On Time, On Budget — Every Time On Time, On Budget — Every Time IMPROVING THE RELIABILITY IMPROVING THE RELIABILITY AND COST-EFFECTIVESS OF AND COST-EFFECTIVESS OF ADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTS ADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTS 6 July 2007 6 July 2007 Presentation to Corporate President’s Council Presentation to Corporate President’s Council
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On Time, On Budget — Every Time IMPROVING THE RELIABILITY AND COST-EFFECTIVESS OF ADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTS 6 July 2007 Presentation to Corporate President’s.
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On Time, On Budget — Every TimeOn Time, On Budget — Every Time
IMPROVING THE RELIABILITYIMPROVING THE RELIABILITY
AND COST-EFFECTIVESS OFAND COST-EFFECTIVESS OF
ADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTSADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTS
6 July 2007 6 July 2007
Presentation to Corporate President’s CouncilPresentation to Corporate President’s Council
Slide Slide 22
Questions to PonderQuestions to Ponder
Are you responsible for project(s) in Adventist Health?
Do you have confidence that your project(s) will be completed as scoped out, on time and within budget?
Do you know the actual status of every project?
Have you had project(s) that were reported on schedule and within projected costs— right up to the point when you found out the real status?
Have you initiated a project that was never fully implemented, or never fully embraced?
Have you wished for a more predictable perfor- mance from your project(s)?
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 33
Purpose of This PresentationPurpose of This Presentation
Share industry data on project effectiveness.
Ask what this information might mean for Adventist Health.
Recommend some next steps for improving performance of projects across Adventist Health, starting with the Corporate Office.
Opportunity for questions.
Acknowledge: Adventist Health accomplishes a lot of good in managing projects; even so, improve-ment of processes always make sense.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 44
The Project Management LandscapeThe Project Management Landscape
A great many companies don’t manage projects as efficiently as they tend to manage everything else: They don’t adopt PM standards.
They don’t train people professionally.
They don’t know how to hold project teams accountable.
And yet, other companies do all that: Reports from— The Standish Group.
Gartner Group.
Project Management Institute.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 55
The PM Landscape – 2The PM Landscape – 2
Data from 2000: 23% of projects fail (are cancelled, or
are finished but never used). Another 49% are “challenged” (over
budget, over schedule, cancelled functions/features).
Only 28% can be considered successful.
The costs to industry are great: 45% cost overruns. 63% time overruns. 67% of challenged projects drop
functions/features.
Source: The Standish Group, 2000 & 2005-06 CHAOS Studies.
On time, on budget—every time!
Fail
Challenged
Succeed
2000 Data:
Fail
Challenged
Succeed
2006 Data:
Improved, and yet:
Cost overruns of 47%,
Time overruns of 72%
35%46%
19%
Slide Slide 66
Standish Group “recipe for success” (their Top 10): Executive support (18*). User involvement (16). Experienced Project Manager (14). Clear business objectives (12). Minimized scope (10). Standard software infrastructure (8). Firm basic requirements (6). Formal methodology (6). Reliable estimates (5). Other criteria (5).
The PM Landscape – 3The PM Landscape – 3
Source: The Standish Group, 2000 CHAOS Study. * Weight of item’s influence on project success.
On time, on budget—every time!
† Natural result of an “Experienced Project Manager”
†
††
††
†
??
Slide Slide 77
From Gartner GroupFrom Gartner Group
Gartner’s “Critical Program Management” approach—
Assertion: 66% of “large scale” projects fail to meet stated business objectives, are delivered late, or are substantially over budget.
Assertion: Not unheard of for 30-40% of project budgets to go into rework.
Assertion: Lacking risk-assessment/mitigation mechanisms, at least 10% of $200k+ projects are canceled, as are 20%+ of all projects.
Assertion: 75% of failed projects >$500k will not be tracked through formal project-management support; 75% of successful projects in that category will be.
"How confident are you that project flaws have been fully discussed and understood by those who need to hear it?"
58%28%
10%
2%
2%
Not At All Confident
Somewhat Confident
Very Confident
Extremely Confident
Not Applicable
Source: Crucial Conversations Online Survey: Discussing High-Stakes Business Initiatives.(589 responses via VitalSmarts website.)
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 1212
And Lest We Think …. And Lest We Think ….
… This isn’t a problem in health care (according to a 2005 HIMSS article): Health care respondents— 50% have 1-4 major IT projects in process.
16% have 17 or more major projects in process.
60% said 1-10% of their IT projects failed in the past year.
21% said 10-20% of their projects failed.
19% reported a project failure rate of 20%. [Very consistent with 2005-06 CHAOS data.]
