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These podcasts are part of the parallel project learning system. As an accredited training provider, they are based on the APM Body of Knowledge and can be used standalone or in conjunction with the Parallel study guides, on-line e-learning and workshops. Visit our website, www.parallelprojecttraining.com, for full details. We're with you all the way
- 186 - APM PMQ (2024) Ethics, Compliance and Professionalism (LO15)
15. Ethics, Compliance and Professionalism - This podcast discusses the ability to work consistently in a moral, legal and socially responsible manner, and covers:
a) The importance of continuing professional development, which should cover both knowledge, skills and behaviours, and the individual’s role in identifying and addressing their own competence gaps.
b) Knowledge of the sources of specialist advice and standards that need to be adhered to.
c) The impact of the legal and regulatory landscape on projects (such as the impact on working conditions, risk management, governance and sustainability).
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 17min - 185 - APM PMQ (2024) Diversity and Inclusion (LO14)
14. Diversity and Inclusion - This podcast discusses the ability to build and maintain an inclusive environment that embraces a diverse culture, and covers:
a) Knowledge of diversity, including characteristics which may cause a person to be treated less favourably, such as: age, disability, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, and sexual orientation.
b) Why incorporating diversity into all parts of a project, from team members to customers, is a factor in creating a positive working environment and the importance of embracing diverse thinking in teams as a means of generating innovative solutions.
c) How conscious and unconscious bias can affect actions and how to treat people fairly, including adapting behaviours to support individuals’ needs and facilitate their contributions.
Sun, 03 Nov 2024 - 14min - 184 - APM PMQ (2024) Sustainability (LO3)
3. Sustainability - This podcast discusses balancing the environmental, social, economic and administrative considerations that will impact a project, and covers:
a) Why sustainability responsibilities, principles and priorities are considered within a project and the impact they may have.
b) How sustainability measures are monitored and reported on.
Sat, 02 Nov 2024 - 21min - 183 - APM PMQ (2024) Change Control (LO24)
24. Change Control - This podcast discusses the ability to manage variations and change requests in a controlled way, and covers:
a) The purpose and importance of each stage of a typical change control process (such as request, initial evaluation, detailed evaluation, recommendation, update plans and implement) and where these stages are different for linear and iterative life cycles.
b) What should be captured and recorded in change requests.
c) Ways in which to assess options related to a proposed change and the high-level impact of the proposed change.
d) How to justify recommendations about whether to approve, reject or defer changes.
e) The importance of updating plans and schedules to reflect and communicate changes.
Wed, 30 Oct 2024 - 18min - 182 - APM PMQ (2024) Conflict Resolution (LO11)
11. Conflict Resolution - This podcast discusses the ability to identify and address differences between individuals and/or interest groups, and covers:
a) The sources of conflict within a project.
b) How conflict can have both positive and negative impacts within a project.
c) How conflict can be addressed in different situations (such as Thomas Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument).
Thu, 17 Oct 2024 - 16min - 181 - APM PMQ (2024) Team Management (LO13)
13. Team Management - This podcast discusses the ability to work with team members to create and sustain teams, and covers:
a) The different stages in the development of a team, including creation, development, maintenance and leadership, and understanding the factors which influence these stages, including the knowledge of the models that are used to understand team development (such as Belbin, Margerison McCann, Myers-Briggs, Hackman, Tuckman, Katzenbach and Smith).
b) The characteristics and benefits of effective teams and teamwork.
c) Why different leadership approaches are needed to support virtual and hybrid teams.
Wed, 09 Oct 2024 - 33min - 180 - APM PMQ (2024) Quality Management (LO18)
18. Quality Management - This podcast discusses the ability to ensure that outputs are delivered in accordance with requirements, and covers:
a) What is meant by quality planning, including an understanding of quality indicators and how these relate to the business case.
b) How quality control techniques are used to determine whether success criteria are met.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 13min - 179 - APM PMQ (2024) Risk and Issue Management (LO23)
23. Risk and Issue Management - This podcast discusses the ability to identify and monitor risks (threats and opportunities); plan responses to those risks and respond to issues, and covers:
a) The benefits of risk and issue management and the role of contingency planning in projects.
b) The purpose and importance of each stage in a risk management process (such as identification, analysis, monitoring, escalation, response and closure) and an issue management process (such as logging and analysis, escalation, and assignment of actions), and why these stages are different for linear and iterative life cycles.
c) How to proactively and reactively respond to risks (such as avoid, reduce, transfer or accept and exploit, enhance, share or reject).
d) Why governance is important in risk and issue management.
Sun, 06 Oct 2024 - 35min - 178 - APM PMQ (2024) Budgeting and Cost Control (LO22)
22. Budgeting and Cost Control - This budget discusses the ability to estimate costs, develop and agree budgets and monitor actual costs against forecast costs, and covers:
a) How to create a budget (including the use of a cost breakdown structure) and the different costs included in a budget (fixed, variable, direct, indirect etc.)
b) How to forecast and refine budgets using cost control techniques e.g. earned value.
c) How to monitor and report financial performance (including different types of financial reports).
d) How to close down finances at the end of a project.
Thu, 22 Aug 2024 - 18min - 177 - APM PMQ (2024) Resource Management (LO21)
21. Resource Management - This podcast discusses the ability to identify and schedule the required internal and external resources, and covers:
a) How to determine the resources required and their availability to deliver activities within a project.
b) How an organisational breakdown structure is used to create a responsibility assignment matrix (RACI).
c) How resources are categorised and allocated to both linear and iterative life cycle schedules.
d) The differences between resource smoothing and resource levelling.
Thu, 22 Aug 2024 - 17min - 176 - APM PMQ (2024) Schedule Management (LO20)
20. Schedule Management - This podcast discusses the ability to undertake time-based planning with an emphasis on activities and resource, and covers:
a) How to define scope in terms of outputs, outcomes and benefits (including the use of product, work and cost breakdown structures).
b) The links and dependencies between activities within a project and business-as-usual activities, for example how business-as-usual activities, costs, quality, risks and scope can all impact the schedule for the project.
Wed, 21 Aug 2024 - 20min - 175 - APM PMQ (2024) Integrated Planning (LO19)
19. Integrated Planning - This podcast discusses the ability to incorporate multiple plans and processes into an integrated project management plan, and covers:
a) The format for an effective integrated project management plan and its typical contents.
b) The importance of producing an integrated project management plan.
Wed, 21 Aug 2024 - 12min - 174 - APM PMQ (2024) Procurement (LO5)
5. Procurement - This podcast discusses securing the provision of resources, choosing strategies for obtaining best value from supply chains, and covers:
a) The purpose and importance of a procurement strategy and the typical contents of a procurement strategy. b) The stages of a supplier selection process, including how to plan the procurement process and conduct negotiations (for example ZOPA, BATNA and ‘Win Win’). c) The features of different contractual relationships and why different methods of supplier reimbursement are used and when it is appropriate to use them (including fixed price, cost plus fee, per unit quantity and target cost).
Wed, 21 Aug 2024 - 27min - 173 - APM PMQ (2024) Solutions Development (LO17)
17. Solutions Development - This podcast discusses the ability to determine the optimal solution to satisfy agreed requirements, and covers:
a) How to evaluate and prioritise requirements in order to deliver the optimal solution, and the different approaches for different life cycle models, e.g. the use of MVP and MMP in iterative life cycles.
Thu, 15 Aug 2024 - 10min - 172 - APM PMQ (2024) Requirements Management (LO16)
16. Requirements Management - This podcast discusses the ability to capture and monitor the requirements of a project, and covers:
a) How to establish scope through requirements management processes (such as gather, analysis, justifying requirements and baseline needs).
b) How to manage scope through configuration management processes (such as planning, identification, control, status accounting and verification audit).
Thu, 15 Aug 2024 - 17min - 171 - APM PMQ (2024) Stakeholder Engagement and Communication Management (LO10)
10. Stakeholder Engagement and Communication Management - This podcast discusses the ability to work with people internally and externally to achieve intended outcomes, and covers:
a) The relationship between stakeholder analysis, influence and engagement.
b) The relationship between stakeholder analysis and an effective communication management plan.
c) The benefits to a project of a communication plan.
d) The importance of managing stakeholder expectations to the success of the project.
e) The range of communication methods available and the importance of tailoring messaging to meet stakeholder requirements.
f) The factors which can positively or negatively affect communication.
Wed, 14 Aug 2024 - 23min - 170 - APM PMQ (2024) Benefits Management (LO9)
9. Benefits Management - This podcast discusses benefits management as the monitoring of benefits realisation throughout a project, and covers:
a) What is meant by benefits management (including identification, definition, planning, tracking and realisation).
b) The importance of aligning benefits with strategic objectives and ways in which the benefits of a project can be communicated to stakeholders.
Wed, 14 Aug 2024 - 14min - 169 - APM PMQ (2024) Business Case (LO4)
4. Business Case - This podcast discusses the business case as the justification for the initiation, investment and/or continuation of a project in terms of benefits, costs and risks, and it covers:
a) The tools and techniques used to determine factors which influence and impact a project’s business case (including PESTLE, SWOT and VUCA).
b) The importance of regularly reviewing the impact of any changes in a project to the business case, and how the business case forms the baseline for the project.
Wed, 14 Aug 2024 - 15min - 168 - APM PMQ (2024) Governance Arrangements (LO2)
2. Governance arrangements - This podcast discusses governance structures as a framework of authority and accountability for the delivery of a project, which align with organisational practice, and covers:
a) Knowledge of different types of permanent and temporary organisation structures and their features (including functional, matrix, and project),and that an organisation’s governance approach will inform the approach used for a project.
b) Why there are distinct roles within project management and what the responsibilities of each role are (including users, project team members, the project manager, the project steering group/board and the product owner), and the differences in responsibilities of the project manager and project sponsor throughout the project.
c) Why aspects of project management governance are required (such as the use of policies, regulations, functions, processes, procedures and delegated responsibilities), and the impact of a project’s life cycle on its governance framework and the limits of financial authority.
d) The importance of linking projects to an organisation’s objectives.
Wed, 14 Aug 2024 - 26min - 167 - APM PMQ (2024) Leadership (LO12)
12. Leadership - This podcast discusses leadership as the way to empower and inspire others to deliver successful projects, and covers:
a) How leadership impacts on team performance and motivation (using models such as Maslow, Herzberg and McGregor).
b) Why it may be necessary to change leadership styles depending upon the situation.
c) The importance of a coaching and mentoring style in leadership, and the role of emotional intelligence.
Tue, 06 Aug 2024 - 19min - 166 - APM PMQ (2024) Reviews (LO6)
6. Reviews - This podcast discusses how reviews are a way of gathering information to provide an assessment on the status of a project and the ongoing viability of the work, and covers:
a) The benefits of conducting reviews throughout the life cycle (including decision gates, benefits reviews and audits).
b) The factors which would typically be reported on to help ensure successful project outcomes.
c) The importance of producing information and collecting data to inform decision making and communicate actions and decisions to stakeholders.
d) Why activities may be re-planned after a review.
Tue, 06 Aug 2024 - 15min - 165 - APM PMQ (2024) Assurance (LO7)Tue, 06 Aug 2024 - 14min
- 164 - APM PMQ (2024) Transition Management (LO8)
8. Transition Management - This podcast discusses the integration of the outputs of a project into business-as-usual, and covers:
a) The basic requirements needed to support a successful transition, including considering business-as-usual throughout a project and planning for transition from the outset of the project.
b) The importance of knowledge transfer in the transition process, including learning from experience and continuous improvement.
c) How to engage stakeholders to agree a transition plan, including transfer of risks.
Tue, 06 Aug 2024 - 24min - 163 - APM PMQ (2024) Lifecycles (LO1)
1. Life cycles - This podcast discusses the distinct life cycle stages used to structure and organise a project, and covers:
a) The distinctive features of linear, iterative and hybrid life cycles (including why projects are structured as phases in linear life cycles) and when each is applicable.
b) The differences between a project life cycle and an extended life cycle.
c) How the context and culture of an organisation, and the needs of a specific project, influence the choice of life cycle and any adaptations that may be needed to the life cycle.
d) The strengths and limitations of different life cycles.
Tue, 06 Aug 2024 - 20min - 162 - APM PPQ Establish and develop teams to achieve project aims and objectives
2.1 Critically Evaluate Tools, Techniques, and Leadership Behaviours
Tools and Techniques: The podcast discusses utilizing the Tuckman model (forming, storming, norming, performing) as a framework to understand team development stages. It emphasizes the importance of trust and confidence through practical approaches like kick-off meetings, social events, and fulfilling commitments.
