors"?
|
Company culture and
existing systems. The "baggage" that comes with the project and is
outside of the control of the project team.
|
What means "Enterprise
enviromental factors"?
|
Project Management
Information System
|
PMIS
|
Existing processes,
procedures, and historical information. They help the project benefit from
past company experience.
|
What are
"Organizational process assets"?
|
Part of
"Organizational process assets". Assume the organization has
information such as historical recors and lessons learned from previous
projects and that the company has incorporated those records into an indexed
corporate knowledge base available to all.
|
Whats the thing about a
"Corporate Knowledge Base"?
|
Data is the "raw
data". "information" is the analysis of this data. Is it good
or bad? Do we need to change something? ...
|
Difference between
"work performance data" and "work performance
information"?
|
Plan-driven projects vs.
Change-driven projects
|
What are two typical
project life cycles?
|
One version of a project
life cycle: Scope, schedule and cost need to be determined in detail early in
the life of the project, before the work begins to produce the deliverables
|
What are Plan-driven
projects
|
One version of a project
life cycle, especially adaptive / agile life cycles: time and cost are fixed,
but scope is broadly defined with the understanding that it will be refined
as the project progresses. Work is planned in quick, brief increments.
|
What are change-driven
projects?
|
Usually the plan-driven
life cycle.
|
What is the most common
Project life cycle, especially for the exam?
|
What you need to do to
manage the work: Initiating, Planning, Executing, Monitoring and controlling,
closing.
|
What are the project
management processes?
|
All project management processes
(initiating, planning,..., closing) may be used for every step of a project
life cycle (feasibility, planning, design,...)
|
Difference between project
life cycle and project management process
|
iterative
|
What kind of process is the
planning process?
|
Request for Proposal
|
What does RfP stand for?
|
Request for Quotation
|
What does RfQ stand for?
|
Invitation for Bid
|
What does IFB stand for?
|
Monitor and Control
|
Gain acceptance of interim
deliverables from the customer
|
Monitor and Control
|
Manage Configuration
|
Monitor and Control
|
Update the PM plan and
project documents
|
Closing
|
Confirm work was done to
requirementes
|
Executing
|
Determine whether processes
are correct and effective (Quality Assurance)
|
Executing
|
Gather work performance
data
|
Executing
|
Report on project
performance
|
Executing
|
Perform quality audits
|
Executing
|
Facilitate conflict
resolution
|
Executing
|
Use issue logs
|
Executing
|
Release resources as work
is completed
|
The functional and physical
characteristics of a product, result, service, or component.
|
Definition
"Configuration"
|
A graphical representation
of the logical relationships among the project schedule activities.
|
Definition "Network
diagram"
|
create activity list
|
What comes before
"create network diagram"?
|
go back - iterations
|
What comes before
"finalize procurement documents"?
|
determine detailed
requirements
|
What comes before
"creat project scope statement"?
|
determine planning team
|
What comes before
"create wbs and wbs dictionary"?
|
estimate time and cost
|
What comes before
"determine critical path"?
|
estimate resource
requirements
|
What comes before
"estimate time and cost"?
|
develope a realistic and
final project management plan and performance measurement baseline
|
What comes before
"gain formal approval of the plan"?
|
gain formal approval of the
plan
|
What comes before
"hold kickoff meeting"?
|
develop budget
|
What comes before
"determine quality standards, processes and metrics"?
|
create project scope
statement
|
What comes before
"assess what to purchase and create procurement documents"?
|
determine all roles and
responsibilities
|
What comes before
"plan communications and stakeholder engagement"?
|
perform risk
identification, qualitative and quantitative risk analzsis, and risk response
planning
|
What comes before "go
back - iterations"?
|
determine qualitz
standards, processes, and metrics
|
What comes before
"create process improvement plan"?
|
create process improvement
plan
|
What comes before
"determine all roles and responsibilities"?
|
plan communciations and
stakeholder management
|
What comes before
"perform risk identification, qualitative and quantitative risk
analzsis, and risk response planning"?
|
Create network diagram
|
What comes before
"estimate resource requirements"?
