Appendix

Submitted by matt.willis@up… on Fri, 09/30/2022 - 22:11

Appendix A: All Materials

To access a document version of the appendices click: Project Management Fundamentals Appendices

 

Appendix B: RACI Matrix

Project governance accountabilities

Many projects run into trouble because they do not have clear accountabilities. To resolve this, you can define your governance accountabilities in the form of a RACI matrix.

A RACI (Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, Informed) matrix describes how the project roles are involved in the delivery of tasks, activities and deliverables.

  • Responsible
    • The role(s) who will do the work to achieve the task.
  • Accountable
    • The role with ultimate responsibility for the completion of the task or deliverable. There can only be one accountable person per task or deliverable.
  • Support
    • Depending on the project, you could also include Support and create a RASCI matrix.
  • Consulted
    • The people whose opinions are sought, usually experts.
  • Informed
    • The people who need to be kept up-to-date on the progress or completion of the task or deliverable.

It might look like this:

Tasks Project Sponsor Project Manager Project Officer Business Analyst IT Manager Finance Officer
Approval of funding AR R     C C
Finalisation of Business Requirements document   A R R C  
Development of Tender Plan I AR R I C R

Some basic guidelines for the matrix are:

  • The left-hand column can be defined in many different ways – project tasks, deliverables, work packages, stages, functions and so on.
  • Accountability is where the buck stops. If something goes awry, this person is held to account.
  • But, they may delegate to someone else – in which case that other person is Responsible.
  • There should ideally only be one Accountable (A) in any row, to avoid buck-passing.
  • One person may be both Accountable and Responsible (AR).
  • Multiple people may be Responsible i.e. authority may be delegated to several people.
  • ‘Consult’ means two-way communication – we are seeking feedback, input, opinion, advice.
  • ‘Inform’ means one-way communication – we are pushing information out and not seeking anything back.
  • As such, it makes no sense to have both C and I in any one box.
  • Not every box needs to be filled.

 

Appendix C: Return on Investment (ROI)

There are a number of ways to measure the ROI of your project. Some organisations require you to calculate the Net Present Value (NPV) or Internal Rate of Return (IRR) as a means of deciding whether to proceed with the work. We’re going to focus on something far simpler than that, but you should check this with your organisation.

  • ROI = (Change in Operational Costs - Costs of Project) / Cost of Project
  • ROI = (Change in Revenue - Costs of Project) / Cost of Project

Costs of Project: Capture the total cost of the project, both the external and internal expenses. This would include things like: salaries, on-costs, service costs (IT, office space etc.), consultants, procurement, service contracts, insurances etc.

Operational Costs: Capture all changes in operational costs based on your project. This would include things like: contracts and licensing you no longer have to pay, changes in amount of materials required, changes in time taken (as a salary figure), changes in cost of materials, any ongoing expenditure of the project (licences, insurances etc.), etc. Note: not all these will be a reduction and some of them are difficult to calculate.

Revenue: Capture all changes to the organisation’s revenue relating to the project. This is self-evident and of course you could have Operational Cost savings alongside Revenue.

Most organisations consider ROI over a number of years, since it is often unrealistic to consider that a project will break even with its expenditure in the first year of implementation – and a project that introduces a significant organisational change may take a number of years to break even. This is often done over five years, depending on the size of the project.

For example, our project costs are $55,000 and we’ve calculated that the annual saving to the organisation is $25,000, but in the first year we’ll only realise half of that saving:

  Project Costs Operational Savings ROI
Year 1 $55,000 $12,500 -$42,500
Year 2   $37,500 -$17,500
Year 3   $62,500 $7,500
Year 4   $87,500 $32,500
Year 5   $112,500 $57,500

You can see we will break even during Year 3 and after five years this project would realise a $57,500 return on investment – or using the calculation above:

($112,500 - $55,000) / $55,000 = 104.5% at the five year mark.

Sub Topics
  • Cole K, 2016, Management Theory and Practice Edition 6, Cengage Australia
  • Dobie C, 2007, A Handbook of Project Management: A Complete Guide for Beginners to Professionals, Allen & Unwin, Australia
  • Gibbons P, 2015, The Science of Successful Organizational Change: How Leaders Set Strategy, Change Behavior, and Create an Agile Culture, Pearson Education
  • Hartley S, 2009, Project Management Principles, Processes and Practice 2nd Ed., Pearson Prentice Hall, Australia
  • Harvard Business Review, 2012, Guide to Project Management, Harvard Business Review Press
  • Project Management Institute, 2017, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Sixth Edition

Online Resources

  • Project Planning with Sticky Notes: https://youtu.be/80c-LRRJ0W8
  • Tasmanian Government, Project Management, www.egovernment.tas.gov.au/project_management

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