Leadership Behaviours: Effective leadership in project management is highlighted through the necessity of establishing trust and confidence. Leaders are advised to under-promise and over-deliver, ensure clear communication of expectations, and actively maintain commitments to build credibility within the team.
2.2 Critically Analyse Response to Changes in Project’s EnvironmentThe dialogue explores the adaptation to changes in a project's environment, emphasizing the need for flexibility in leadership styles. It discusses the situational application of leadership models like Hersey and Blanchard, and Max Landsberg's skill-will model to cater to evolving team needs and environmental contexts, ensuring that team requirements and interests are continuously supported.
2.3 Critically Analyse Tools and Techniques for Effective Team DevelopmentFor maintaining an effective team, the session underscores the importance of clarity in roles and responsibilities through tools like RACI matrices and comprehensive project plans. It also suggests regular updates and adaptations to the project environment, advocating for proactive management of team dynamics and ensuring alignment with project goals through continuous development and training.
2.4 Critically Evaluate the Role of Monitoring and FeedbackMonitoring and feedback are framed as crucial for recognizing individual contributions and guiding team progress. The discussion points out that both project-oriented and personal feedback are necessary. The former ensures that the project stays on track, while the latter supports individual development, addressing personal challenges and aligning them with project goals.
2.5 Critically Evaluate Relationship Between Performance Management and MotivationPerformance management is linked directly to motivating team members by aligning individual professional growth with project goals. The conversation highlights how performance appraisals, development opportunities, and potentially even financial incentives like bonuses can enhance motivation, leading to successful project outcomes.
2.6 Critically Evaluate the Use of Conflict to Improve PerformanceThe podcast illustrates the concept of 'positive conflict', suggesting that controlled, constructive conflict can be beneficial. It can stimulate innovation, challenge ideas to improve project outcomes, and enhance performance through healthy competition. Moreover, resolving conflicts respectfully can strengthen team cohesiveness and trust among members.
Tue, 23 Apr 2024 - 30min - 161 - APM PPQ Provide visionary leadership for a project.
1.1 Critically Evaluate Ethical, Flexible, Inspirational, and Collaborative Approaches to the Leadership of Others in Evolving Situations
The discussion emphasises the multifaceted nature of leadership within the context of project management, highlighting the need for leaders to exhibit ethical, flexible, inspirational, and collaborative behaviors. Ethical leadership involves openness, honesty, and integrity, ensuring transparency and trust within the team. Flexibility in leadership styles is crucial to adapt to varying team and stakeholder needs, fostering an environment where the project manager's approach evolves based on situational demands. Inspirational leadership focuses on motivating and encouraging team members towards achieving project goals, cultivating a sense of purpose and commitment. Collaborative leadership underlines the importance of engaging with the team in problem-solving and decision-making processes, promoting inclusivity and collective ownership of project outcomes.
1.2 Critically Analyse Ways in Which to Engage with a Diverse Range of Individuals and Teams to Agree Aims and Objectives Which Are Aligned to a Project’s Strategic GoalsEffective engagement with a diverse team is central to aligning individual tasks and broader project objectives. This involves utilizing tools like RACI charts to clarify roles and responsibilities, ensuring everyone understands their contribution to the project’s success. The approach requires analysing different methods of engagement, identifying the pros and cons to tailor communication and leadership strategies that resonate with varied team dynamics. This segment also stresses the significance of establishing clear, tangible goals that are communicated effectively, fostering an environment where every team member is bought into the vision and motivated to contribute to the strategic objectives.
1.3 Critically Evaluate Environments Which Encourage and Sustain Empowered and High-Performance TeamsCreating an environment conducive to high performance and empowerment involves considering both the physical and cultural aspects of the workplace. This includes decisions on co-location versus virtual collaboration, which hinges on the nature of the team and project requirements. The importance of daily or regular check-ins, such as agile stand-ups, is highlighted as a means to foster communication and accountability. The discussion also touches on the significance of the project manager's role in setting up structures that facilitate performance, including the strategic use of work package descriptions and ensuring alignment with the project's objectives. Lastly, it mentions the need for a supportive culture that encourages innovation, responsibility, and collaborative problem-solving, enabling teams to thrive regardless of their geographical distribution
Thu, 07 Mar 2024 - 16min - 160 - APM PPQ: Deliver the intended benefits of a project.
In this podcast, Paul Naybour and Tom O'Shea explore the complexities of benefits management within project governance, with a specific focus on the APM's PPQ qualification. They highlight the critical nature of ensuring that benefits are measurable, meaningful to stakeholders, and align with an organisation's strategic objectives. The conversation delves into developing a benefits management strategy, emphasising the importance of setting priorities, assigning responsibilities, and defining timescales.
The significance of prioritising benefits based on their contribution to strategic objectives is a key point of discussion. Naybour and O'Shea also address the creation of a benefits realisation plan, considering factors such as funding, tracking, monitoring, and scheduling. They explore strategies to maximise the achievement of planned benefits, including integrating benefit considerations into project design and management.
Throughout the podcast, the importance of project managers' understanding and active involvement in benefits management is underscored despite it not being a routine task. The speakers recommend consulting the APM's guidance on benefits management and suggest embedding benefits planning into various project stages to ensure effective project outcomes and value for the organisation. The podcast concludes with a discussion on the role of benefits management in programmes, emphasising its importance regardless of project scale or complexity.
Wed, 31 Jan 2024 - 22min - 159 - APM PPQ Manage change control processes and protocols
In this podcast, Paul Naybour and Tom O'Shea discuss change control in project management, focusing on four key areas: the benefits and features of effective change control processes, methods for capturing, recording, and reviewing change options, implementing and managing approved changes, and the use of trend analysis. They emphasise the importance of understanding change control's rationale, the need for structured management approaches, and the role of trend analysis in project improvement. The discussion also highlights the challenges in adapting change control processes in dynamic project environments, underscoring the necessity of clear communication and documentation updates.
Fri, 26 Jan 2024 - 27min - 158 - APM PPQ Use information to inform reviews and help manage deviations from a project plan.
In the podcast, Tom and Paul explore the APM PPQ assessment criteria related to project reviews and management. They underscore the vital importance of critically evaluating reliable and valid information to assess various project factors across its lifecycle. They also emphasise the significance of aligning reviews with organisational, legal, and regulatory requirements.
Furthermore, they analyse scenarios where deviations from the project plan may arise and discuss strategies for resolving them. The podcast underscores the need for accurately documenting deviations and highlights the advantages of doing so. Additionally, they discuss change control processes and protocols, including a critical assessment of their benefits and features.
Throughout the conversation, they provide valuable insights into effective project management practices.
Mon, 22 Jan 2024 - 15min - 157 - APM PPQ Establish and maintain the governance structure of a project to ensure alignment to organisational practice
In this podcast episode, Paul Naybour and Tom O'Shea discuss the PPQ assessment criteria, specifically focusing on 1.1, which relates to governance in project management. They highlight the importance of aligning project structures and hierarchies with the organisation's structure and the chosen project lifecycle. They also discuss the possibility of proposing a different approach to project management if it aligns better with the project's nature.
They emphasise the need to evaluate appropriate structures and hierarchies, considering factors like organisation structure and team setup, especially when taking over an ongoing project. They mention the relevance of the seventh edition of the Body of Knowledge as a reference and provide insights into creating governance structures, such as project boards or steering groups.
The conversation continues with a discussion on establishing roles and responsibilities within a project team, ensuring formal documentation and individual acceptance. They suggest methods like mapping roles to skill sets and conducting workshops to gain team buy-in.
Lastly, they touch on maintaining reporting hierarchies and structures throughout the project's lifecycle, stressing the importance of adapting to changing needs and circumstances. They mention that regular progress reporting can help reinforce accountabilities.
Overall, this podcast episode delves into the complexities of governance, roles, responsibilities, and reporting structures in project management, offering insights and guidance for project managers.
Mon, 15 Jan 2024 - 20min - 156 - APM PPQ Introduction
In this Parallel Project Training podcast, Paul Naybour welcomes Tom O'Shea, the new leader of their PPQ programs. Tom shares his extensive involvement with the PPQ, including his role in its initial development and evolution from the previous PQ version. He highlights the PPQ's transition to a more efficient half-day assessment format and discusses his work in guiding and coaching candidates through the PPQ assessment process.
The podcast delves into the PPQ's purpose, positioning it as a crucial bridge between foundational project management knowledge, as covered in the PMQ, and the advanced technical skills required for achieving chartered status. Unlike the PMQ, which focuses on theoretical knowledge, the PPQ emphasises practical application. It requires candidates to demonstrate their project management capabilities in real-world scenarios, particularly through case study assessments.
Thomas explains that these case studies often involve turnaround situations, challenging candidates to apply their knowledge and experience to poorly managed projects. He underscores the importance of practical application in the PPQ, as it assesses the candidates’ ability to bring tangible improvements to real-life project scenarios. The podcast aims to provide insights and tips for candidates preparing for the PPQ, emphasizing the value of practical experience over theoretical knowledge in achieving success in the assessment.
Thu, 04 Jan 2024 - 23min - 155 - APM ChPP - Competence 7. Stakeholder management and communication management
In this episode, we discuss competence 7. stakeholder management and communication management. The professional practice criteria are
PP1.1 Determined stakeholder interests, and levels of influence for a project.
PP1.2 Produced a communication plan and undertaken effective stakeholder engagement based upon it.
PP1.3 Monitored effectiveness of the communication plans and stakeholder engagement activities.
PP1.4 Adjusted the communication plan and responded to any changing stakeholder engagement needs.
PP1.5 Employed relevant communication methods and media to meet stakeholder requirements and expectations.
PP1.6 Disseminated clear, timely and relevant information to stakeholders.
PP1.7 Obtained, and responded to, feedback from stakeholders which may have an impact on a project.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 12min - 154 - APM ChPP - Competence 6. Risk and Issue Management
In this episode, we discuss competence 6. Risk and issue management. the professional practice criteria are
PP1.1 Continually identified risks within a project.
PP1.2 Created a risk register including potential impact and suitable responses.
PP1.3 Assessed the probabilities and impacts of risks and planned their responses.
PP1.4 Capture and recorded issues, how they were resolved, and their implications to inform planning for future projects.
PP1.5 Reacted, assessed, and planned responses to issues.
PP1.6 Implemented responses to risks and issues including escalation, recording lessons learned.
PP1.7 Transferred and/or formally closed unresolved risks at the end of a project or phase.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 13min - 153 - APM ChPP - Competencies 5a. Leadership and 5b. Team Management
In this episode, we discuss competencies 5a. Leadership and 5b. Team management
The professional practice criteria for 5A. Leadership
PP1.1 Maintained a team’s understanding of, and commitment to the vision, values, and objectives of a project.
PP1.2 Selected an appropriate leadership style based on the situation and/or context.
PP1.3 Collaborated with others to maintain the momentum of a project.
PP1.4 Encouraged others to adopt behaviours which built trust, confidence, and collaboration either within or between teams.
PP1.5 Established environments which presented opportunities for empowered and autonomous working.
PP1.6 Established leadership approaches to work with remote teams, colleagues and stakeholders.
PP1.7 Identified and addressed difficulties and challenges through facilitating open discussions in a timely manner.
The professional practice criteria for 5B. Team management are
PP1.1 Agreed team objectives and ways of working to achieve the vision and goals of a project.
PP1.2 Evaluated the maturity level of the team.
PP1.3 Adopted a proactive approach to communication to establish networks of support and facilitate effective ownership of delegated tasks.
PP1.4 Built a relationship of trust and support, taking into consideration the possible complexities of collaboration, virtual working, time zones and cultures.
PP1.5 Met the demands of a project through balancing individual and team needs.
PP1.6 Provided opportunities for coaching and/or mentoring to members of a team, creating an environment of learning and trust thus promoting continual professional development.
PP1.7 Addressed performance issues likely to negatively impact on the success of a project whilst remaining alert to any signs of stress within the team.
PP1.8 Acknowledged levels of performance through constructive feedback to individuals and teams and celebrated success when evident.
PP1.9 Established a learning culture and promoted continued professional development.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 21min - 152 - APM ChPP - Competencies 4a. Integrated Planning and 4b. Schedule Management
In this episode, we discuss competencies 4a. Integrated planning and 4b. Schedule management
The professional practice criteria for 4A. Integrated planning
PP1.1 Considered constraints and assumptions when creating an integrated plan.
PP1.2 Considered dependencies and governance arrangements, when creating an integrated plan.
PP1.3 Demonstrated compliance with organisational practice when establishing the size, structure, and contents of an integrated plan.
PP1.4 Included other relevant components, plans and documentation to support a comprehensive integrated plan, and ensured formal acceptance of it.