|
create wbs and wbs
dictionary
|
What comes before
"create activity list"?
|
Measure -> Change ->
Update -> Lessons learned
|
Storyline der
"control"-Prozesse
|
What do I need before I
can...
|
An "input"
means...
|
Benefit measurement methods
(comparative approach), Constrained optimization method (mathematical
approach)
|
The two methods for project
selection?
|
Change, Configuration,
Requirements and Process
|
Which management plans
additional to the one related to every knowledge area do exists?
|
Scope, Schedule and Cost
|
What baselines do exist?
|
Any changes to the Baseline
Requirements agreed with the client, should be taken up by project team on
approval from this committee.
|
What is a "Change
control board"?
|
Part of the "Scope
Management Process". Involves defining and planning for stakeholders
needs, wants, expectations, and assumptions to determine the requirements for
the project.
|
What is the
"Requirements Management Plan"
|
The project manager needs
to think in advance about where there might be changes and what to do to
limit the negative effects of changes. The PM needs to stand as a barrier to
prevent unnecessary changes. The Change Mgmt plan describes how changes will
be managed and controlled.
|
Definition and Reason for
the "Change Management
Plan"?
|
It defines how you will
manage changes to the deliverables and processes and the resulting
documentation.
|
What is the
"Configuration management plan"?
|
Later in the project
management process, you will need to constantly measure progress against the
projhect management plan. The end date, end cost, and other constraints in
the project MUST be met.
|
Why is it so important to
have a project management plan that is realistic?
|
Any project-related
documents that are not part of the project management plan. Most
"project documents" are created by the project manager for use on
the project and typically are not shown to or approved by the sponsor. (As
opposed to the Project Management plan)
|
What are "project
documents"?
|
To determine the Early
Start of an activity, factor in all its dependencies and see its earliest
start date. (Forward pass technique)
|
ES
|
The Early Finish (EF) is
the earliest calculated time an activity can end. (forward pass method)
|
EF
|
Late Start (LS) and Late
Finish(LF). calculating backward to see how much an activity may slide
without affecting the finish date.
|
What are the "Backward
pass techniques"?
|
Late Start. The latest time
an activity may begin without delaying the project duration. (Backward pass
technique)
|
LS
|
Late Finish (LF) latest
time an activity may be completedwithout delaying the project duration.
(backward pass technique)
|
LF
|
The project managers system
for authorizing the start of work packages or activities
|
What is the work
authorization system
|
Undertaken to adjust
performance within the existing project baseline and do NOT change them.
Therefore a proper baseline has to be established.
|
What is important to
understand about "corrective actions"?
|
Preventive Action deals
with anticipated or possible deviations. It requieres more experience than
calculations. Evaluating Trends.
|
Difference between
"Corrective" and "Preventive Action"?
|
Another way of saying
"Rework", when a component of the project does not meet
specifications.
|
What is "Defect
Repair"?
|
evaluate impact (to all
constraints, i.e. knowledge areas), identify options, get internal approval
(change control board), get customer buy-in (if required)
|
Process for change requests
|
assume there is one
|
what about the change
control board?
|
validate scope is about
getting formal acceptance from the customer for many interim deliverables
|
difference between close
project and validate scope?
|
requirements for a project,
i.e. definition of scope, are gathered from all stakeholders, not just the
person who assigned the project
|
who defines requirements?
|
project scope = product
scope(i.e. deliverable) + work to create deliverable
|
Difference product and
project scope
|
That i am the buyer of
staff
|
whats the assumption about
procurements in the exam?
|
it gives boundaries. no one
can request or add work to the project that is not documented in the charter
|
why is a proper charter so
important?
|
if you cannot plan it, you
cannot do it
|
idea behind the creation of
management plans
|
analyze, prioritize, manage
and track changes
|
what happens after
requirements are collected?
|
all. not only product
requirements. compliance, project / risk mgmt etc.
|
what requirements are
collected?
|
a missed requirement can
mean significant changes and conflict and even project failure
|
why is requirement
collection so important?
|
u.a. review historical
records, interviews, focus groups, brainstorming...
