OK - eProject seems to have turned me loose on a Blog. This sounds like it might be dangerous, especially for someone who likes to pontificate as much as I do :-)
By way of introduction, I'm Dave Blumhorst, CEO and founder of EffectiveIT Group. I am a former CIO and CFO, and the former Sr. Director of the IT-PMO at PeopleSoft. You may have attended one of my Webinars, or attended one of my presentations at eProject's users conference last Septembers (BTW - those are available from my web site). In any event, I have now been given a new forum for discussing all things PMO related. So, here goes:
For my first topic, I'd like to address the question I get most often. If we are just starting a Project Management Office, where should we start? To address this question, let's first look at what goes into a PMO.
PMOs have widely varying charters. They range from simple offices for managing large projects or programs, to strategic planning entities inside of project driven organizations, the most common being Information Technology (IT). It is the latter that I ran at PeopleSoft, and that I typically address.
At EffectiveIT Group, we take a comprehensive approach that looks at 3 basic practices. These are not always contained in the PMO, but all relate to each other no matter where they are located. They are:
Portfolio Management - organizing and tracking the slate of projects in meaningful groups, or portfolios, and prioritizing the list of requested and active projects.
Project Management - the methodologies and execution of projects.
Resource Management - How those projects get staffed, and the resulting resource conflicts managed.
So, where do you start? It all depends on where the pain is!
Many organizations have mature project management practices, but haven't even looked at how to organize or prioritize them. They should start with portfolio management. Others have their projects well organized, but can't seem to execute successfully - they should start at Project Management. And many organizations suffer from acute resource overload - resource management is a great starting point for them.
But what if it all hurts?!? This is the most common problem, and here's my quick take:
Start by developing sound project management methodologies. If you can't deliver on single projects, the rest won't do you much good!
After that, group them into portfolios, and start prioritizing them. Start with the grouping part, then develop a sound project intake, or request, process to control the flow of work into the organization.
Finally, learn to plan you resources. Oddly enough, this starts by logging time so you ca get real world feedback on what your resources are doing. Without that feedback, all the planning in the world is just guess work. You should also start making those planning guesses by assigning people to tasks in your project plans. Don't go to capacity planning until you have some experience with the former 2 steps.
OK - that sounds good - but how do you actually do those things? More on that in future blogs . . .
And if you have some other ideas - share them!