PP1.5 Completed formal sign off and acceptance of an integrated plan.
PP1.6 Continually monitored the progress of a project against the integrated plan.
PP1.7 Adjusted the integrated plan utilising a change control process
PP1.8 Applied configuration management to a plan once it had been formally accepted.
The professional practice criteria for 4B. Schedule management are
PP1.1 Defined tools and techniques for creating and updating a schedule.
PP1.2 Established units of measure to accurately define activities and events to be completed during a project.
PP1.3 Developed duration estimates and critical dates for each activity and event.
PP1.4 Determined relationships and dependencies between activities and events, when constructing a schedule.
PP1.5 Documented a schedule of phases, milestones, and reviews to support project monitoring and progress reporting.
PP1.6 Agreed a schedule baseline, exceptions, and tolerance thresholds.
PP1.7 Communicated regular schedule updates to internal or external stakeholders.
PP1.8 Refined a schedule of activities based on effective monitoring, implementing the change control process when required.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 19min - 151 - APM ChPP - Competencies 3a. Governance and 3b. Reviews
In this episode, we discuss competencies 3a. governance and 3b. reviews.
The professional practice criteria for 3A. Governance are
PP1.1 Defined reporting, decision-making hierarchies, and levels of authority for a project.
PP1.2 Established the relationship between a project’s governance and the organisation’s governance structures.
PP1.3 Designed the project governance structure taking into account context, complexity, and potential impact.
PP1.4 Adapted or adjusted the governance structure as required
PP1.5 Ensured clarity of ownership and levels of authority by agreeing the responsibilities and accountabilities with relevant individuals.
PP1.6 Ensured effective decision making through maintained governance structures.
PP1.7 Ensured effective reporting through maintained governance structures for appropriate staffing and maintenance
The professional practice criteria for 3B. Reviews are
PP1.1 Considered factors which need to be evaluated during a review.
PP1.2 Established and implemented a schedule of reviews incorporating key milestones.
PP1.3 Obtained appropriate information from valid sources to inform the reviews.
PP1.4 Maintained records of any deviations from plans to include reasons for and responses to, the deviations. PP1.5 Communicated the outcomes of reviews to relevant stakeholders.
PP1.6 Confirmed stakeholder understanding and acceptance of proposed actions.
PP1.7 Implemented agreed actions and updated lessons learned.
PP1.8 Conducted and documented a close out review.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 18min - 150 - APM ChPP - Competencies 2a. Change Control and 2b. Conflict Management
In this episode, we discuss competencies, 2a. Change control and 2b. Conflict management.
The professional practice criteria for 2A. Change control;
PP1.1 Established a suitable change control process.
PP1.2 Implemented and maintained a suitable change control process.
PP1.3 Captured and recorded proposed changes to the agreed project scope.
PP1.4 Determined the high-level impact of proposed changes to the project scope including reference to relevant sources.
PP1.5 Determined the detailed impact on time and cost estimates of options relating to a proposed change.
PP1.6 Reached justified recommendations on the approval, rejection, or deferral of proposed changes to a project and updated stakeholders as necessary.
PP1.7 Updated plans and schedules reflecting the approved changes to a project demonstrating configuration management.
PP1.8 Used trend analysis to help determine the performance of the current and future projects.
The professional practice criteria for 2b. Conflict management;
PP1.1 Taken a proactive approach to identifying and addressing potential conflict situations which may have impacted on the project.
PP1.2 Taken an impartial approach to investigating the cause of conflict.
PP1.3 Evaluated and implemented conflict resolution measures, seeking assistance from others when necessary.
PP1.4 Responded appropriately and promptly to conflict situations where intervention was required.
PP1.5 Monitored the extent to which conflict resolution measures have been successful.
PP1.6 Sought to resolve conflict respecting the views, opinions, and concerns of all parties.
PP1.7 Supported others to resolve conflict.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 16min - 149 - APM ChPP - Competencies 1a. Budgetting and Cost Control and 1b. Financial Management
In this episode, we discuss the first two competencies, 1a. budgetting and cost control, and 1b. financial management.
The professional practice criteria for 1A. Budgetting and cost control are;
PP1.1 Established estimates for different project costs.
PP1.2 Established and gained agreement to a project budget.
PP1.3 Set up funding drawdown arrangements based on cash flow forecasts.
PP1.4 Applied metrics to establish cost trends within a project.
PP1.5 Refined budget allocations based on cost analysis, applying change control processes as required.
PP1.6 Produced financial reports for stakeholders based on financial performance monitoring.
PP1.7 Upon project closure, produced final financial reports and distributed them to relevant stakeholders.
The professional practice criteria for 1B. Financial management are;
PP1.1 Established estimates for different project costs.
PP1.2 Established and gained agreement to a project budget.
PP1.3 Set up funding drawdown arrangements based on cash flow forecasts.
PP1.4 Applied metrics to establish cost trends within a project.
PP1.5 Refined budget allocations based on cost analysis, applying change control processes as required.
PP1.6 Produced financial reports for stakeholders based on financial performance monitoring.
PP1.7 Upon project closure, produced final financial reports and distributed them to relevant stakeholders.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 11min - 148 - APM ChPP - Becoming a Chartered Project Professional (ChPP)
In this episode, Parallel Project Training discuss some further details around the application process for ChPP.
We also start to look deeper into the Technical Knowledge and Professional Practice statements. These statements are written on a number of mandatory and elective competencies, and we set the scene for the upcoming podcasts on each competence.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 05min - 147 - APM ChPP - An Introduction to Chartered Project Professional
In this episode, Parallel Project Training offer an introduction to some APM ChPP topics.
We cover;
- What is ChPP, and why might someone want to become chartered? The application process What is different with the new version of the Chartered Standard. An introduction to technical knowledge and professional practice.
For more guidance on the Association for Project Management Chartered Project Professional (ChPP), or any other project management training, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com or call 0118 321 5030.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 - 24min - 146 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Earned Value
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss earned value. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain why a project manager would use earned value management Interpret earned value data (including variances and performance indexes) Explain the benefits of using interpretation of earned value dataThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Below is a transcript of this APM PMQ podcast:
Introduction
Welcome to a parallel project training APM project management qualification podcast based on the APM body of knowledge seventh edition. You should be using this in conjunction with our elearning podcasts, and potentially a tutor led course. For more information, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Paul
Hello, welcome to this Parallel Project Training podcast. Today we're looking at our favourite topic earned value.
John
Yes, hello, Paul – love earned value.
Paul
This is quite a big change in earned value for this syllabus. But anyway, let's go through the assessment criteria. Explain why project managers should use earned value, interpret and value data including variances and performance indices, expand the benefits of interpreting and value and expand the role of contingency planning and projects. So we're not doing any, we don't have to do the sums of calculating Earned Value anymore.
John
No, no. I mean, basically there is this new form of torture called interpret interpret. Yeah, so they give you a diagram and go or give you some numbers and you have to figure out what's going on. Yeah. You have to sort of synthesise, and you have to you have to look at those numbers and kind of read into them what could be going wrong on a particular project?
Paul
What you do quite often in a project environment Anyway, you go to a progress meeting. And someone hands a report to you as you go in the door.
John
Yeah, but I mean, if you got it if you've got a CPI of point eight, yes. I mean, interpret that. What does that mean? Well, that means that we're overspending on costs, we're really efficient. But that could be the result of billions of different reasons, you know, so I'm not, you know, we can go through few of them. But there might be many reasons why that's happening. Yeah. So there's not a definitive kind of List of these. But the essence of it is, is that you're working out some sort of, if you figure out your own value, right, that's what
Paul
Explain why a project manager should use earned value. Let's do that first
John
Okay, well, the principle is that you can't tell how well your project is doing simply by comparing what you've spent with what you thought you were going to spend. So you need another measure. So you need a third axis on your graph. So the curve on your graph, which is progress, progress is calculated. So the third the third act, the third curve is earned value. And that's calculated by taking the budget completion, multiply it by the percentage complete. Yes. So if you've got a war that's worth three grand, and you're two thirds of the way through, you've got 2000 pounds worth of earned value, putting it very crudely. So you plot those figures, you plot how much you spent, how much Earned Value you've got, and you compare the actual span of the plan costs with your own value, and that gives you indices and indexes and variances. It works on the basis that the only really good answer is your own budget, and you've delivered stuff according to the budget. So if there are no variances on earned value or actual costs, so that's the principle. So the consequence of that is that any deviation is bad. Yeah, even if it's positive,
yes.
Paul
Is that we're not necessarily good.
John
It's difference is a deviation. Yes,
so that a deviation positive or negative is not in itself a good thing. However, I thought would be finishing early is probably better than finishing it. No, no, I don't know. I don't agree with you. I don't I have a real problem. I
Paul
remember the slowdown that
John
yes, if you will. Okay, so let's, let's think about that. Then I've got two people on site. One's building the roof and one's building the walls. I mean, how old? Yeah, all right. I don't want the bridge deck delivered before the piers for the whole project, but I don't want the top of the rocket finished before the bottom of the rocket, because I don't know where to put it.
Paul
Yeah. Okay. So at
John
each level, and also don't forget, you're spending money early. So there's this rush to burn money. Yeah. Where's the actual fact it smooths out your
Paul
cash flow? I mean, generally, people will say that if it's if the whole
John
planning the whole planning cycle is predicated on starting as soon as you can, yes. Which is not always a great idea.
Paul
So let's go back a little bit and talk about these measures that we do. So there's basically two sets of measures of variances honour. So when a variance what we do is look at what our earned value is, we compare it to what we should have spent our actual cost. And what we plan to spend our planned planned cost as planned costs, what we should have spent actual costs what was actually spend, so we end up with cost variance, and we end up with a schedule variance, and those should be zero. So basically, we've spent what we expected and we've delivered what we expected and then the A set of measures our performance indices, and now we do exactly the same. But we compare earned value to the actual cost and earned value to the planned cost, but we do as a ratio. So they were looking for the measures to be one to one means one plan. greater than one means were ahead of plan or delivering more efficiently, less than one means we're behind plan or delivering less efficient. So we were just talking about is, ideally you want to be on plan, in terms of delivery. And in terms of
John
progress. I mean, I think the other thing is that, you know, you see people coming up, I've got a CPI of naught point seven or 1.7. Okay, and they're going “really clever aren't I really good”? Quick? So 170% efficient? Yeah, you're gonna ask a few questions. Yeah, Don't forget you see if you're if you fit that means you got to finish early. Yes. And under budget? Yes. Well, the business of the time, no snow, the business has set aside all that money to pay for your project. Okay. So they have no, they have to spend it elsewhere. Yes, yes. Yes. So your business has held back all that money in New York coming in? Why?
Paul
Jesus nicely under forecasts? Yeah. So from those performance indices, we can then do a forecast. And that forecast sort of projects, our current cost performance and current scheduled performance. And so we can turn around to the business and say, I'm currently a little bit ahead. And I think that I might finish this project a little bit ahead, or I'm currently slightly over budget. forecasts.
John
Nothing wrong with being early a bit under budget, you know, no one's gonna moan about that. Yeah, or being a bit late. But over budget, it's not the end of the world. But it's too late to realise at the end of it,
Paul
so that's right. That's a sackable offence
John
to be one to be one month away from the end of them. And then finally, your budget got to be Yeah, it was. Yeah, yeah. That's, that's 90% of the way through realises another 90%. ago.
Paul
Yeah, that's, that's all for life. So. So that's the fork. So basically, from these measures, we can we can do some forecasting,
John
but when you interpret the data, they're either going to give you a graph, I think, I don't know. I mean, whatever data on it. Yeah, it depends on how exactly. SPI CPI No, you know, given those No, you don't do the calculation says
Paul
SPI equals and a CPI.
John
So also quite quite what the answer the question is, oh, God only knows,
Paul
because I think you just play it absolutely straight back. So in my SPI is 1.1. Yeah, that means my head of plan, my CPI is naught point eight. That means I'm overspending for what I've delivered.
John
That's not the question they ask you, though. That's it. They don't ask you that. They say you've got a CPI of naught point eight. Explain what might be going wrong on the project. I'm running late here, though. But that's so why
Paul
I don't have enough data to answer that question. So yes, that'd be running late for a number of reasons.
John
Yeah. Well, but that's what it says in the sample paper.
