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pmos.pptx

  1. 1. 1. PMO Mandate 2. Goals & Benefits 3. Scope Definition 4. Key PMO Stakeholders 5. Projected Timeline for Implementation 6. Project Roles and Responsibilities 7. High-Level Budget 8. High-Level Risk Assessment A project management office (PMO) is usually created to solve a specific problem: generally, the IT organization’s inability to deliver IT projects on time, on budget and in scope. Project managers may “live” in the PMO, or in different IT units, such as in application development or in the business. Most PMOs start out addressing issues around project management and delivery before elaborating their remit to program management or portfolio management. The scope of work changes from tactical to strategic, while the scope of initiatives broadens from IT-intensive projects to enterprisewide business and IT initiatives. Once the PMO has earned credibility with the business, it usually receives requests to help manage business projects.
  2. 2. PPM PPM PPM PPM PPM PPM PPM PPM PPM PPM RM PM PM PM PM PM PM Reporting for enterprise portfolio and the financial/human resources needed to deliver them Finance for project/portfolio capital and expense Customer Management – the customers, sponsors of the project Strategy Management – projects and programs relate to corporate Program Management – related projects in the portfolio Time Accounting Business Relationship Management (BRM) Project Information System (PMIS) – organization of project information Administrative Support – general assistance with Portfolio Record Keeping – Enterprise Information Forecasting Quality Assurance Procurement and Vendor Management Project Status Reporting PM Services Training PM SOP x ePMO IT PMO PMO CMO CoE x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x OCM OCM OCM Adoption Benefits Attainment Change Management OCM Forecast Benefits OCM GOV GOV Track Benefits Governance Intake GOV Reporting x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x What is your definition of a PMO? Use this model to clearly show what is in and out of scope.
  3. 3. Use Info-Tech’s PMO function matrix to help provide role definitions for your PMO Portfolio Management Resource Management Project Management Organization al Change Management PMO Governance Recordkeeping and bookkeeping Strategy management Assessment of available supply of people and their their time Project status reporting PM SOP (e.g. feed the portfolio, project planning, task managing) Benefits management Technology and infrastructure Reporting Financial management Procurement and vendor management HR Security Matching supply to demand demand based on time, cost, cost, scope, and skill set set requirements PMIS Intake CRM/RM/BRM Program management Legal Financial Tracking of utilization based based on the allocations Quality Intake Time accounting PM services (e.g. staffing project project managers or or coordinators) Quality assurance Organizational change management Project progress, visibility, visibility, and process Forecasting of utilization via utilization via supply-demand demand reconciliation Administrative support PM training Closure and lessons learned Info-Tech’s potential PMO capabilities are in the header of the table below. These are the services a PMO may (or may not) provide depending on the needs of the organization. Various options for specific PMO job functions are listed below each capability. PMO leaders need to decide which of these functions are required for their organization. The rest of this blueprint will help you choose the right capabilities and accompanying job functions for your PMO.
  4. 4. Sample SWOT analysis 1.1.2 continued Strengths • Knowledge, skills, and talent of project staff. • We have fairly effective project management processes. • Motivation to get things done when priorities, goals, and action plans are clear. Weaknesses • IT-business communication and alignment. • No standards are currently in place across departments. Staff are unsure which templates to use and how/when/why to use them. • There are no formal intake structures in place. Projects are approved and it’s up to us to “figure it out.” • We have no prioritization practices to keep up with constantly changing priorities and shifts in the marketplace. Opportunities • Establish portfolio discipline to improve IT-business communication through more effective and efficient project coordination. • Stronger initiation processes should translate to smoother project execution. • Establish more disciplined and efficient weekly/monthly project reporting practices that should facilitate more effective communication with senior leaders. Threats • Risk of introducing burdensome processes and documentation that takes more time away from getting things done. • We tried to formalize a PMO in the past and it failed after eight months. • We have no insight into project resourcing.
