This document provides guidance on essential project management concepts, competencies, standards, and templates for managing information and communication technology projects in e-government. It defines key terms, outlines the skills required of project managers, and describes standards for project methodology, knowledge areas, and maturity levels. Templates and examples are provided for project planning, scoping, costing, staffing, and using project management software.
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ICT4GOV Project Management Essentials Training Notes
1. ESSENTIALS OF ICT PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Practitioner’s Notes on Standards and Practices
(THE E-GOVERNMENT VERSION)
2. TABLE OF CONTENT
ESSENTIALS OF ICT PROJECT MANAGEMENT ...................................................................................... 1
TABLE OF CONTENT ................................................................................................................. 2
Training Goal: ........................................................................................................................ 4
Training Objectives: ................................................................................................................. 4
A. Project Management Basic Definitions: ....................................................................................... 4
Description of e-Government ................................................................................................... 4
e-Government Maturity Framework ....................................................... Error! Bookmark not defined.
Project ............................................................................................................................. 4
Project Valuation – ............................................................................................................... 5
Project Management ............................................................................................................. 5
Project Management Office..................................................................................................... 5
Project Manager .................................................................................................................. 6
B. PROJECT MANAGEMENT COMPETENCIES: (Project Manager View) ........................................................ 7
ICT Project Management Domains ............................................................................................. 7
ICT Project Manager Categories of Skills...................................................................................... 7
C. PROJECT MANAGEMENT MATURITY ASSESSMENT (Organizational View) ................................................. 8
ICT Project Management Failure Points ....................................................................................... 8
Presence Ranking................................................................................................................. 8
Project Management Capability Maturity Rubric............................................................................. 9
D. PROJECT MANAGEMENT METHODOLOGY STANDARDS ..................................................................... 10
Project Management Life-Cycle Phases ..................................................................................... 10
Project Management Knowledge Areas...................................................................................... 10
Business Management Stages of the Project................................................................................ 11
Solution Development Management ......................................................................................... 14
E. ICT PROJECT MANAGEMENT TEMPLATES .................................................................................... 16
Project Initial Definition and Planning ...................................................................................... 16
ICT Project Visioning and Scoping ........................................................................................... 18
ICT Project Business Case ..................................................................................................... 19
ICT Solution Development Project Scoping ................................................................................. 21
ICT Project Cost and Budget: Item Spreadsheet ........................................................................... 23
ICT Project Investment Requirement and Cost ............................................................................ 25
Project Organization: Roles Matrix .......................................................................................... 26
F. ICT PROJECT MANAGEMENT OPEN STANDARD SOFTWARE ................................................................ 29
Project Documentation Software ............................................................................................ 29
Project Gantt chart Software................................................................................................. 29
Project Modeling Software .................................................................................................... 29
Project File Security Software ............................................................................................... 29
3.
4. Training Goal:
Improve the leadership, management, and technical mindsets and practices behind the e-
Government ICT project’s performance, methodology, justification, planning, implementation,
control, evaluation and support
Training Objectives:
1. Describe the knowledge, skills and attitudes requirements to manage the projects towards
success
2. Explore the various references standards that defines the mindset, methodology and
certification in managing projects
3. Build common understanding on the detailed processes, deliverable, templates and tools to
manage ICT project for e-government and community development
4. Elaborate the use of project management tools to capture, store and analyze project data and
generate project information and knowledge , and how to use project templates to document
project management deliverable on each phase or stage of the ICT project
5. Discover, evaluate, and use open standard computer software and web based services to
support the documentation, collaboration, communication, visualization, publication, and
monitoring requirements of project management.
A. Project Management Basic Definitions:
Description of e-Government
World Bank Definition: “It refers to the use by government agencies of information
technologies (such as Wide Area Networks, the Internet, and mobile computing) that have the
ability to transform relations with citizens, businesses, and other arms of government.”
“These technologies can serve a variety of different ends: (1) better delivery of government
services to citizens, (2) improved interactions with business and industry, (3) citizen
empowerment through access to information, or (4) more efficient government management.”