Paul
Okay, well,
John
okay. So again, some of the people that are listed exactly the people that listen to this need to understand how to answer that. Okay, well,
Paul
I'd say, I could be running late for a number of reasons scope, because
John
I might not be able to get resources this way. So may have, it's a comparison between the CPI and SPI as well. So you look at both of them together. Okay. Because just saying I'm late, because you can't really tell much from that and help with that. Actually, yeah. Because there isn't, there are things that you can deduce from the relationship between the CPI and the CPI. So if you're, if you're spending too much, but you're late, you're probably inefficient, yes. Which means that the people are working odd and spending a lot of money. They're not getting anywhere. Yes. So you might find that there's lot of rework or incoming materials, not very good. scope is poorly controlled. But conversely, if you're early, so I were what was the last one over budget and late, you can be under budget and early. Right. So what that means is really that you're, you're very efficient, you could probably afford to slow down a little bit if you needed to. Or, you know, you might want to re estimate the project, because you're kind of you're kind of doing too well,
Paul
on the most common one I've seen is you really liked. We're not spending enough.
John
Yes, that's right.
Paul
So the team you have is been efficient, because they're delivering more value than cashing in. But you just haven't got enough result.
John
enough resources. So there are
Paul
some, it's, you could say this is indicative of that sort of situation, you know, yeah. And I suspect we'll do it.
John
We'll do in the course as well there. Yeah. I mean, if you if you read if you read our material, there are some parts. Project one, two and four. Yeah, there's there's four examples. There's, there's four main examples of the interpretation. But yeah, when you say the question is, it's a bit you know, without the data, it's very difficult to be definitive. So you have to realise or more generic answers I can see that will develop over time. Well, yeah, once once the examiners work out what he
Paul
earned value and values measure those three things, the planned cost, that what we've actually spent and our progress in terms of earned value then comparing them and you can compare them as variances differences or distractions from they can forecast what your end is going to be. And you can do some sort of arm waving indicative interpretation or waving of mostly around how efficient your resources you know, are you put in is, is the I put enough money in to get the progress you want or is more money going in the progress you've achieved? Brilliant. Excellent. Okay, john.
We hope you enjoyed this podcast and found it informative. To find out about our training courses elearning or tutor led course please go to www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sat, 02 May 2020 - 11min - 144 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Procurement
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss procurement. This podcast is ideal for anyone doing one of the APM PMQ project management courses and aims to address the following assessment criteria:
Explain the purpose, typical content and importance of a procurement strategy Differentiate between different methods of supplier reimbursement (including fixed price, cost plus fee, per unit quantity, and target cost) Differentiate between different contractual relationships Explain a supplier selection processA procurement process is used by companies in the acquisition of goods and services. This will usually have a defined procurement strategy document and include details on selecting suppliers, setting up contracts and management of those contracts.
Because the procurement strategy document is a standard project document it needs to be in place at the start of a project as it is an important factor at the same time as considering the business case of a project.
Typical parts of the procurement strategy documentation are:
Would it be better to produce the required goods within the organisation or would it be more efficient or cost-effective to use an external producer/suppler. This decision can only be made when the specification of the product is fully understood.
There is a wide choice of contractual agreement types fro the single contract between the client and supplier to more complex agreements between the client and a main contractor and between main contractor and sub-contractors.
These are the payment terms and the way in which the goods or services will be paid for. This could be as simple as a fixed-price method for a clearly specified product through to much more flexible arrangements where an innovative new product is being developed by the supplier for the client.
Large organisations will usually have an established process to help in the selection of the right suppliers, most usually through a competitive tender process where several suppliers provide costs for the required product/service. The aim being for the organisation to acquire the product or service at the most competitive price.
This should be a regular, ongoing process throughout the term of the contract to confirm that both supplier(s) and client are complying with the terms of the contract which they have agreed.
This is important in any type of strategy in order to learn lessons about what went well and what did not; in order to improve the process for future projects.
This podcast is just part of the Parallel Learning System for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses.
SEE THE TRANSCRIPT BELOW:
Introduction:
Welcome to a Parallel Project Training APM Project Management Qualification podcast based on the APM body of knowledge seventh edition. You should be using this in conjunction with our e-learning, podcasts and potentially a tutor-led course. For more information please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Paul Naybour:
Hello welcome to another parallel project training podcast we're on to procurement for the APM PMQ with Paul Naybour and John Bolton.
Hello, John
John Bolton:
Hello everybody.
Paul:
Last chapter. By now the guys are hurray. Guys and girls.
John:
If this takes two minutes it’s because we've had a long day. Yeah, well. It's quite a big topic, though so let’s crack on
Paul:
By completing this subsection you will be able to understand the learning objectives:
Explain the purpose of a procurement strategy. We need to get that clear, because it causes confusion Differentiate between the different types of reimbursement method. Differentiate between the different types of contractual relationship Explain the supplier selection process.So, let's talk about procurement strategy first. What is a procurement strategy I think this is the thing that I see causing the most blanks. Also called procurement plans. So basically,
John:
I don't think they do I think if you could say procurement plans, a lot of people they think about supplier selection.
Paul:
Yes, and they get confused. Because strategy is a is a document written early in the project, about how you're going to procure those goods and services.
John:
I think it's a bit more profound than that actually because. Let's say I write a business case. And I'm going to build a bridge. I could if I was a bridge building company. Let's take a different example. Let's say, I'm a construction company. And I'm going to move into a new headquarters. Yes. Right. I could decide to use my own staff to fit the building out and then move us in. Or I could hire a consultancy firms do it for me,
Paul:
Or, you could just lease the building? Or you could build a building.
John:
Let's just worry about how I'm going to fit the building out. Right. Okay. So we've already acquired the building. It's a building. So now I've got to fit it out. I've got to make it fit for purpose for my people. Yeah, I'm going to move my staff in there. But because I'm a building company, I could decide to do all the building work, lay all the carpets, do all the partitions, offices, everything myself. I could use my own staff to do that. Or I could hire somebody else to do it.
Paul:
Or I could just go into a serviced office.
John:
Or, I could hire somebody else in to do it. Okay.
So I've got a choice between using my own people, which would be make it myself. Or I could buy those services in, right. I will talk about service office in a sec. But let's just keep it simple. There's two options. One is where I make it and one is where I buy it. So why would I make it myself it’s because it might be a bit cheaper. I've got more control. I haven't got such a long lead time. So I'm going to go to 10 dodge got a design and get on with it. So there's lots of advantages do it myself. Or if I go to tender I might get a better job done. I haven't got to tie my people up doing fairly mundane work as they might see it.
So there's choices to be made. Now. those choices are fundamental to what project you've got because if you decide to do it yourself, you've got to go and buy all the materials, do all the plans. If I get a consultancy in to do it, a prime contractor, they'll just it.
So now I've got very different contracts. All I'm doing is managing them. Yes. And what they do, I'm not managing my people and how they do it. So the procurement strategy side kind of fits between the business case and the project management plan. Because when you write the project management plan, you've got a very different project. So you kind of go down one limb or the other. And to me, that's the essence of a procurement strategy. And now, if you talk about Yes, we can have a serviced office. If your requirement is a new office, yeah, then yeah, I mean, that might be another form of buying it in. So yeah,
Paul:
So I actually think it goes back to the business because, you know, in the business case, we show different optionss. So some of those may be different procurement option. You know,
John:
That's right or I might decide to do multiple contractors or I might decide to do prime contractors.
Paul:
Before we can get on with the planning of the project. We need to decide what procurement approach or procurement strategy is going to be - a fundamental decision.
John:
That's right. So that document contains a few things. The first thing which is fundamental is whether we're going to make it or buy it.
And the second thing is going to be, are we going to contract people if we do? Yes, and you've very rarely just have one or the other is usually a mixture of the two. You might decide that you're going to do that on the basis of ascertain costs or fixed price or target costs are so it's going to be issues around how you're going to want to pay for it. Milestone payments, lump sums. What form of contract - JCT or NEC3 or whatever it's going to be. Or your own, or IPS.
So there's that procurement strategy kind of laying down the rules. And quite often organisations have these already. They have a way of a standardised way of doing things. And you just tune it.
It's also influenced by business rules as well, because the chances you know that one of your procurements parts of your procurement strategy might be that you make all your acquisitions through some sort of Credit Card, some sort of corporate credit card arrangement. Or you might have to go to three tenders. So there's, there's things that are stipulated to you. So the procurement strategy is a kind of composite of what the organisation wants you to do and how you're going to do this particular project. That's why it's a bit of a hybrid. That's why it doesn't live in the business case or the project management plan, really, because both documents…
Paul:
It’s usually actually written by a procurement specialist. Yeah, what I've done. Yeah, the procurement specialist to go this is the procurement strategy for this.
John:
They're quite popular in the oil and gas industry. And instead of a project management plan, you get a procurement strategy and a project execution plan.
Paul:
Remember, going to that talk by the guy from HS2. And he talked about the procurement strategy, the packages, the way we're going to package up those projects, right, and how the different contractors that they were going to appoint to the different packages. That was like really, really early in the project. So I think that's a really good description because it differentiates the procurement strategy - strategic document - with the bits that we're going to look at next, which are things like the options in terms of different contractual relationships that we can have.
John:
Yeah, so the strategy will say it is our intention to do fixed price only. One of our customers used to do ascertain cost then they went to a fixed price and now they’re back to ascertain cost. So I expect in a few years’ time they’ll go back to fixed price, but that's the kind of global decision that they've made.
Paul:
So different types of contracts relationship, we could adopt…let's do the different types of contract relationship next. So they’ve simplified this quite a lot. Yeah, they’ve basically said… let’s do the most common first.
John:
I've a bit of an issue about this because I think they've like they've really simplified, dumbed this down to a point where it’s meaningless in a lot of ways.
Paul:
The first option is to go to a prime contractor or, principal, or main contractor. Usually a large company, but this should then subcontract the work out and the prime or main contractor may or may not add that much themselves. So they may subcontract everything out, or they may add quite a lot of value themselves. So that's quite common in big projects, because that probably that one be, you know, that big project is too big for one organisation to take on and they need lots of subcontractors. And the client wants to one point of contact so they won't be able to go to one organisation say, right, you're running this project for us. You go away and make it happen.
John:
Yes. So I mean, just to summarise, you've got a client with a contract with a main contractor, and the main contractor intern contracts to subcontractors. So if you had to subcontractors actually you should have three contracts, you know, one main contract and two sub contracts.
Paul:
Yes. But you wouldn’t necessarily - as the customer - see those sub contracts though
John:
That's the problem - one of the problems is you have no direct line of sight with the people that are on the ground. You always have to go through the main contractor and legally, you can't sue a sub-contractor unless you have third party rights. So you know it can take a lot of the burden away from you because what's going to happen is that principle contract is going to integrate all the works everything, they're gonna make sure that bricklayers aren't tripping over the plumbers and electricians are coming in before the plasterer and all that sort of stuff.
Paul:
The advice I heard is if you've got one of these contracts then “eyes on hands off”. So you keep an eye on what's going on. You let the main contract to get on with doing their job as you appointed them to manage that contract. So don't start telling subcontractors what to do.
John:
You might need some decent reporting though. Just to make sure they are on track because otherwise if you have no line of sight with the subcontractors they could be telling you black’s white and you don't know any different so you need quite a good, really good reporting anyway but, even more so in that instance.
Paul:
So then to overcome those disadvantages what you can do is have direct relationships with one or more suppliers single or multiple contractors so people also call this a hub and spoke. So I'm in the spoke and there's loads of people around the hub but now I'm doing the role of the prime contractor. I'm sort of coordinating all those different contractors together so this is a bit like Grand Designs you know where they got the plumber and the electrician and the guy doing the wall and the roof and he's on the phone all the time trying to, you know, put the plumbing guy back because the guy who's doing the plastering hasn't arrived you know.
John:
The first time I did our kitchen I did it the hub and spoke – I don’t want to call it hub and spoke - but anyway, with multiple suppliers. So I got the guy who did the work top because we didn't have any money. It was cheaper. So I managed it all myself and I took the risk of making sure the floor was level so that when they put the worktop in he didn't moan about the floor being unlevel right so, but the next time I did it, I did it with the prime contractor. A kitchen fitting company came in and did it all. They charged me a lot more, but probably, arguably, a better result.
Paul:
I had a kitchen fitted once and the kitchen fitters left their order in the kitchen overnight, and they been paid like £300 - £400 to fit the kitchen and I'd been charged like 1,500 quid for kitchen fitting.
John:
Well, that's the problem.
Paul:
Whoa, I should just employ those guys directly.
John:
Yeah, exactly. But I did the prime or principal guy from the shop in the town. What occurred to me was he had a bigger book than I. He just had more people that he knew.
Paul:
But they knew that if he wasn't happy they weren't going to get any more work.
John:
To be fair, he had more buying power as well. But he didn't use that buying power to reduce my price he used it to reduce his cost
Paul:
For his car! Did he have a nice car?
John:
He did. Yeah, he had a Lotus Cortina.