|
tools for requirement
collection?
|
evaluate and rank
|
what happens with ideas
from brainstorming
|
Experts are being asked
independently for their opinion. The answers are comprehended and send back
for review and comments until an agreement is found
|
delphi technique?
|
ask for acceptance
criteria. "How will we know if the work we do will meet this requirement?"
|
how do you ensure that you
properly understood a requirement?
|
They have priority!
|
what about requirements of
the customer?
|
luft
|
gaiss
|
helps to determine which
risks have the most potential impact on the project.
|
Sensitivity analysis
|
Accept those that best
comply with - the BC of the project, the charter, the scope, the constraints
(e.g. schedule)
|
How do you resolve
competing requirements?
|
Links the requirements to
the objectives of the project. (We do "Small chairs in children
area" because we want to "provide a pleasant place for community
member to meet")
|
What is the requirements
traceability matrix?
|
By assigning team members
to manage a requirement.
|
How can requirements be
managed?
|
Here is the approved
project and product scope for this project.
|
What does the scope
statement say?
|
A tool build into the WBS
to manage and control cost, schedule, and scope at a higher level than
workpackages (e.g. workstreams)
|
Control Accounts?
|
Scope increasing or varying
from what was planned
|
Scope Creep?
|
You decompose the project
using a WBS
|
Decompose vs. WBS?
|
Risk Breakdown Structure -
The RBS splits risks into categories and then splits them further into
sub-categories thereby making our lives (The life of a Risk Manager) easier.
|
RBS
|
provides a description of
the work to be done for each WBS work package. a project manager can user the
WBS dictionary to prevent scope creep before work even starts on the project.
|
WBS dictionary?
|
Frequent, planed meetings
with the customer or sponsor to gain formal accptance of deliverables during
project monitoring and controlling.
|
How do you "validate
scope"?
|
You perform quality
inspection before you go to the customer.
|
What do you do before
"validate scope"?
|
measuring and assessing
work performance data against the scope baseline. If necessary, you would
submit a change through the integrated change process.
|
How do you "control
scope"?
|
A work authorization system
|
Tool for Schedule
management?
|
you may meet to plan the
schedule with the project sponsor, team members, and other stakeholders.
|
how could you plan the
schedule?
|
You plan acitivities to the
detail needed to manage the work only when you start that phase of the
project life cycle.
|
What do you do in
"Rolling Wave Planning"?
|
significant events within
the project schedule and checkpoints to help control the project
|
What are milestones (for)?
(2)
|
A network diagram
|
Result of "sequence
activities"?
|
It can show the critical
path
|
network diagram + activity
duration estimates = ?
|
Arrow Diagramming Method
|
ADM
|
Graphical Evaluation and
review technique
|
GERT method?
|
Nowadays PDM is used.
|
PDM vs ADM vs GERT?
|
Activity on Node = PDM
|
AON?
|
A computer simulation
technique that allows loops between activities. (Designing and testing e.g.)
|
What contains GERT?
|
In "soft logic"
you can change a discretionary dependency if necessary. Only the organization
decided to usually do it this way.
|
Difference between
mandatory and discretionary dependency?
|
Mandatory, discretional,
external and internal
|
Types of dependencies for
scheduling? (4)
|
Waiting time inserted
between activities. e.g. a 10 day lag exists, the next activity cannot be
initiated under any circumstances unless and until the 10 full days have
passed by
|
What is "Lag"?
|
an activity can start
before its predecessor activity is completed.
|
What is "Lead"?
|
Ideally the person who will
do the work.
|
Who should do estimations?
|
Historical information from
past projects (part of organizational process assets)
|
What is key to improve
estimates?
|
If smaller size work is
estimated
|
How can estimates become
more accurate?
|
Equipment, materials and
people
|
What are ressources?
|
Ressource breakdown
structure
|
RBS
|
the resources to be used,
organized by their category and type.
|
What does a RBS show?
|
Extra time or cost added to
an estimate because the estimator does not have enough information.
|
What is a "pad" /
"padding"?