“The resulting benefits can be less corruption, increased transparency, greater convenience,
revenue growth, and/or cost reductions.”
Project
• OGC PRINCE 2 -“A management environment that is created for the purpose of
delivering one or more business products according to a specified Business Case.”
“A temporary organization that is needed to produce a unique and predefined outcome
or result at a pre-specified time using predetermined resource.”
• PMI PMBOK - “A project is a temporary endeavour undertaken to create a unique
product, service or result. It is performed by people, constrained by limited resources,
planned, executed and controlled.”
“Projects are different from operations because the latter are ongoing and repetitive
activities, while projects are temporary and unique.”
5. Project Valuation –
Indicative areas to refer the value of a project
• Quality of Experience
• Cost Effectivity
• Sustainability
• Governance
Project Management
• Project management is the aapplication of principles, practices, and techniques to lead
project teams and control project schedule, cost, and risks to deliver the results of a
successful project to the delighted stakeholders.
• Control:
Scope, Time, Cost, Resources, Quality, Change, and Security
• Agenda:
Performance, Culture, People, Process, and Technology
• Project management is a process with the following components: (PMBOK)
1. Inputs (documents, plans, designs, etc.)
2. Tools and Techniques (thinking tool applied to inputs)
3. Outputs (documents, products, etc.)
Project Management Office
• PMBoK Definition:
• Shared and coordinated resources across all projects administered by the PMO
• Identification and development of project management methodology, best practices,
and standards
• Clearinghouse and management for project policies, procedures, templates, and other
shared documentation
• Centralized configuration management for all projects administered by the PMO
• Centralized repository and management for both shared and unique risks for all
projects
• Central office for operation and management of project tools, such as enterprise-wide
project management software
• Central coordination of communication management across projects
• A mentoring platform for project managers
• Central monitoring of all PMO project timelines and budgets, usually at the enterprise
level
• Coordination of overall project quality standards between the project manager and any
internal or external quality personnel or standards organization.
6. Project Manager
• Responsibility Domains of Project Manager (From TenStep)
A. PROCESS RESPONSIBILITIES B. PEOPLE RESPONSIBILITIES
1. Define the project and build the work plan 1. Lead the identification and elaboration of the
2. Supervise the implementation of the overall work project processes, and make sure that people
plan, that the work is assigned and completed on follow the tasks directives.
time, according to quality specifications and within 2. Lead the team to willingly follow your direction.
budget. Leadership is about communicating a vision and
3. Identify, track, and resolve the project issues. getting the team to accept it and strive to get
4. Communicate proactively the project information there with you.
to all stakeholders. 3. Set the reasonable, challenging and clear
5. Identify, monitor, and mitigate the project risk. expectation of people, and holding them
6. Ensure acceptable quality of the solution and accountable for meeting the expectations and
project deliverables at every phase of the project. allow them to get enabling opportunities.
7. Manage proactively the project scope by insuring 4. Facilitate team-building, so that people work
that only what was agreed to is delivered, and the together well, and feel motivated to work hard for
changes are approved through scope management. the sake of the project and other team members.
8. Define the metrics and collect the data that set 5. Communicate proactively and clearly, both
the proper view on how the project is progressing, verbally and written.
and whether the production of the deliverables is 6. Realize good and active listening skills
acceptable based on agreed specification, time
and cost.
7. B. PROJECT MANAGEMENT COMPETENCIES: (Project Manager View)
ICT Project Management Domains
1. Business Management
Business Case, Policy and Regulations, Acquisition and Procurement, Scope and Time, Cost
and Budget, Plan and Implementation, Documentation and Communication, Human
Resources, Contracts and Vendors, and Risk Mitigation
2. Solution Development Management
Requirement, Approach, Standards, Architecture, Configuration, Technology, Skills,
Construction, Control, Testing, Acceptance, Training, Integration, Security, Roll-Out, and
Support
ICT Project Manager Categories of Skills
1. Leadership Skills
Attributes
VISIONING Leads strategic management; defines,
communicates, and leads goals and objectives
CONTROL Decides, implements and monitors
NEGOTIATION listens, builds consensus, and manages conflict
2. Management Skills
Attributes
PLANNING Gathers data, analyze information, look forward
decision, design, and write
CONTROL Facilitates process initiation, execution,
control and improvement, and lead decision
making
DOCUMENTATION Captures and stores information for knowledge
requirements
3. Technical Skills
Attributes
ANALYSIS Captures information and apply appropriate
thinking tool to build understanding, decision,
and planned action.