Paul:
So the advantage is you get more flexibility. So Terminal 5 I think was done this way. So they acted as the hub. And they pulled in the different resources as and when they needed. It gives you more flexibility, but you do have to be a lot better. You have to be more on it. You have to be much more - like you - making sure the floor’s level. And if there's any disputes between those different suppliers, you're the one who's got to fix them.
John:
Well, I mean, when you're thinking about this as well, you need to think about it from a different point of view. These two are not different depends who you are. Because if you're the project manager managing multiple suppliers, you might be doing that on behalf of a main contractor. So the Hub and Spoke is no different to prime contractor. It just depends who you are. So the only thing you're adding to a hub and spoke model is the prime contract between you and the client. That's the only difference. So anyway…
Paul:
So that moves us on to payment rates. So there's different types of payment. And I think people get confused about this, because each of those different types of contracts will probably have multiple payment forms in them - probably some that we call fixed price components where you've agreed, say, a certain amount for your kitchen. And then they'll have a day rate for extras. So within a contract, well, there’s schedule a rate so that's paying so much per unit.
John:
That's not in the book - not anymore. You didn't want it in there so I took it out. And it doesn't appear in any of the indicative content. Any of that. That’s what I'm saying ...
Paul:
Okay.
John:
Okay.
Paul:
So right, what should we do then let's just go quiet and see if I can edit in.
Paul:
So that moves us on nicely talk about the different types of payment that you might see in a contract. Any one contract might have multiple payment mechanisms. So the typical ones, you'll see are fixed price. I think everyone knows what a fixed price is. fixed price fixed scope. Yeah, except it should be firm price.
John:
Woah, really? There was a silence there.
Paul:
A firm price contract is what most people mean by fixed price. Our firm price means that fixed price with a firm scope, fixed actually means it's fixed to some form..
John:
No, no, no, no, no, no. Firm price is firm. Nothing ever changes – nothing. Fixed price is the same as a firm price, except for the things that can change. So in a fixed price contract, you can have inflation. It can be indexed against certain... So fuel prices, consumables. So firm price and fixed price are different. But I've never seen a firm price contract.
Paul:
People usually use him to mean the same thing.
John:
Anything over about a year in duration, you're mad because of inflation and anything can happen to the commodity prices. So I think firm price from the point of view of being one end of the continuum - it's not in the syllabus, anyway. So I think when we talk about fixed price, what we really mean is, there's a reasonably fixed price for reasonable fixed scope of work and any changes will incur extra cost.
Paul:
So next one's cost plus fee. So basically, you pay all my costs, plus an agreed fee. And that fee includes my profit. So implies some form of open book relationship. So you know what my costs are. So I have to send you timesheets or something like that.
John:
The thing is cost not price, so I'm paying your cost. Whereas before I was paying a fixed price so I don't see your costs under a fixed price. Cost plus is typically where they do the scheduler rates. We decide what components we're going to do, but when it actually comes to buy them, I pay you what you've actually paid. So if you want 40 metres of concrete, we estimated that was going to cost five grand. But then it actually turns out to be £3,800. I pay you £3,800 plus an agreed fee, wherever your profit fee is.
Paul:
And are we going to percentage and fixed fees?
John:
Well, they don't differentiate. But we could, I mean, that confuses a lot of people because you can have cost plus percentage fee so I'll pay you 1,000 pounds – sorry - I'll pay your cost plus 10%,. Or I could pay you your cost plus 1000 pounds. Which is slightly different. So cost plus fixed fees. Not really. I might just charge you a design fee. So you might charge me cost plus design fee.
Paul:
Yes percentage is more common, isn't it? Per unit quantity - that's like carpet fitting. So you pay for the quantity - each square metre you have you pay so much per unit.
John:
We used to call that time & materials. So your everyday work we pay an amount of money but it's price, it's not cost. So we pay you your fee for that one day's work. So we pay you for your time & materials.
Paul:
Yeah, it isn't usually quantity though - the output quantity, so it's usually per metre or per square foot.
John:
I think it could be either.
Paul:
Target cost is where you agree a target – we’re going to pay you a million pounds. And then if you underspend the cost I will share the saving and if you overspend we'll share the pain.
John:
Or you might have incentives around that as well. So you've got some target in mind that you're both trying to achieve. And that's the good thing, because you're both working towards the same target because the pain or gain will hit both of you.
Paul:
Correct. And differentiate between different types of contracts we’ve done. For the supply selection process - how did you get into contracts? So most people have met this before. And we've got five steps but there's about 20! Like issue an invitation to tender, get the quotes back, tenders back, off the suppliers. Review those quotes, bids back and then award the contract to the successful supplier. That's actually a vast simplification of a 20 or 30 step process.
John:
Well, I think it can be. I mean, it also can be many years coming – if you’re spending a billion pounds I think, the only way this works, is because it's principles based The only way this works is to describe the principle and let people adapt to their own local conditions. Because every organisation you come across has got a different way of doing this. Do we have three suppliers or five tenders? Have bidders conferences or not? How do we do weighting criteria? You know, so there's a whole bunch of suppliers.
Paul:
Sector-specific as well.
John:
You might get bound up in the European Union's procurement regulations, and there's usually anti-competitive law, and the US has got different laws again.
Paul:
I expect the best advice is if you're going to do a major or significant procurement, go and talk to the procurement specialist because in the UK, certainly, (I’ve only just discovered this actually) the procurement has personal liability for the process having been followed properly. And they can be personally under European law.
John:
Yes. For European procurements. Yes. That’s right. It's custodial sentence as well. You can't do things like breaking it up into two small chunks to get under the limits. It was 200,000 euros, isn't it? 200,000 euros for services and about 1.5 million euros for capital. There's a whole load of other boundaries for service contracts.
Paul:
In practice, most people will get a procurement specialist.
John:
That’ll be a key point in strategy as well. You see, the procurement strategy will raise the fact that you are liable to go through these processes of which you're not in control.
Paul:
Yeah, it's another interesting point, you know about the three-point accountability thing? So best procurement practice is you have a requester, who's a technical person who asked for the work. There's a procurement specialist who place the contract and a finance person who checks and pays the invoice. So you have those three different departments involved in procuring and paying for work. It just means there's less chance of things go wrong. less chance of corruption. Less chance of fiddling the books.
John:
They call it separation of duties.
Paul:
So you'd have that principle of three.
John:
Well, I think you know, great. Good idea.
Paul:
Good. Thank you, John.
Sun, 03 May 2020 - 22min - 143 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Quality - Planning, Assurance and Control
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast Paul and Jan discuss quality control, quality management and quality assurance. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain what is meant by quality planning Differentiate between quality control and quality assuranceThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Here is a summary of the different aspects of quality within a project management environment:
Quality PlanningA project manager will always need to create a quality plan detailing how the project will produce products of the required quality. Included in the quality plan will be the following:
Roles and Responsibilities related to quality issues The processes to be followed for both production and testing procedures A description of how continual improvement will performed Details of quality assurance such as supplier vetting Details of quality control techniques such as Pareto Analysis How to establish and manage interactions with other project processes such as configuration management Quality AssuranceQuality assurance demonstrates how the necessary quality will be achieved and in doing so instils confidence in stakeholders regarding quality levels of the final outcome.
The typical components of quality assurance are:
TrainingAre members of the project team competent and fully trained to complete the work assigned to them.
AuditA formal, external audit of processes provides reassurance that the project will be carried out as expected.
Supplier AccreditationWhen goods and materials are supplied to be used in creating the products that will form the project deliverables then those goods or materials must be assessed to be of the required quality.
Lessons LearnedLessons should be learned throughout the project and effectively communicated so that any problems are resolved at the point they are being made. This ensures the root of the problem is identified rather than issues recurring again and again.
Quality control measures will vary widely depending on the type of project and the type of project deliverable. The key similarity, however, will be a comparison of the final deliverable with the original specification.
Some of the quality control techniques that might be used in a project management environment include:
Pareto analysis Walk-throughs Process control charts Visual inspection and measurement Continuous improvementAnd here is a transcript of this podcast:
Introduction
Welcome to a parallel project training APM project management qualification podcast based on the APM body of knowledge seventh edition, you should be using this in conjunction with our elearning podcasts, and potentially a tutor led course. For more information, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Paul
Hello, welcome to another Parallel Project Training podcast today we're doing quality podcasts with Jan. Hello, Jan
Jan
Hi there.
Paul
Very good. Very good. So this is based on the seventh edition of the body of knowledge with PMQ. So the learning so the assessment criteria in this question section are explained what is meant by quality management and differentiate between quality control and quality assurance?
Jan
Right? That's a mouthful
Paul
Explain what is meant by Quality Management, I suspect we have two definition of what quality is first.
Jan
Okay, so it's going for the body of knowledge. It says qualities assessment of a product's fitness of purpose. While the definition appears to be limited the products that the project will produce. It also implies not only to these products is the process and procedures deployed in managing the project iself.
Paul
So there's two things,
Jan
There's two things Yes, because quality to the to the product itself, you can see why it conforms to specification. And of course, the specification is set out when we have to do things like scope management and kind of requirements. So does it meet or does not meet the actual requirements. And of course, that has to be kind of agreed and kind of baseline. And then we talk about change control and all that sort of stuff. But qualities can be very, very subjective as well. So quality to you like a quality car to you may not be To me, that's what I want to use car for. But also, its terms around people's experience of the project management and the processes itself is how we manage, it's like the work we do, we can actually get a lot of people through a course and get the exams passed. But what they'll actually remember is our interaction with those people our service, if you like, and once you start talking about that it's our processes, how we actually took the order, how we had to get a production sorted out how we actually manage the classroom into managing any sort of queries or problems, or maybe issues about have had is around experience. So there's two sides of it, you can actually have something like a fantastic stadium that is built and is fit for purpose. But it's a project management, everything Oh, my goodness, you know, the experience was so bad. The processes weren't there. We did lots of changes in the project, we didn't know what quality was, or all the requirements was he can actually set up for a bad experience. So it's
Paul
two sides summary qualities, two things. It's the delivery of the output. Yes. Fitness for purpose.
Jan
To specification.
Paul
Yeah. to auto specification. Yes. And it's to the quality of the process that got us there.
Jan
Yes. Good. Yes, it is. And it also, it can be against the processes, because projects don't just deliver products, they can deliver processes, especially when you start talking about quality in the service sector industry is a process like your experience of a restaurant, for example, you remember the experience, and the food, the food being the product. Okay.
Paul
Okay. So we need to differentiate between quality control and quality assurance, right? I spoke about talk about quality planning to really hadn't we aspect.
Jan
So that's what we need to do at the very beginning.
So sorry.
So we talked about quality planning at the very beginning is how we actually and it should be should be sorted out as a separate product or separate entity is embedded in what we do. The minute we start to talk about scope of the project, or even the parameters of the project in terms of the time, the cost, the scope, quality, I often put into the middle part of triangle, we deliver it, it's fit for purpose as…
Paul
…the quality plan.
Jan
A quality plan will be the roles responsibilities, often, you know who's responsible for the quality of the project will actually pretty everybody is, and we actually has interaction with it to how we're going to actually define quality criteria, what tools and process of going to be using to manage the quality, what sort of resources we're going to be using, what sort of testing can a specialist test equipment, specialists, people to do the testing, what assurance we're going to put around that to make sure that we are doing what we think we should be doing. We can carry out audits and interactions to other processes. We talked in other podcasts around change and configuration management to what we often called managed The the baselines of the projects and together with the assets, the configuration version control of the project.
Paul
So it's part of the PMP.
Jan
Yes, certainly is developed by the project manager with the teams. Okay. Okay. So that's done early in the project lifecycle? Yes, yes, certainly, actually, quality may be kicking off. Sitting around the concept, we started the business case, but certainly will be teased out as we go into definition.
Paul
So how's that different from quality assurance, as quality assurance, different from quality planning,
Jan
the quality assurance might be a higher end it often I call that the umbrella of quality incorporates a planning and control. And it's making sure the organisation and city qualified experienced people have scripts, that we have processes in place that will manage the process, run the project, like we have a risk management process, change management process, this is how we actually do the requirements, we actually will have testing, certain organisations have testing labs or procedures. There's certain laws and legislation we have to follow, like your health and safety and other legislation. And we have to make sure that these procedures are being followed through an audit certifies assurance provides confidence to stakeholders that we can time after time, deliver a quality product to the customer, we have the infrastructure, if you like or the structure to do it.
Paul
So I like the idea of the assurance being an umbrella. Yes. So the bit how's that different from quality control for control is you control the quality that we deliver?
Jan
The quality is around inspection, testing, measuring, okay, whatever that from the requirements, you actually define the quality criteria of each of the products have the output and does it or does not meet specification. Okay, so we may have tolerances
Paul
so each product gets right quality assessed in some way.