Wide perception in health care industry: Project Manage-ment is just overhead.
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Source: Healthcare IT News; Glen Knight, PMP, CPHIMS, FHIMSS. “Healthcare IT needs project management.” 1 Aug 2005.
Slide Slide 1313
And Lest We Think …. – 2And Lest We Think …. – 2
Per Glen Knight (author of the HIMSS article): Most health care IT project managers are “accidental project leaders.”
[LM: True across health care organizations, not just IT.]
Subject matter experts (excellent technicians and analysts) are pressed into PM without any formal training.
Most of these SMEs have other major responsibilities.
“Production applications and firefighting will always have a priority over even the most important projects.”
“It’s no wonder that many projects are behind schedule.”
However, there is a revolution in thinking in health care.
PM needs to become a recognized career path within health care.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 1414
Projects and Organizational StructuresProjects and Organizational Structures
Source: Project Management Institute.
Organizational structures have an interaction/impact on project management within that organization.
On time, on budget—every time!
?
Slide Slide 1515
What Are the Opportunities in AH? What Are the Opportunities in AH?
To begin with: A PM assessment (Roseville).
How many “projects” (a defined term). Sense of dimension (Large, Medium, Small). Honest judgment of relative success (Successful;
Challenged; Failed). Beyond that, were the original expectations met or not
(in terms of scope, schedule, resources/costs)?
Without this assessment: Have little or no firm know-ledge about how expected costs relate to actual costs on most Adventist Health projects— successful, challenged, or failed.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 1616
What Are the Opportunities in AH? – 2What Are the Opportunities in AH? – 2
Re-set organizational views of project management: PM: A proven and reliable (that is, repeatable) and cost-effective
process for planning and executing projects.
Where it makes sense, offload project administration from the SMEs, allowing them to focus on their technical contributions.
Set a standard for project leadership in Adventist Health.
The great thing: There is a world-wide standard for planning and executing projects— Project Management Institute. 38-year-old standards-setting
organization, with 232,000 members in more than 160 countries.
Certified “Project Management Professional.”® [There are only three of us PMPs in AH that I know of.]
What might this look like, organization-wide (starting in Roseville): Approval: Better information for approving projects that
compete for support and scarce resources (strategic fit, resource estimating , return, prioritization).
Standardization of process and deliverables: Scope definition; Resource estimating; Scheduling; Budget, etc.
Execution control: Scope management; Change management. Status reporting: Repeatable, reliable, and comparable
progress reporting. Formal project closure: A clear and definite end for all projects
— including canceled ones.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 1919
Sample EVA Status ReportSample EVA Status ReportOn time, on budget—every time!
“ Ideal ”
Re-calc, based on history
EVA: Earned Value Analysis
Slide Slide 2020
““Troubled” Projects Troubled” Projects
Starting Place: Admitting that a project is in trouble.
PMI has a SIG (special interest group) devoted to the area of “rescuing” “troubled projects.” Effectively/objectively assess project status (including early warning
signs). Understand the troubled project in terms of the “triple constraints”
(scope, schedule, resources). Re-set project stakeholder expectations (as needed). Develop buy-in during recovery. Devise/apply control mechanisms to keep project within re-set triple
constraints. Leverage communication during recovery.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 2121
For Your Consideration For Your Consideration
What does the “ideal” PM deployment look like? — A very lean project facilitation function. This would help …. Set standards for PM in Adventist Health Increase professionalism among AH project leaders. Set the expectation that all projects will have trained project leaders
assigned (PM FTE variable by size of project). Set the expectation that projects will be conducted in a standard manner
to increase predictability of outcomes. Improve standard status reporting to authorizing body/ies. Capture, preserve and extend learnings from project successes and
failures. Provide project-recovery services.
Desired outcome: Increase confidence in the performance of projects in Adventist Health.
On time, on budget—every time!
Slide Slide 2222
Summary and Conclusion Summary and Conclusion
A large percentage of projects, by any measure, don’t fully succeed, or fail entirely.
Project success is highly correlated with a formal, standard approach to project planning and execution.
Adventist Health would benefit from improved effectiveness in the performance of internal projects.
There is a small, but growing community of project management professionals within Adventist Health who are committed to help make this vision a reality.
We need leadership commitment to PM to make this vision a reality.
On time, on budget—every time!
On Time, On Budget — Every TimeOn Time, On Budget — Every Time
IMPROVING THE RELIABILITYIMPROVING THE RELIABILITY
AND COST-EFFECTIVESS OFAND COST-EFFECTIVESS OF
ADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTSADVENTIST HEALTH PROJECTS
6 July 2007 6 July 2007
Presentation to Corporate President’s CouncilPresentation to Corporate President’s Council