DESIGN Capturer requirements and performance
specifications, and apply appropriate modeling
tool
BUILDING Defines and implements the development
platform, and to control delivery and
integration of work packages to comply with the
project scope and outcome requirements
8. C. PROJECT MANAGEMENT MATURITY ASSESSMENT (Organizational View)
ICT Project Management Failure Points
FAILURE CAUSES
Presence
Ranking
RUSSEL D. ARCHIBALD (MPCM Survey)
Frequent scope changes: 73%
Unattainable deadlines: 51%
Frequent scope changes: 73%
Incorrect or incomplete Feasibility Study (or Business Case or Business Plan): 27%
Precarious project management methods, tools and techniques: 22%
Lack of resources (human, financial and material): 22%
Insufficient or inadequate commitment from senior management: 22%
Inadequate risk management: 22%
Project managers with insufficient management skills: 20%
Insufficient or inadequate IT team’s technical skills: 13%
Insufficient or inadequate commitment from the involved user areas: 7%
9. Project Management Capability Maturity Rubric
(Based on OGC P3M3)
Maturity Maturity Condition Descriptor
Level
5 Optimized Process The organization runs continuous process
improvement with proactive problem and
technology management for projects in order to
improve its ability to depict performance over
time and optimize processes
4 Managed Process The organization obtains and retains specific
measurements on its project management
performance and run a quality management
organization to better predict future
performance
3 Defined Process The organization has its own centrally controlled
project processes, and individual projects can
flex within these processes to suit the particular
project.
2 Repeatable Process The organization ensures that each project is run
with its own processes and procedures to a
minimum specified standard. There may be
limited consistency or co-ordination between
projects.
1 Initial Process The organization recognizes projects and run
them differently from its ongoing business.
Projects may be run informally with no standard
process or tracking system.
10. D. PROJECT MANAGEMENT METHODOLOGY STANDARDS
The methodology standards help the project manager to define and manage the end-to-end
stages, activities, requirements, and deliverables of both the business and product development
components of ICT project. The project team members and stakeholders are given the common
references on how to appraise and deliver the expectations defined for the project. The applicable
methodology standards provide the competencies and organization to project handling, and make
available the performance benchmark to validate the kind of input, tools, and deliverables entered
into the project management.
Project Management Life-Cycle Phases
PMBOK PRINCE2 MSF
Project Management Body of Project in Controlled Microsoft Solutions
Knowledge Environment Framework
1. Initiating 1. Starting Up a Project 1. Envisioning Phase
2. Planning 2. Planning 2. Planning Phase
3. Executing 3. Controlling a Stage 3. Developing Phase
4. Controlling and Monitoring 4. Managing Product Delivery 4. Stabilizing Phase
5. Closing 5. Managing Stage Boundary 5. Deploying Phase
7. Closing a Project
Project Management Knowledge Areas
PMBOK PRINCE2 SWEBOK
Project Management Body of Project in Controlled Software Engineering Body
Knowledge Environment of Knowledge
Integration Management Business Case Requirements
Scope Management Organization Design
Time Management Plans Construction
Cost Management Controls Testing
Quality Management Management of Risks Maintenance
Human Resource Management Quality in a Project
Environment
Communication Management Configuration Management
Risk Management Change Control
Procurement Management
11. Business Management Stages of the Project
INITIATION PLANNING EXECUTION CONTROL CLOSING
L
Stages Tasks Results
INITIATION Data gathering for the baseline information to
define the need for the project, value
justification of the project, solution and Research data and information
requirements, the available options
Approved business case
Agreement on the project methodology,
estimation tools, and financial valuation
formula. Request for Proposal and Project
Terms of Reference
Elaboration of the needs, key performance
indicators, critical success factors, financial Approved Project Proposal
valuation metrics
Project Contracts
Formulation and approval of the business case
Project Implementation Terms of
Composition, approval and release of the request References
for proposal with project terms of reference
Project Manager Appointment
Acceptance, review and approval of project
proposal
Composition, approval and release of the project
contracts, and project implementation terms of
reference based on the approved project
proposal
Setting up of the project organization and the
appointment of the project manager
12. PLANNING Definition of the tasks and requirements to be Work Breakdown Schedule
planned for execution and utilization
Organization Breakdown Schedule
Elaboration and agreement on of the applicable
input, procedures, methodology and tools to be Estimation Techniques
use in planning the project development.