Jan
Is that measuring something that that item needs to be four centimetres, is it four centimetres, yes or no plus or minus and plus or minus tolerances?
Paul
Good. And as different techniques, you can use walkthroughs? Or
Jan
Yes, we offer his walkthroughs within parallel project training, when we actually walk in through both sayings, especially mission testing very much in engineering environments or software environments. You can use process control charts, there's 101 different quality control techniques. But when we're doing resource management for the project, there's but he ran the policy planning is what resources do we need? What facilities Do we need to actually carry out the testing?
Paul
Good, as short and sweet. So to summarise quality is the delivery the fitness for purpose for the project? Yes, performance, the specification and who decides that? Yeah, it's it's about the control of the products. Yes, making sure those products meet the specification. Of course
Jan
specification is control for configuration management, and then change control.
Paul
It's about that overarching quality assurance umbrella. Yes. And it's about project quality plan as part of project management. Yes,
Jan
what we need to do for this project specifically to do quality management, and of course, within the quality plan, we may be drawing down certain key process procedures from the quality management, the quality assurance bit, okay, you know, if you're going to do a testing, this is how we do testing. This is how we, you know, do risk risk management within this organisation. Excellent, good fracture. Okay, thanks very much.
We hope you enjoyed this podcast and found it informative. To find out about our training courses elearning or tutor led course please go to www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Tue, 18 May 2021 - 08min - 142 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Risk and Issue Management
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss risk and issue management. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain each stage in a risk management process (such as identification, analysis response, and closure) Explain proactive and reactive responses to risk (such as avoid, reduce, transfer or accept and exploit, enhance, share and reject) Explain the benefits of risk management Explain the key aspects of issue managementThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Below is a transcript of this podcast:
Introduction
Welcome to a parallel project training APM project management qualification podcast based on the APM body of knowledge seventh edition. You should be using this in conjunction with our elearning podcasts, and potentially a tutor led course. For more information, please visit www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Paul
Hello, welcome to another Parallel Project Training podcast with John Bolton. Hello, John. Hello and Paul Naybour. Oh, we're doing the PMQ and we're doing risk and issue management today. Deep joy. So we've got quite a big section here. Quite a lot of assessment criteria.
John
This was the longest podcast in the box. So this lasts 47 minutes
Paul
So explain the stage in the risk management process such as identify analyse, plan, response and closure, explain proactive responses to avoid reduced transfer and accept exploiting enhance, share and reject, explain the benefits of exposure and explain the key aspects of issue management and contingency. So as we start with this definition, a risk event is
John
well, yeah, a risk event is an uncertain event or set of circumstances that should occur or they occur would have an effect on the achievement of one or more of the project's objectives. That's the prime guide definition. Okay. There is a slightly different glossary definition. Okay, what's the glossary? Say it doesn't talk about risk events as much it talks about just it says something more generic. The risk is the potential of an action or event to impact on the achievement of objectives,
Paul
potential action or event. Yeah. Okay. So they're all events that might have an impact on achievement.
John
Yeah, I mean, I think people talk about the word event as if it's meaningful, I think it's just just a noun,
Paul
or an adjective, whatever it is, to the key thing that can be opposite. They can be opportunities or threats, right. So you're looking at both, which confuses some people sometimes because generically, we talk about risks being bad things, but we don't tend to write down on opportunities are very rarely academic,
John
which is, but then, you know, interest rates could go up as well as down. I have a blog about that fuel prices forgot as well as down. They want to talk about that or not really. Okay. No, I mean, well, we need to mention it, because it could be part of, but it's not ostensibly part of the syllabus. Yeah. You know, they don't talk about risks. Positive risks in here are explicitly Yeah, although they do talk about the responses as being exploiting heartshare or reject, which in the pram guide on opportunity on so we talk about those as well.
Paul
So risks can have causes background facts, it make them happen. So that's called change or political uncertainty, economic uncertainty, or technology or something. And that cause introduces an uncertain event, which has an impact on time, cost and quality usually, or achievement of the overall objectives for the period.
John
So I mean, how is our problem with going down the cause? root, you know, so you can they might rain tomorrow? Because of global warming? That's a fact. Yeah. But I mean, it could cause a global warming is more likely Pratt was the rain. Warning. Yes, exactly. So what's the cause? So close to this, because I've got diesel,
Paul
diesel, and go back and back and back back, but you just try to identify a manageable root cause? So Ben, well, it's
John
a specificity of, isn't it? It's, it might rain, tomorrow's facts, but it might rain when we've got the roof off the building. Yes, that's a risk.
Paul
Yes.
John
So that's something tangible I could do something about the corner. It's only any use to you if there's actually it's meaningful due to the fact we're working outside in February, a rain
Paul
tomorrow,
John
we might have bad weather while we've got the roof of the building. It's while we've got the roof of the building. That's the key bit. Yes. So we haven't got enough resources. That's fact you know, most people haven't. Yes, yeah. So we haven't we haven't we know, we know. We're short of people. Therefore, there's a risk that I won't have my expert on the for a week in June to review my document of risk, and that's the risk.
Paul
And so that means your project might be delayed. That's why Guess what? A good the benefits of risk management. Well, it's demonstrates professionalism, you got sound process in place, means you can calculate the contingencies properly. You know what you're doing about those risks? And it builds a culture that actually lets you take risk,
John
where things go wrong, they're stone they because you're proactively doing something about it. Yes, but but also So it has the has the effect of labelling people to do things. It's an enabling thing rather than a restrictive thing.
Paul
Yes. So risk isn't necessarily bad.
John
No, because where there's where there's muck, there's brass.
Yeah, exactly where there's opportunity risk you get no
better. Exactly, exactly. So, you know, the only way you avoid all risk is sort of lying in bed in the morning. Wait to die. Yeah. sighs you have to avoid the risk, you avoid the
Paul
risk. Yeah. So the process we're going to follow is slightly simplified, identify what those risks are, assess the significance of race plan, what you do by the wrist and close might actually find most people are understand this now. Mostly, they've done it for health and safety perspective.
John
Yeah. And
Paul
we're, we did talk about health and safety earlier. Here, the difference is that we're looking at the impact of time, cost and quality, rather life and accident. So we're going to identify what those risks are, assess them plan what to do about them, and close out the risks.
John
I think it's a shame that they've sort of diluted the health and safety aspects of this a bit because yes, in my experience, a lot of our customers Health and Safety, Health is very important. So I don't want anyone to run away with the idea that we're dismissing that
Paul
now it's mandated requirement,
John
we are talking about project risk here, not kind of such as life and limb.
Paul
Yeah. And so the difference is, this is discretionary. You don't have to understand what your commercial risks are. If you don't, you'll just lose money and grow our business but you do the Law Society says you need to manage your health and safety risks. It's a mandatory thing everybody has to do. So, working through that process, the first terminators identify understand what those risks are. And we've listed out some techniques brainstorming SWOT assumption analysis, interviews, prompt lists, checklists, are slip swatting, they're by mistake. And we're going to talk through each of these are quite obvious, really well,
John
they are I mean, I think people know what a brainstorming session a capture assumption, I suppose the the assumptions analysis might be a bit trickier. My Way think, and assumptions are risks, really? Because I'm assuming I've got five bricklayers, therefore there's a risk. I haven't. Yeah, that's fine. I'm assuming the customer is going to do that for therefore there's a risk they don't.
Paul
Yes. So assumption that you have any uncertainty about
John
sales guys never using let the bid managers put risks in the proposals. Why? Well, because they used to say, well, the customer might think is risky, they want to buy it. But you know, so as descriptions in AD square that circle, so what assumptions in here you have assumptions, pages and pages of assumptions. But basically, I mean, but sometimes you have to make assumptions as we move forward, Tony? Yeah. So you know, I'm assuming that, you know, with the, you know, the server's gonna be delivered on the right day or something, but, you know, essentially, we used to convert that into
Paul
assuming when the server rise, it will run software that we've written.
John
You know, I used to, yeah, so assumptions, we used to turn them into risks, just tell everybody go through them and put them under risk. Because that way they do get managed. Yeah. brainstorm interviews is like a one to one, isn't it? Probably just a good promise, the pestle, you know, do a pestle analysis a good list? Yeah. And then a checklist is a more definitive version of a problem list is where specific actions are identified. So you see, those were things like display screen assessments in the health and safety space. But also, you know, you see him on procurement has the has the has the supplier potential supplier got a clear, you know, credit history, or they got a record of ccjs have they got this okay? So you go and take and if they take all of those then you're at you're sort of happy doesn't mean they're any good, but you've gone through the checklist.
Paul
So from there, we build our risk log or risk register.
John
Yeah, usually got, you know, like a normal Excel spreadsheet type thing. Identification description. In fact, everybody I know uses Excel.
Paul
Do ya? Some people have databases? Yeah,
John
this was big columns and other big database system.
Paul
So then we've got this long list of risks. The next step is which are key risks and most people are happy with this probability impact grid now we look at how likely the risk is impacts gonna be and
John
very common. high probability high impact risk there's one of these on the news the other night was was was watching one of those Brexit things and also face Laura, what's her name? Coons Berg had a risk recipe I wasn't gonna I can't remember it was exactly but yeah, they one of these. So where were the main risks? So they were they were appearing on this
Paul
site, a set of generic sort of templates for infographics. And it had all these in it. Like you have become a member David Wilson invented this thing with a different waiting Yeah, it was this idea that thing get to know that old Yeah.
John
So the pig the pigs all right is a sort of visual training aid. It's a bit rubbish when it actually use one.
Paul
Well, you just code it into a lookup table on your Excel spreadsheet. Yeah.
John
But you just it becomes illegible after about half a dozen on there.
Paul
No, no, sorry, it calculates the colour. So you can build it into Excel so that when you put the high medium low, it will calculate whether it's red, Amber green. Oh,
John
I know. Yeah. But I mean, all you're doing is just yeah. Yeah, but I mean, this actual grid. Yeah. As good as training. And if you've got a workshop with a bunch of people getting to put risks on posters and stick them on the wall, usually is a column and is really yeah, they you normally have a long tabular thing that you can saw.
Paul
Yeah. So next step is take your most significant risks and come up with responses. That's right. Most people will just talk about mitigation here. So we have to just talk a little bit about that, because mitigation is a simplification of the APM
John
view of the world. Well, mitigation is like a collective noun. Yeah, for all of these things, right. So to mitigate a risk, you can accept it, avoid it, transfer or reduce it. That's right. So mitigation is not a valid thing to be talking about.
Paul
Yeah. So for exam mode, we need to talk about accepting the risk is basically saying, Well, I know what that risk is, I'm just gonna live with it. Yeah, I've done I've done all the reasonable stuff that I can to minimise that risk. So eventually, I think you do you end up accepting everything? Yes.
John
I think a lot of us could accept because by definition,
Paul
yeah. And business.
John
Well, the point is, once you've accepted something, you have to provide a contingency.
Paul
Because because they happen rarely see, that's why
John
irrespective of how remote it might be, or unlikely it might be due
Paul
to what happened. And that's where insurance and PII insurance and all that sort of avoid, avoid my favourite actually changed the scope. So that that risk can no longer happen.
John
We're used to stuff called traco ethylene traco. trike,
Paul
oh trike. Yeah. For cleaning.
John
Yeah, yeah, it gives off equipment and mustard gas when you warm it up.
Use a dip. Copper don't use that anymore
while they stop using it because it was a bit dodgy. And so they kind of avoided any risk of it was quite a global that was that was. Yeah, that's pretty nice. Yeah, that was. And so what they did, they introduced a different degreaser. Yeah. Which of course wasn't quite as good. Yeah. So they've already won risk. But they introduced another one. Yeah, that's an example of a secondary risk. Yeah. But avoiding is where you just change what you're doing change the scope, or change the process or
Paul
Yeah, transfer, give the rest of somebody else who's better able to manage your risk looking at somebody else's? Yeah, usually through insurance, an example of transfer or contracting.
John
I don't know. I think transfer is really hard. Because you transfer you don't insurance only transfers, the impact doesn't matter. The
Paul
probability, you only transfer you can only transfer the impact, he cannot transfer the likelihood, if the risk still happens, is transferred to a subcontractor. But the vistal you transfer I think, like if you transfer the risk to a subcontractor if something goes wrong, it's still you're still your fault. So you just replace a kind of digital delivery delay risk with a reputational risk. Yeah, it works if you give it to someone who's better able to manage it than you.
John
Yeah. But it's still like,
Paul
yeah, it's still like, they might have more skill and competence to manage that risk. They might though. Yeah.