|
Identify and openly adress
uncertainties with the project managers
|
What should estimators do
when estimating to avoid padding?
|
u.a. sanity check, prevent
padding, formulate a reserve, record asumptions for later review.
|
If the people that will do
the work are estimating, what does the project manager do? (4)
|
If an estimator submits one
estimate per activity
|
What is a one-point
estimate?
|
Top/down estimating? expert
judgement and historical information is used. (as opposed to bottom-up
estimating)
|
What is "Analogous
estimating"?
|
Estimating based on sub-variables,
e.g. time per line of code, time per linear meter, time per installation etc.
|
What is
"parametric" estimating?
|
A generally accepted rule
(of thumb) or best practice. E.g. 80/20.
|
What is
"Heuristics"?
|
(P+O+M)/3
|
What is "Triangular
distribution"?
|
(p+4m+O)/6
|
Beta distribution?
|
(p-o)/6
|
Beta activity standard
deviation?
|
tha possible range for the
estimate
|
activity standard
deviation?
|
expected activity duration
|
EAD
|
Standard deviation
|
SD
|
... the greater the risk
overall
|
The greater the range
(schedule variance) for a project, the ...
|
Project managers have a
professional respnsibility to establish a reserve to accommodate the risks
that remain in the project after the risk management planning process have
been completed
|
What about
"reserve"?
|
Contingency reserve for the identified risks remaining after
risk responses are planned and management reserves fore the unknown unknown.
|
Two types of "reserves"?
|
determining the longest
path through the network diagram
|
How do you determine the
critical path?
|
you need to focus time and
effor monitoring and controlling activities on both the critical and
near-critical path so there is no delay in project compleation
|
What do you need to know
about near-critical path?
|
total is for an activity
without delaying the project or intermediary milestone. free is for an
activity not delaying the ES of its successor and project is without delaying
externallz imposed completion date.
|
total, free and project float?
|
taking critical path
activities that were originally planned in a series and doing them instead in
parallel
|
Fast Tracking?
|
adding or adjusting
resources in order to compress the schedule. it trades time for money
|
Crashing?
|
Fast Tracking and Crashing
|
The two schedule
compression methods?
|
he analyzes and the lets
the requester (sponsor, mgmt, customer...) know about the consequences. he
does NOT just say yes.
|
What does a project manager
do with a request?
|
Leveling lengthens the
schedule and increases cost in order to deal with a limited amount of
resources. smoothing only shifts to the extend of floats
|
difference between resource
leveling and smoothing?
|
critical path + resource
dependencies = critical chain
|
Critical chain vs critical
path method?
|
network diagram, milestone
chart or bar chart
|
how can a project schedule
be shown?
|
show interdependencies
between activities
|
why network diagram before
bar chart?
|
report to senior management
|
why milestone chart before
bar chart?
|
to track progress and
report to the team
|
why bar chart before
network diagram?
|
Organization Breakdown
Structure
|
OBS
|
value engineering - find a
less costly way to do the same work
|
Value Analysis
|
quick, activities need not
be identified, less costly to create vs. less accurate, requires considerable
experience, does not take into account differences between projects
|
advantages and
disadvantages of analogous estimating
|
the exam assumes that a
project manager knows the actual cost of labor when performing detailed cost
estimating. (might also involve estimating the work of consultants, vendors
and suppliers)\
|
resource cost rates
|
-25% - +50% estimate from
actual cost
|
ROM?
|
cost estimate made during
project planning. -10% to +25% from actual
|
budget estimate
|
+/-10 percent from actual
cost estimation, some project managers use -5% to +10%
|
definitive estimate
|
rom / budget estimate /
definitive estimate
|
three steps of estimation
accuracy?
|
the cost budget includes
also management reserves (for the unkown unknowns)
|
difference between cost
baseline and cost budget?
|
follow the cost management
plan
|
What actions should a
project manager take to control cost?
|
Measure. Assume that the
project manager is measuring, measuring, measuring. You need to have an
"attitude" of control. It is your project and your career.
|
What means
"control"?
|
part of controlling costs
involves analyzing whether those contingency reserves are sill necessary or
whether new reserves are required.