Project Management Plan
Composition of the Project Management Plan to
integrated the following plans
Issues and Problem Management
Work Plan –work breakdown schedule, organization Plan
breakdown schedules
Change Management Organization
Resource Plan – organization, skills needs,
recruitment, people training, deployment schedules
Procurement Plan – bills of materials, acquisition
strategy, contract handling
Communication Plan – reporting instruments, kinds of
communications, audience definition and information
needs
Risk Management Plan – What if identification process
and the mitigation and action requirements
Budget Plan – Budget Items, Cost and Scheduling
Quality Plan – Quality assurance procedures and tools
specifications
Training Plan – capability requirement matrix and
training design, and schedules
Technology Plan – technology items, approaches,
standards, and delivery, installation, and
configuration, and testing schedules
Change Management Plan –request for changes as a
result of problem, incident, etc…
EXECUTION Definition of solutions requirement Process Model
Design the solution model Information Model
Create the solution model prototype Technology Model
Verify and Validate solution model prototype Work Packages
Build the beta version of the solution Delivery Report
Internal Team verification and validation of beta Accomplishment Reports
version of the solution
Minutes of the Meeting
Train users to test the beta version release
User’s Approval, Sign-in and Sign-
Test and Approve the beta version Off document
Training Report
13. Integration and normalization of the final Configuration Documentation
version
User’s Manual
Test and approve the final version
Release the final version
Handle incident, problem and change request
CONTROL Institute and enforce compliance report Compliance Checklist
Issues reporting and change management Issues Documentation
handling
Attendance Reporting
Testing and Quality Assurance
Documents
CLOSURE Lessons Learned Lesson Learned Document
Contracts closure Payment
Handing over Project Acceptance Documentation
Project document archived Turn-over Documentations
14. VISIONING REQUIREMENT DESIGN BUILDING TESTING
PLANNING DEFINITION INTEGRATION
RELEASE SUPPORT
MAINTENANCE
Solution Development Management
Stages Tasks Results
VISIONING & PLANNING Setting the goals, strategy, Project Work Plan
approach, configuration, and
plan of developing the solution
based on the approved business
case and project proposal of the
project.
REQUIREMENT ANALYSIS Elicitation and documentation Business, Information,
of information to compose the Technology Configuration
input, process, output, and Documentation
technology architecture
specifications of the proposed Functional and non-functional
solution requirement checklists
Analysis and definition of the
functional and non-functional
requirements of the proposed
solution.
SOLUTION DESIGN Visual drawing of the Process, application, data, and
application, data, and technology models
technology model, and
prototype making of the Application conceptual model
solution
Database model
Generate mock-ups and
prototypes of processes, screen, Technology platform model
reports
Validation, verification and
approval of the visual drawing
and prototype.
SOLUTION BUILDING Coding of the approved Work Packages
application, data and
technology prototype. Conformance Testing Report –
Pass – Fail –
Internal testing on the
conformance of the coded Revision Report
solution to approved design of
the solution requirements
15. SOLUTION TESTING Validation and verification of List of approved work packages
the functional and non-
functional requirements of the Change Requests
alpha version of the application
model and database tables
Issues reporting and change
request
SOLUTION INTEGRATION Putting together the Integrated work package beta
functionally accepted modules, version
databases, network services and
security services to run the Testing report and change
integrated version of the requests
solution
Integration testing to validate
and verify the inter-operational
performance
SOLUTION ACCEPTANCE Conduct of user’s training on Training Design
using the functional beta
version of the solution Testing Scripts
Perform user’s testing and Testing Report
acceptance of the completed
solution version Change Request
Solution business readiness List of accepted functional and
assessment of the final solution non-functional features
version for release
SOLUTION RELEASE Normalization of the Final Release Version of the
configuration requirements for work packages
the solution final version
release User manual
Deploying by installing and List of location and users for
configuring the release version deployment, and status of
of the solution to business installation and configuration
production area.