John
So that's why that's, that's why you subcontract? Yes. Because there's a risk we can't do it. Therefore get someone that can.
Paul
Yeah, he's done it before. He's got like last Friday's Yeah. Reduce is the closest to what people mean by mitigate. So he takes some action to reduce the likelihood of doing a survey or pilot study or feasibility study. Or you reduce the impacts more tickets reduce the impact. To reduce, you know, it's gonna rain. So wear a coat. Put us put a cover up or something.
John
Yeah, yeah. So if you got to take the roof off the building in February, you're going to offer time? Yes. So reduce him post likelihood. No impact.
Paul
Yes. The impact, correct. Sorry, I was wrong.
John
Then you got opportunities. And these are in to some degree there. The other? Yeah, the adverse, are they so reject his way? So Trevor, we don't bother with it. Yeah. Quite why we need to write that down is beyond me. But anyway, enhance where you you actually try and enhance the probability or the impact
Paul
separately to reduce
John
by doing something? Yeah. So you actually take action to enhance it? Yeah. exploited is where we don't don't do any action. We just take the take the opportunity to take it when it comes. Okay. So there's no cost involved in in house. Yes, they just had to happens or it doesn't same. exploit,
Paul
exploit.
Okay, exploit is different from enhance.
So that's the same as Except to them what exploit?
John
exploit is the same? Well, hold on, let's start again. accept, accept and reject. They go together. Yeah. Yeah. So accept and reject. They're those. If I enhance and reduce, they're the same. Yeah, share, and transfer, they're the same. So avoid an exploit.
Paul
Okay? So we don't avoid it. We just say, Oh, that's a good rest. Let's just go for it.
John
I don't think they're opposites. Yeah, we've had this conversation before, avoid is where you do something differently to stop it happening. exploit is where you do exactly the same as what you were going to do. And wait for it to happen. Yeah. So they're not always opposites. But three of them are, but yeah, so in, you know, in a, in a practical sense, if, if I'm building a new station, and I decide there's an opportunity to put up, pop up coffee shop on it, and get some rent from it, then I might, might exploit that, and just rent it out and cost me nothing. On the other hand, if that space needed some water, or some power, or drainage or whatever, then I might have to do some more grant more enabling works to make it happen. So I'm doing the same thing, except now I'm doing some work to make it happen, rather than just letting it happen naturally. Good.
Paul
So next step is to response. So actually making this happens a lot, I think. So you caught your plan, you put it in this register, and they goes, Oh, that's a really good recipe. Let's put that in the bottom drawer and forget about it. Yeah. So response means actually going out and buying that insurance policy or subcontracting this workhorse, right.
John
That's the thing that's the mistake people make is they think that doing that is contingency, but it isn't buying PCs part of your budget, isn't it? Yeah, actually spend money. So it's golden is doing a prototype, if I decide if I decide I'm going to put some drainage in for that pop up shop. Yeah, all of a sudden, it said work back into my car, and I'm gonna spend it actually
Paul
committed to doing it. That's right. So it's
John
no longer kind of is no longer optional. And enclosure
Paul
is about keeping all the records up to date as in.
John
Yeah, well, it's just about tied in keeping it keeping your shipshape, really. But if the project the project could the risk unnaturally close? So if, if you've got, if you've had the roof of the building and put it back again, then although there's no risk is that yeah, it's like most construction jobs, all the risks are happen before you get to damp proof course. Okay, because it's all about ground condition winds, it's all about, you know, sort of in a lost civilization or, you know, not having a proper, you know, kind of soil, sort of constituency. So, some risks can naturally just drop off. Yes. Others, you get to the end of a project, and you might find if you've identified others, so, if you've built a new build a new building, you realise there's a risk that the flooding, you might need to tell somebody. Yeah, this used to be called closed it? No, it's called monitor monitor.
Paul
Yeah. So I think what they're trying to get out here is when when a phase is like you're saying, when a phase is finished, you can close out the risks associated with that phase. Yeah. And realise the savings. Of course,
John
the point about a close risk is that if there was any contingency associated with it, it gets relinquished. Yes. That's why closures quite important. Yes.
Paul
Yes. So let's talk about contingency. We mentioned it a few times, like so what's your definition of a contingency? Same as yours?
John
I think I hope go on. Well, you when you do probability impact grades, you work out what the probability is. Yes. And the impact? Yes. And that allows you to come up with a figure. Yes. And that figure in pounds is what your contingency is. So the consequence of that is, if it's not on the risk log, there's no contingency for it. Yes, that doesn't mean something could still go wrong, just because it's not in your log. But I've got a I've got a risk that I've identified, I've worked out what my contingency budget is. Alongside that I need a contingency plan. So I need to know what's going to happen if that risk occurs, no matter how unlikely it might be. So that's why it essentially every every risk on a risk log eventually is accepted. Yes. Because, but but you can't just accept it. Accept that
Paul
you have to have some money in the bank, and you have to know what you're going to do. Because it might be really important to you contingency plan is all your team might win the lottery. That's right. So what's your contingency plan if they do?
John
retire,
Paul
or recruit consultants, so you might have to put some agency staff to backfill, that's your contingency plan. So you work that out in advance? Yeah. Well, how much money would you need to set aside for that much plan? Well, the chances of your team winning the lottery blooding? Low Yeah, so not so much. So you write about we need to take counts both the cost of the contingency action, but also the likelihood of slack contingency actually
John
happening, and it's the way insurance works. That's why car insurance things. People say all the insurance was really cheap. Well, that's probably because they consider it to be a really low risk. What's the chance of me getting well
Paul
continued kidnapped in another class if you continuously plan to Lewis cabins?
John
Yeah, that's right. It's like insurance. You'd never don't need it till you need it. No. But that's contingency. So the the obvious question is, well, what do you do about the risks that you haven't identified? That just okay, just pop up in front of known unknown, although actually they're not risk their issues. So what happens to the issues that occur that you never predicted? Yes, the unknown unknowns, and that's called manage reserve.
Paul
Yes. Okay.
John
I, neither neither the contingency or the management reserve are held by the project manager. I
Paul
don't know. That's different from different organisations. Yeah. organisations give the country a little bit of pm some a little bit.
John
Sometime. Yeah, I have problem with giving the project manager the contingencies, they tend to spend it. They'll spend it on things other than things supply chain. Yeah, the dangers continues to get. So the good practice, go all the suppose a recommendation that the ideal solution, I suppose, is where the sponsor holds the contingency, and gives it to the project manager on the on the risk event occurring. Yeah. But that's a bit overly bureaucratic and limiting for the project manager on the contractual relation here might be bigger. I mean, certainly, if you're a supplier, that might be the case. I know, big con, some big contracts have relied on that. When they were they've said to the supplier don't build any contingency. And if it goes wrong, we'll give you them. We'll give you the money.
Paul
Yeah.
John
But by the way, if it's not on your log, you pay for it.
Paul
Yes. So I'm gonna have a logbook, we had that once, guess how many risks we had in the log gone. 500 500. Just to make sure that everything was on the log, yeah, we spent six weeks creating a generic log of risk is always different. It's always interesting that you put pressure on one point because you think that's going to solve the problem. And you create a disincentive to do something else.
John
I went to do a health check on a project up in London once for the government department to remain nameless, and the project managers out I've got 417 or something risks. And I said, I said I don't think I'm managing the
Paul
contract. They said yes, I say whatever. Why don't blame me for not telling them. Yeah, that's that's not the best plan. Really, that's not the best. Yeah, the best reason for doing it. That's the problem. I will not talk about problems of risk. But that's the problems I've seen the risk is when you build it into a contract, it changes the behaviour. Yeah, does people behave in a commercial way rather than because the project deliver cover their backside? That's what they do. So definition of issues, an issue is something that has a problem that's now or in the near future, that's going to breach our tolerances. tolerances, it's going to exceed our expected budget. Yeah. agreed with the
John
tolerances, your wiggle room, needs to be
Paul
in require support from the sponsor to resolve. So they're no longer than certain. Yeah, almost certainly going to happen. Yeah. But they're not insignificant, they're not. So it says the project manager is responsible for the day to day management of the project. This is not day to day issues. This is stuff that's beyond the data, why
John
the way the syllabus is read, or the way the book implies it is these are the things that they can't deal with. Yes. So it's like something's gone wrong. Our family best but actually to melt, some new legislation comes in. That's right. Or whether or not whether or not I've added on the risk or not is irrelevant. because it'd be sorted out. I've never seen this coming. Yeah.
Paul
You know, if you're a project manager, you're going to keep tabs on all the parliamentary legislation, it's going to be introduced by the government tomorrow. In our like, it's not, it's not your job,
John
like, so. issues, really, I mean, and that's why in here, they talk about issue escalation. So I think the key point here for me is issues. Risk Management is prospective. Yes. So it forces you to think about the future and what might go wrong. issue management is here now it's reanimated? Yes. So the project managers got to be quite tuned into what's going on. Yeah. Because you got to spot these things early enough to be able to do something about them and, and actually deal with them straight away. And and that's why the relationship between the project manager in the sponsor is quite important because sometimes issues bubble up, you know, like, I was doing a job and the contractor went out of business. You know, we turned up on a Monday morning, everything was locked up. padlocked up there's a security guard, Stan. Yeah, yeah. You know, you haven't got time to mess about you've got to get a meeting done quickly sorted. You know? So I suppose there's a low tolerance for a lot of documentation around a lot of issues. It usually happens afterwards. But, you know, issue management's usually done through minutes of meetings or, you know, emergency meetings or
Paul
Yeah, I've actually best place to track issues is on the progress report. Yeah, cuz they're the things you actually want to talk to a sponsor. That's right, your progress. That's why I like raid logs.
John
Yeah, you know, risks, assumptions, issues and decisions. Not so right about the decision bit, but keeping them all in the same place. The good thing about risk logs is risk, because risks are not yet happened. There's a probability associated, that probability is always less than 100%. Okay, issues 100%. Yes. So there's that. Yeah, actually, when you look at a risk log and look at an issue log, they're very similar. You can lock people up to saying the same, but the only difference is issues. 100% probability, yeah.
Paul
Little code that says this issue is
John
yes. Because now an issue. And then you've got you've got traceability that as well. Yeah. Yeah. But anyway, that's a bit sort of
Paul
cool. So we talked about contingency, we did benefits of issue management and escalation, our fitness true benefit is that it enables the sponsor to take the decisions of sponsor should be taking, and the project managers take decisions the project manager should be taking. So it's, it means that you can ask for the support or the sponsor to resolve issues that are beyond your remit. And if I think back in my career, I wish I had known about this when I was a junior PM, because I used to carry everything on my back. I, you know, I felt responsible for the whole pie. And I didn't realise that actually, if someone has said to me, Paul, you need an issue management process that you can escalate issues up the chain, they're beyond your remit. I think I'd been more successful and I've had a better career. Not I was unsuccessful. But I just think it's a really useful mechanism.
John
Well, the trouble is, you see, if you sort of take it on yourself, everyone will just get used to taking as far as they won't away didn't tell me. Yeah. And then you got to get yourself to blame everything. I
Paul
call it monkey management.
Key management's a monkey shoulder.
Yeah. And everybody just wants to dump the monkey on you. Yeah. So you just take everybody's monkeys. And
John
by the same token, no, no, senior persons kind of thank you for waiting outside their door every morning or like, Oh, well, that's why today, you
Paul
know, another thing has gone, you know, it's not day to day. So that's why I like this definition of issues or things that are significant. You can't
John
know. So that's why the boundary is quite important. Because, you know, if you are incompetent, you'll have more issues when you Yes, and that become that's what gets thrown up into stark relief. Yeah, quite quickly. Yeah. Because you're always staying outside to go I've got another problem Mirko deal with it. Yeah.
Paul
That's why I think stick them on your monthly report. That's the place to sit down and talk about the issues, you know, less their companies going out of business or something. Good. And we talked about contingency planning. Excellent. Thank you, john.