|
reserve analysis?
|
a combination of the three
baselines scope, schedule and cost.
|
performance measurement
baseline?
|
variance at completion - as
of today, how much over or under budget do we expect to be at the end of the
project?
|
vac
|
We are getting xy USD worth
of work out of every 1 USD we spent.
|
Meaning of CPI?
|
4
|
how many formulas for EAC?
|
when the original estimate
was fundamentally flawed
|
when to use ac +etc = eac?
|
if no variances from the
bac have occurred or you will continue at the same rate of spending
|
when to use bac/cpi = eac?
|
when current variances are
thought to be atypical of the future. it is ac plus the remaining value of
work to perform
|
when to use ac + (bac - ev)
= eac
|
when current variances are
thought to be typical of the future and when project schedule constraints
will influence the completion of the remaining effort.
|
when to use bac = ac +
(bac-ev) / (cpi*SPI)
|
bac - eac
|
formula for vac?
|
quality is defined as the
degree to which the project fulfills requirements. (Not about how cool it is
/ gold-plating etc.)
|
definition of quality?
|
quality theorist. developed
80/20 principle
|
What did Joseph Juran do?
|
quality theorist -
advocated zero defects and prevention over inspection. concept of the cost of
poor quality
|
what did philip crosby do
|
since most projects have
difficulty to meet the project objectives, all available effort should go
into achieving those objectives.
|
What is bad about gold
plating?
|
quality management -
looking for the point where the benefits from improving quality equals the
incremental cost to achieve this quality
|
marginal analysis
|
Just in time - decreasing
inventory to close to zero
|
JIT
|
total quality management -
this philosophy encourages companies and their emplozees to continuously
improve the quality of their products at every level of the organization
|
tqm
|
each team member must check
his or her work by inspecting the quality of his work himself. the project
manager has the fnial responsibility.
|
responsibility for quality
|
The UN convention on
contracts for international sale of goods - standard that governs
international sales transactions
|
CISG
|
occupational safetz and
health administration - standards for the safetz of american workers
|
osha
|
it will result in additions
or changes to the project management plan and project documents. e.g. work
may be added to the WBS, resources may be changed...
|
results of the plan quality
management process
|
a common flowchart model -
shows the connections between supplier, input, process, output, and customer
in a process
|
SIPOC
|
Checksheet. keep track of
data such as quality problems uncovered during inspections. e.g. how often a
particular defect occurs. "Strichliste"
|
Tally sheet?
|
control limits represent
the performing organizations stadards, specification limits represent the
customers expectations or contractual requirements
|
Difference between control
and specification limits
|
a heuristic. if a group or
series of seven data points is on only one side of the mean on a control
chart. And also they are not out of the control limit they are not random and
the process is out of control
|
Rule of seven?
|
when the rule of seven
applies or a data point is outside the control limit or even specification
limit
|
when is a process out of
control
|
use experimentation to
determine statistically what variables will improve quality - systematically
change all of the important factors in a process
|
Design of experiments
|
a group outside the project
while the project work is being done
|
Who performs quality
assurance and when?
|
is being used when checking
the quality of the deliverable
|
Quality checklist?
|
Imagine a team of auditors
to see if you are complying with company policies, standardized practices,
and procedures and to determine whether the policies, practices, and procedures
being used are efficient and effective
|
Who does quality audits?
|
A part of continuous
improvement effort in a project that focuses on identifying improvements -
part of quality management
|
Process Analysis
|
process decision program
charts - these charts decompose a goal into steps required to achieve it and
each step is then reviewed for potential risk
|
PDPC
|
you at first gather data
through analysis and then use the interrelationship digraph to identify the
cause and effect relationships between the data.
|
Interrelationship digraphs
|
Relations Diagrams are
drawn to show all the different relationships between factors, areas, or
processes.
|
Interrelationship digraphs
|
Administrative and
Behavioral
|
Two parts in "Human
Ressources"
|
Reponsible for governance
at an executive level of the projects or programs that make up a portfolio.
|
What is the role of a
portfolio manager?