Users training schedules
Training of the production
users.
SOLUTION SUPPORT Setting up of the organization Service Desk
and procedures for Incident,
problem and change handling
Accepting incident and problems
for documentation, reporting,
analysis and resolution
16. E. ICT PROJECT MANAGEMENT TEMPLATES
Project Initial Definition and Planning
Logical Framework
OBJECTIVES MEASURABLE MEANS OF IMPORTANT
INDICATORS VERIFICATION ASSUMPTIONS
GOAL: Wider problem Quantitative ways of Cost-effective methods External factors
the project will help to measuring or and sources to quantify necessary to sustain in
resolve qualitative ways of or assess indicators the long run
judging timed
achievement of goal
PURPOSE: The Quantitative ways of Cost-effective methods External conditions
immediate impact on measuring or and sources to quantify necessary if achieved
the project area or qualitative ways of or assess indicators project purpose is to
target group i.e. the judging timed contribute to reaching
change or benefit to be achievement of purpose project goal
achieved by the project
OUTPUTS: These are Quantitative ways of Cost-effective methods Factors out of project
the specifically measuring or and sources to quantify control which, if
deliverable results qualitative ways of or assess indicators present could restrict
expected from the judging timed progress from outputs
project to attain the production of outputs to achieving project
purpose purpose.
ACTIVITIES: These are Quantitative ways of Cost-effective methods Factors out of project
the tasks to be done to measuring or and sources to quantify control which, if
produce the outputs. qualitative ways of or assess indicators present, could restrict
judging timed progress from activities
performance of the to achieving outputs
activities
INPUT: These are the Quantitative ways of Cost-effective methods Factors out of project
resources and budget to measuring or and sources to quantify control which, if
be made available to qualitative ways of or assess indicators present, could restrict
realize the activities judging timed the provision of input
and to produce the performance of the Financial report as to initiate the activities
outputs. activities required by the project to achieving outputs
fund sources
17. Stakeholder Analysis
The project stakeholders are individuals and organizations whose interests may be affected as
a result of executing the project. They are either primary or secondary stakeholders who needs,
knowledge, influences, resources, and regulatory functions are considered contributory to achieve the
project goal, and whose active engagement are considered critical success factors to the project
success.
The project manager has to initiate the activity of identifying the stakeholders, to perform the
critical evaluation of their situational stake, and manage their expectation and participation.
Stakeholders are persons assigned to the project, the members or departments within the organization,
the outside institutions with regulatory or supplier relationship with the organization, and individual or
groups considered as influencers.
The results of stakeholder analysis provide the stand-point on how to communicate with the
various interest groups of the project, and how to address differences and build consensus.