John
Good
We hope you enjoyed this podcast and found it informative. To find out about our training courses elearning or tutor led course please go to www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sat, 02 May 2020 - 28min - 140 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Resource Management
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss stakeholder management. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Describe how resources are categorised and allocated to a linear life cycle schedule Differentiate between resource smoothing and resource levellingThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Sat, 02 May 2020 - 15min - 139 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Scheduling
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast Michelle and Paul discuss scheduling. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Describe ways to create and maintain a schedule (including critical path and Gantt charts) Differentiate between critical path and critical chain as scheduling techniquesThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Fri, 01 May 2020 - 17min - 138 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Stakeholder Management
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss stakeholder management. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain the relationship between stakeholder analysis, influence and engagement Explain the importance of managing stakeholder expectations to the success of a projectThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Fri, 01 May 2020 - 16min - 137 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Estimating
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss estimating. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain the approaches to producing estimates (including parametric, analogous, analytical and Delphi) Explain the reasons for and benefits of re-estimating throughout the project life cycleThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Fri, 01 May 2020 - 18min - 136 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Project Management Plan
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Michelle and John discuss the project management plan. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain the relationship between the deployment baseline and the development of a project management plan in linear and iterative life cycles Explain the importance of producing a project management plan Describe the typical contents of a project management planThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Fri, 01 May 2020 - 16min - 135 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Information Management
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Michelle and John discuss information management. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain an information management process (including collection, storage, curation, dissemination, archiving, and the destruction of information)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Fri, 01 May 2020 - 16min - 134 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Business Case and Investment Appraisal
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Jan and John discuss business case and investment appraisal. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain the importance of a business case throughout the project life cycle Explain what is meant by benefits management (including identification, definition, planning, tracking and realisation) Explain investment appraisal techniques used by a project manager (including Internal Rate of Return (IRR) and Net Present Value (NPV))This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Thu, 30 Apr 2020 - 17min - 133 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Change Control
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and Jan discuss change control. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain different stages of a typical change control process (such as request, initial evaluation detailed evaluation, recommendation, update plans, and implement)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Thu, 30 Apr 2020 - 10min - 132 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Requirements and Configuration Management
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, John and Jan discuss requirements and configuration management. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain how to establish scope through requirements management processes (such as gather, analysis, justifying requirements, ad baseline needs) Explain how to manage scope through configuration management processes (such as planning, identification, control, status accounting, and verification audit)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Thu, 30 Apr 2020 - 18min - 131 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Defining and Managing Project Scope
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss scope management. This podcast aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain how to define scope in terms of outputs, outcomes and benefits (including use of product, cost and work breakdown structures)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Thu, 30 Apr 2020 - 23min - 130 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Teams and Teamworking
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and Jan discuss the conflict and negotiation. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Describe the characteristics and benefits of effective teams and teamwork Explain factors which impact on the leadership of virtual teams Explain factors which influence the creation, development and leadership of teams (using models such as Belbin, Margerison-McCann, Mysers-Briggs, Hackman, Tuckman, Katzenbach and Smith)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Wed, 29 Apr 2020 - 13min - 129 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Leadership
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Jan and Paul discuss leadership. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain how leadership impacts on team performance and motivation (using models such as Maslow, Herzberg and McGregor) Explain why it may be necessary to change leadership styles to effectively support the management of a projectThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Wed, 29 Apr 2020 - 11min - 128 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Conflict and Negotiation
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, John and Paul discuss the conflict and negotiation. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ exam assessment criteria;
State sources of conflict within a project Explain ways in which conflict can be addressed (such as the Thomas Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument) Explain how to plan and conduct negotiations (including ZOPA, BATNA, and 'Win Win')This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Wed, 29 Apr 2020 - 16min - 127 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Communication
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and Jan discuss the communication. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain the benefits, to a project, of a communication plan Explain the relationship between stakeholder analysis and an effective communication management plan State factors which can positively or negatively affect communicationThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Wed, 29 Apr 2020 - 11min - 126 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Project Life Cycles
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss project life cycles. This includes look at the differences, phases and reviews in linear, iterative and hybrid life cycles. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Differentiate between linear, iterative and hybrid life cycles Explain why projects are structured as phases in a linear life cycle Explain the differences between a project life cycle and an extended life cycleThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Tue, 28 Apr 2020 - 27min - 125 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Project Management Office
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Jan and Michelle discuss the project environment. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ exam assessment criteria;
Describe the functions and benefits of different types of project office (including project / programme / portfolio management office (PMO), embedded PMO, central PMO and hub and spoke PMO). Explain why aspects of project management governance are required (such as the use of: policies, regulations, functions, processes, procedures and delegated responsibilities.This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Tue, 28 Apr 2020 - 14min - 124 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Project Roles
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and Jan discuss project roles. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain the role and key responsibilities of the project manager Differentiate between the responsibilities of the project manager and the project sponsor throughout the project. Describe other roles within project management (including users, project team members, the project steering group / board and the product owner)This podcast is just part of the Parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, online e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Tue, 28 Apr 2020 - 13min - 123 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Organisational Structures
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Jan and John discuss organisational roles within projects. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
The difference between types of permanent and temporary organisation structures (including functional, matrix and project) Explain the way in which an organisational breakdown structure is used to create a responsibility assignment matrixThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Tue, 28 Apr 2020 - 17min - 122 - APM PMQ (BoK7) RegulationMon, 27 Apr 2020 - 13min
- 121 - APM PMQ (BoK7) The Project Environment
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Jan and Michelle discuss the project environment. This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Explain tools and techniques used to determine factors which influence and impact projects (including PESTLE, SWOT, and VUCA) Explain the impact of legal and regulatory environment on projects (such as the impact on working conditions, risk management, governance and sustainability)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Mon, 27 Apr 2020 - 11min - 120 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Projects, Programmes and Portfolios
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Michelle and Jan discuss projects, programmes and portfolios. They discuss the difference between project management, programme management and portfolio management, and the way they fit in an organisations strategic goals.
This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Differentiate between project management, portfolio management and programme management Outline the relationship between programmes, projects and strategic change Describe situations where the use of programme management may be appropriateThis podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM PMQ Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Mon, 27 Apr 2020 - 11min - 119 - APM PMQ (BoK7) Projects and Business as Usual
In this APM Project Management Qualification (BoK7) podcast, Paul and John discuss projects and business as usual. They look at the characteristics of a project, and explain how projects differ from the business as usual activities in an organisation.
This podcasts aims to address the following APM PMQ assessment criteria;
Differentiate between projects and business as usual (BAU)This podcast is just part of the parallel learning system for the APM PMQ Project Management Qualification. This approach includes a wide range of learning resources including a printed study guide, on-line e-learning, a tutor lead study group and a wide range of project management courses
Mon, 27 Apr 2020 - 15min - 118 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Project Reporting
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
Outline the purpose and benefits of project progress reporting
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
Studying for the APM PFQ will enable you to:
apply the fundamental principles of project management including monitoring and tracking project progress
successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects
gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional
develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager
Find out more about the wide range of professional Project Management Qualifications available at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sun, 26 Apr 2020 - 07min - 117 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Project Reviews
In this podcast the Parallel Team discuss the following assessment criteria: state the purpose of: decision gates, post project reviews, benefit reviews and project audits
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for novice project managers or people working in project orineted sectors who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management in your everyday project environment. You will also be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects
This internationally recognised qualification will also enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
If you are seeking a Project Management Qualification find out more at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sun, 26 Apr 2020 - 14min - 116 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Leadership and Teams
In this APM PFQ podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the term ‘leadership’ explain how a project team leader can influence team performance outline the challenges to a project manager when developing and leading a project team outline how a project manager can use models to assist team development (including Belbin and Tuckman)
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers leading to an internationally recognised qualification that will enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
If you are seeking a Project Management Qualification find out more at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sun, 26 Apr 2020 - 17min - 115 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Change Control and Configuration Management
In this APM PFQ podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the terms ‘configuration management’ and ‘change control’ in the context of scope management explain the relationship between change control and configuration management outline the stages in a typical change control process outline the activities in a typical configuration management process (including planning, identification, control, status accounting and verification audit)
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
If you are considering a Project Management Qualification to boost your career prospects find out more at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sun, 26 Apr 2020 - 14min - 114 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Issue Management
In this APM PFQ podcast, the Parallel Project Training team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the term ‘issue’ outline the purpose of ‘issue management’ differentiate between an issue and a risk state the stages of an issue resolution process
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
Studying for this accreditation will equip you with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your company through well-managed projects. It will also help you to develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager and enhance your career prospects as a project professional with an internationally recognised qualification.
If you are considering studying for a professional Project Management Qualification find out more at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sat, 25 Apr 2020 - 10min - 113 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Quality Management
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the term ‘quality’ outline the purpose of ‘quality management’ define the term ‘quality planning’ define the term ‘quality control’ outline the purpose of ‘quality assurance’ state the purpose of: decision gates, post project reviews, benefit reviews and project audits
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationThis internationally recognised qualification will also enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
If you are seeking a Project Management Qualification find out more at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
Sat, 25 Apr 2020 - 10min - 112 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Risk Management
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the term ‘risk’ explain the purpose of risk management outline the stages of a typical risk management process (including identification, analysis, response and closure) describe the use of risk registers
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management including identifying and managing risk Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationRead our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
This internationally recognised qualification will also enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
Sat, 25 Apr 2020 - 10min - 111 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Project Resource Management and Procurement
In this podcast the Parallel Team discuss the following assessment criteria:
outline options for resource optimisation (including resource levelling and resource smoothing)
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management including: Defining the business case Establishing scope Drawing up a plan for project delivery Identifying and managing risk Monitoring and tracking project progress Controlling change Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationRead our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
This internationally recognised qualification will also enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
Sat, 25 Apr 2020 - 05min - 110 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Project Scheduling
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- state the purpose of scheduling state the purpose of critical path analysis state the purpose of milestones define the term ‘time boxing’ outline options for resource optimisation (including resource levelling and resource smoothing) define the term ‘procurement strategy’
Read our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
The APM PFQ is an internationally recognised qualification will also enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management including: Defining the business case Establishing scope Drawing up a plan for project delivery Identifying and managing risk Monitoring and tracking project progress Controlling change Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationFri, 24 Apr 2020 - 09min - 109 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Estimating
In this podcast the Parallel Team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- State typical estimating methods (including analytical, analogous, parametric) Outline the purpose of the estimating funnel
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
Read our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
This internationally recognised qualification will enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management including: Defining the business case Establishing scope Drawing up a plan for project delivery Identifying and managing risk Monitoring and tracking project progress Controlling change Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationFri, 24 Apr 2020 - 07min - 108 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Scope and Scope Management
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the term ‘scope management’. differentiate between scope management within linear projects and scope management within iterative projects. describe how product breakdown structures (PBS) and work breakdown structures (WBS) are used to illustrate the required scope of work. outline how a project manager would use cost breakdown structures (CBS), organisational breakdown structures (OBS) and the responsibility assignment matrix (RAM). define the terms ‘configuration management’ and ‘change control’ in the context of scope management. explain the relationship between change control and configuration management outline the stages in a typical change control process outline the activities in a typical configuration management process (including planning, identification, control, status accounting and verification audit)
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
Read our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
This internationally recognised qualification will enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management including: Defining the business case Establishing scope Drawing up a plan for project delivery Identifying and managing risk Monitoring and tracking project progress Controlling change Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationFri, 24 Apr 2020 - 17min - 107 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Communications
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
1. Define the term ‘communication’
2. outline the advantages of different communication methods (including face to face, physical and virtual).
3. outline the disadvantages of different communication methods (including face to face, physical and virtual).
4. outline the contents of a communication plan.
5. explain the benefits, to a project manager, of a communication plan.
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
Read our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
This internationally recognised qualification will enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationFri, 24 Apr 2020 - 10min - 106 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Stakeholder Management
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
Outline the stakeholders of a project management plan
The APM Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ), formerly known as the APM Introductory Certificate, is a qualification developed by the Association for Project Management, the chartered body for the project profession. It is a practical course for new project managers or members of project teams who want a better understanding of the processes, tools and language of project management.
Read our Guide to Project Management Qualifications and find out more about our project management training courses at www.parallelprojecttraining.com
This internationally recognised qualification will enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
At the end of the APM PFQ course, you will:
Be able to apply the fundamental principles of project management including: Defining the business case Establishing scope Drawing up a plan for project delivery Identifying and managing risk Monitoring and tracking project progress Controlling change Be equipped with the practical skills and knowledge to successfully deliver benefits to your organisation through well-managed projects Gain a recognised qualification to enhance your career prospects as a project professional Develop the behaviours and leadership skills needed to become a successful project manager Confidently sit the APM Foundation Project Fundamentals Qualification (PFQ) examinationThu, 23 Apr 2020 - 07min - 105 - APM PFQ (Bok7) Project Management Plan and Deployment Baselines
In this podcast the Parallel team discuss the following assessment criteria:
- define the term ‘deployment baseline’ state how deployment baselines differ between linear and iterative life cycles
Read this blog post Deployment baselines for linear and agile projects for what is a deployment baseline and how to use it in linear and agile projects.
Read our Guide to Project Management Qualifications to find out more about all of our project management training courses that will enhance your career prospects as a project professional.
Thu, 23 Apr 2020 - 07min
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