Activity: Conceive New Project |
|
 |
This activity brings a project from the initial germ of an idea to a point at which a reasoned decision can be made to continue or abandon the project. |
Extends: Conceive New Project |
|
Description
On the basis of the initial Vision, risks are assessed and an economic analysis, the Business Case, is produced. If the Project Approval Review finds these satisfactory, the project is
formally set up (in Task: Initiate Project), and given limited sanction (and budget) to
begin a complete planning effort. Note that, by definition, this initial Vision is created outside the project (perhaps
by a separate business modeling or systems engineering activity), not by the subsequent Task: Develop Technical Vision within the project. This latter activity adds
substance to the initial Vision, validates and refines it. The project begins with this activity, so any artifacts that
are input must already exist - in other words, the project must have some organizational and business context.
|
Staffing
The person(s) acting as Project Manager for these early activities may not be the one(s) to carry the project forward, because the emphasis at this
stage is on risk discovery and establishing the potential return-on-investment. The Project Manager's ability to make
sound business and technical risk judgments is valuable, the ability to manage teams of people less so, in these early
activities. Equally, the Management Reviewer should have extensive business and domain
experience.
|
Usage
Usage Guidance |
This activity should be performed, since it is important to know whether or not to invest in the project.
In the Business Case, the project manager should describe at least two
approaches to realizing the vision, and analyze these in terms of risk impact, and economic outcomes. During the Project Approval Review, one of the offered choices will be selected,
if the project is to continue. There is a considerable body of management knowledge and theory to assist the project
manager and the project reviewer in risk and decision analysis, and it is valuable to have a few of the project
management and review staff well versed in these techniques - especially if the project is large, unprecedented,
complex or otherwise risky. See, for example, [CLE96], [EVA98] and [VOS96].
|
Work Breakdown
Licensed Materials - Property of IBM
© Copyright IBM Corp. 1987, 2012. All Rights Reserved.
|
|