1. Stakeholder Analysis: Talking Points
18. ICT Project Visioning and Scoping
MSF v3.0 Project Visioning and Scoping
BUSINESS SOLUTION SOLUTION DESIGN
SCOPE
OPPORTUNITY CONCEPT STRATEGY
Opportunity Goals Feature/Functions Architectural
Statement List Design Strategy
Vision Statement Objectives Out of Scope Technical Design
Strategy
Benefit Analysis Assumptions Version Release
Strategy
Constraints Acceptance Criteria
User Profile Operational
Criteria
Usage Scenario
Business
Requirements
Users Requirements
Operation
Requirement
Systems
Requirements
19. ICT Project Business Case
Decision Points for E-Gov Project Justification
DECISION POINTS
INPUT
Project Needs, Goals and Project Log Frame
Objectives,
Key Performance Indicators, Project Log Frame
Critical Success Factors, and
Performance Metrics
Target Beneficiary and Stakeholder Analysis
Stakeholders
Mandate or Developmental Agency R.A., Medium Term Developmental Goals, Incumbent
Agenda Alignment President Agenda, Approved Strategic Plan
Resulting Value to the Agency, Applied Information Economics, Balanced Score Card, Economic
Citizen, and Government Value Added, Economic Value Sourced, Portfolio Management,
Real Option Valuation, Break Even Analysis,
Technology Solution Options Enterprise Architecture, Information Systems Strategic Plan,
and the Value of Choosing the Request for Information
Option
Risks Risk Analysis, Costs of Risk, Costs of Mitigation, Risk Probability
and Impact,
Timeframe Project Timelines, Work Breakdown Schedule
Project Requirements and Cost One-Time Development Expenses, One-Time Implementation
Expenses, Capital Costs, Maintenance/Continuing Cost
Financial Valuation Cost Benefit Analysis, Net Present Value, Payback, Total Cost of
Ownership, Internal Rate of Return, Opportunity Cost, Payback
Maintenance and Sustainability Service Support Plan and Service Management, Business
Continuity Plan, Business Plan
20.
21. LOGICAL PROJECT DEFINITION MATRIX
JUSTIFICATION REQUIREMENT ACQUISITION
STAKEHOLDERS NEEDS OBJECTIVES ICT SERVICES PRIMARY PRIMARY NON- SECONDARY SECONDARY DEVELOPMENT INPUT SUPPLIER
Whose interest Problem, Measurable End- SOLUTION FUNCTIONAL FUNCTIONAL FUNCTIONAL NON- APPROACH or GOOD AND
will be affected Improvement, Result to Solve Product REQUIREMENT REQUIREMENT REQUIREMENT FUNCTIONAL STRATEGY SERVICES
Internal Regulation Problem, Deliverables to Core/Cutting Core/Cutting Serves REQUIREMENT Procedures
External Improvement be Purchased or Across Across particular Serves Methods
Targets, Constructed Tasks, Quality interest or particular Standards
Compliance Information and Characteristics in handle special interest or Tools
Registration for Results the Tasks, exceptions handle special Infrastructure
the Stakeholders Information and exceptions Platforms
Results Skills
Organization
22. ICT Solution Development Project Scoping
PROJECT TASKS REQUIREMENTS
PROJECT PHASES ACTIVITY DURATION SERVICES GOODS
01. Business Case
Preparation
02. Business Case Review
and Approval
03. Budget Requirement
Preparation, Allocation
Request Processing,
Approval and Actual
Allocation
04. Request for Proposal
Preparation and Project
Terms of Reference
Definition
05. Request for Proposal
Review and Approval of
the Project Terms of
Reference
06. Procurement
Preparation, Bidding,
Evaluation, Awards,
Contract Approval
07. Activation of Project
Implementation
Organization
08. Detailed Project
Implementation Planning,
Scope Breakdown
Refinement, Budget
Alignment, Delivery
Schedules, responsibility
matrix
09. Developmental
Platform Delivery,
Installation and
Configuration
10. Solution Requirement
Elicitation and Design
Definition
11.Solution Prototype
Building, Validation and
Verification
12. Solution Beta Version
Coding, Internal Testing
and Integration
13. Production Platform
Delivery, Installation and
Configuration
14. User’s Training for
Solution’s Beta Version
Testing
15. Solution First
Production Release
Version normalization
16. User’s Approval of
Production Version; and
release of solution to
the users environment
17. Service Support and
Maintenance
18. Project Closing and
Turn-over
23. ICT Project Cost and Budget: Item Spreadsheet
SERVICES COST ITEMS AND BUDGET ESTIMATE
PROJECT DELIVERABLES SERVICES DETAILS
Expert & Skills Salary Total Total Travel, Insurance
Requirement Rate Hours or Salary Accommodation
HR/DAY Mandays Expenses
01. Business Case
02. Financial Work Plan,
Budget Requirements and
Approved Allocation
02. Request for Proposal &
Project Terms of References
03. Reviewed and Approved
Bids
04. Project Office and Skilled
Personnel
05. Project Meetings and
Workshops and Project
Training
06. Project Work Plan
07. Development Platform
Hardware, Software and
Bandwidth
08. Approved Requirement
Documentation and Solution
Design, Architecture and
Functional Models
09. Validated and Verified
Solution Prototype Program –
application interfaces
prototypes, database tables,
and network interfaces
10. Beta Version Program
Module –working business
application, data, security,
integration interfaces, and
network
11. User’s Documentation
and User’s Training
12. User’s Testing and
Change Documentation
13. Normalized Production
Version of the Solution
14. Solution Roll Out
Support.