|
Think of your team as if
they are employees who report directly to you.
|
How to best think of your
team in terms of HR?
|
Responsibility assignment
matrix - cross-references team members with the activities or work packages
they are to accomplish
|
RAM?
|
You will see negotiation
frequently referenced on the exam as it relates to gaining resources from
within your organization and in procurement situations.
|
Negotiation?
|
Can be more challenging to
manage, but you can reach out to the whole world to find the best team
members.
|
Pro and Con of virtual
teams?
|
establish a set of criteria
to help evaluate potential team members.
|
multi-criteria decision
analysis in HR
|
The project manager should
incorporate team-building activities into all project activities
|
Where should "Team
building" be happening?
|
Forming, storming, norming,
performing, adjourning
|
Stages of team formation
and development?
|
What standards of behavior
do you expect for team members interactions with each other? What are the
project rules?
|
What are ground rules?
|
#NAME?
|
Tight Matrix?
|
evaluate and enhance the
effectiveness of the team as A WHOLE
|
What is important to know
about "Team performance measurement"?
|
Expert and reward
|
What are the best forms of
power?
|
the pm coordinates the
input of others
|
Facilitating
|
the pm solicits input from
team members but retains decision-making authority for himself
|
consultative-autocratic
|
those who have the
cnoflict, possibly assisted by the project manager
|
who should resolve
conflicts?
|
is is not bad, its an
opportunity for improvement, and it is inevitable
|
what about conflict?
|
collaborating,
compromising, withdrawal, smoothing, forcing
|
the main conflict
resolution techniques?
|
collaboration (i.e. problem
solving)
|
best conflict resolution
techniques?
|
employees who believe their
efforts will lead to effective performance and who expect to be rewarded for
their accomplishments will remain productive as rewards meet their expectation
|
expectancy theory
|
a neutral party hears and resolves a dispute
|
arbitration in conflicts?
|
some employees receive special rewards, such as assigned parking
spaces, corner offices and executive dining.
|
perquisites (perks)
|
the "standard" benefits (education, profit sharing etc.)
|
Fringe benefits?
|
Theory of needs (Acquired needs theory)
|
David McClelland?
|
people are most motivated by achievement, affiliation and power
|
theory of needs?
|
Input - Tools and Techniques - Output
|
ITTO
|
Magisches Dreieck - Time, Cost, Scope
|
Triple constraints?
|
Providing information in the right format at the right time
|
Effective communication?
|
When project managers unknowingly introduce communication blockers
into their projects. e.g. using meaningless phrases or being hostile or
negative
|
What are communication
blockers?
|
Often too much time is spend reporting and not enough time managing.
|
Problem with reports?
|
PMO ist eine
organisatorische Einheit die es unabhängig von der Dauer eines konkreten
Projekts gibt. Ein PO ist für ein konkretes Projekt zuständig und von daher
mit begrenzter Dauer.
|
Unterschied PMO und PO
|
Statement of Work
|
SOW?
|
It is both. An input to a project to develop the project charter and
an output from procurement, which serves as an input to the receiving
organization
|
Is SOW an input or an output?
|
Projekt- vs.
Standard-Unternehmens-Kostenstellen
|
Control accounts vs "Chart of Accounts"
|
Nummer eines workpackages
|
Code of account?
|
Nummer eines workpackages
vs Standard-Unternehmens-Kostenstellen
|
code of account vs. chart of accounts
|
Experten
|
Member of focus groups?
|
Project & feeding
buffer
|
Two kinds of buffers for the critical path
|
on activities and on workpackages
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zwo contingency reserves
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the typical cost curve
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what is s-shaped?
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Over budget
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what is "cost
overrun"
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A tally sheet. Eine
Strichlister
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what is a checksheet?
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Prioritization of risks
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Goal of "Perform qualitative risk analysis"?
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Expected monetary value
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EMV?
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Fixed Price with economic price adjustment - i.e. price will be
adjusted according to a factor, e.g. steel price
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FP-EPA?
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the price per unit
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What is fixed in a time-material contract?
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Terms and Conditions
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T&C
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