15. Incident Management
and Maintenance
24. COMPUTER GOODS REQUIREMENT AND BUDGET ESTIMATE
Project Management Office
COMPUTER HARDWARE COMPUTER SOFTWARE BANDWIDTH
Item Name No. & Total Software License Total Cost Capacity Duration
Cost of Cost Type Number Cost
Units
Workstation Operating
System
Network Hub Productivity
Tools
Server Scheduling
Program
Network Security
Cables/Peripheral Software
Solution Development Platform
COMPUTER HARDWARE COMPUTER SOFTWARE BANDWIDTH
Item Name No. & Total Software License Total Cost Capacity Duration
Cost of Cost Type Number Cost
Units
Workstation Modeler
Network Hub Editor
Server Application
Server
Network Database
Cables/Peripherals Server
Network
Server
Business Production Roll-Out
COMPUTER HARDWARE COMPUTER SOFTWARE BANDWIDTH
Item Name No. & Total Cost Software License Total Cost Capacity Duration
Cost of Type Number Cost
Units
Service Support Management
COMPUTER HARDWARE COMPUTER SOFTWARE BANDWIDTH
Item Name No. & Total Cost Software License Total Cost Capacity Duration
Cost of Type Number Cost
Units
Service
Desk
Service
Monitoring
25. ICT Project Investment Requirement and Cost
Investment Unit Duration Estimated Estimated Total Total Cost % Source of Fund
Component Unit Cost Cost
SERVICES 000%
Project
Team
External Consultants
Training Venues
Transportation
Accommodations
Rentals
Bandwidth
Electricity, Water
GOODS 000%
User’s Access
Computer
Computer Server
Network Server
Internet Server
Application Server
Database Server
Security Server
Backup Server
Network Devices
Cabling and
Peripheral
Software Installer
and Licenses
Office Supplies
Other Equiptments
MAINTENANCE 000%
Computer Devices
Network Devices
Other Equiptments
Software
Building
TOTAL INVESTMENT COST
26. Project Organization: Roles Matrix
PROJECT TASKS: ROLES MATRIX
Date of First Draft: Version No. Current Version Date:
PROJECT NAME
PROJECT DURATION
PROJECT OUTCOME
PROJECT OWNER
PROJECT BENEFICIARY
SOURCING STRATEGY
PROJECT DELIVERABLES PROJECT ROLES
TASKS
Responsible Accountable Expert Work
27. PROJECT ACTIONS: RESPONSIBILITY MATRIX
Date of First Draft: Version No. Current Version Date:
PROJECT
NAME
PROJECT
DURATION
PROJECT
OUTCOME
PROJECT
OWNER
PROJECT
BENEFICIARY
SOURCING
STRATEGY
PROJECT RESPONSIBILITY MATRIX
PROJECT
ACTION ACTION APPROVING DECISION ANALYSIS, INTERNAL EXTERNAL
ITEMS IMPLEMENTOR AUTHORITY PROVIDER EVALUATION & SUBJECT SUBJECT
RECOMMENDATION MATTER MATTER
MAKER EXPERT EXPERT
28. REQUIREMENT TRACEABILITY MATRIX
Unique Requirement Requirement Software Design Program Requirement Successful Modification Remarks
No. Statement Source Requirement Specification Module Test Test of
Specification Document Name and Specification Verification Requirements
or Reference Reference Document
Functional Number Number Reference
Requirement Number
Document
Reference
Number