  5. 5. Portfolio Management Resource Management Project Management Organization al Change Management PMO Governance Recordkeeping and bookkeeping Strategy management Assessment of available supply of people and their their time Project status reporting PM SOP (e.g. feed the portfolio, project planning, task managing) Benefits management Technology and infrastructure Reporting Financial management Procurement and vendor management HR Security Matching supply to demand demand based on time, cost, cost, scope, and skill set set requirements PMIS Intake CRM/RM/BRM Program management Legal Financial Tracking of utilization based based on the allocations Quality Intake Time accounting PM services (e.g. staffing project project managers or or coordinators) Quality assurance Organizational change management Project progress, visibility, visibility, and process Forecasting of utilization via utilization via supply-demand demand reconciliation Administrative support PM training Closure and lessons learned
  6. 6. Job description content
  7. 7. Current State Business Strategies PMO Initiatives Future-State Business Goals Portfolio Management Resource Management Project Management Organizational Change Management Governance Long Term Medium Term Short Term Documentation Project progress, visibility, and process Project Intake Process Prioritization Project Levelling Approval Triage Process Resource Allocation Book of Record Reporting Standardize Project Management Methodologies PM Training Benefits
  8. 8. Screenshot of PMO MS Project Plan Sample Top-level hierarchy Second-level hierarchy
  9. 9. Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Task Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Establish Transition Establish Governance Organizational Chart Technology and Infrastructure Assess Status Quo Project Progress, Visibility, and Process Documentation Clarify PMO Roles and Responsibilities Performance Reviews PPM Software PM Software Sample roadmap Top-level hierarchy Second-level hierarchy
  10. 10. Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Develop Portfolio Management Capabilities and Guidelines Design Resource Management Process Standardize Project Management Methodology In progress Planned Completed Triage Process Project Classification and Leveling Project Classification and Leveling Business Cases Steering Committees Prioritizing and Scoring Ticketing System Content review Performance management Administrative Support Quality Assurance Procurement and Vendor Management PM Training and Mentoring Staffing Record and Book Keeping Cloud support Legal generation Project Methodology Market analysis Project Status Reporting Approval Process Standard Operating Procedure Customer outreach Establish Resource Allocation Strategies Sample roadmap
  11. 11. Committee Overview Committee Name Committee Membership Mandate Executive Leadership Committee CEO, CFO, CTO, CDO, CISO/CRO, CIO, Enterprise Architect/Chief Architect, CPO Provide strategic and operational leadership to the company by establishing goals, developing strategy, and directing/validating strategic execution. Enterprise Risk Committee CISO/CRO, CPO, Enterprise Risk Manager, BU Leaders, CFO, CTO, CDO Govern enterprise risks to ensure that risk information is available and integrated to support governance decision making. Ensure the definition of the organizational risk posture and that an enterprise risk approach is in place. IT Steering Committee CIO, Product Owner, Service Owner, IT VPs, BRM, PMO Director, CISO/CRO Ensure business value is achieved through information and technology (IT) investments by aligning strategic objectives and client needs with IT initiatives and their outcomes. IT Risk Council IT Risk Manager, CISO, IT Directors Govern IT risks within the context of business strategy and objectives to align the decision-making processes towards the achievement of performance goals. It will also ensure that a risk management framework is in place and risk posture (risk appetite/threshold) is defined. PPM Portfolio Manager, Project Managers, BRMs Ensure the best alignment of IT initiatives and program activity to meet the goals of the business. Architectural Review Board Service/Product Owners, Enterprise Architects, Chief Architect, Domain Architects Ensure enterprise and related architectures are managed and applied enterprise-wise. Ensure the alignment of IT initiatives to business strategy and architecture and compliance to regulatory standards. Establish architectural standards and guidelines. Review and recommend initiatives. Change Advisory Board Service/Product Owner, Change Manager, IT Directors or Managers Ensure changes are assessed, prioritized, and approved to support the change management purpose of optimizing the throughput of successful changes with a minimum of disruption to business function.
  12. 12. Sample Governance Model Strategic: Ensures IT initiatives, products, and services are aligned to organizational goals and strategy and provide expected value. Ensure adherence to key principles. Tactical: Ensures key activities and planning are in place to execute strategic initiatives. Operational: Ensures effective execution of day-to-day functions and practices to meet their key objectives. IT Steering Committee IT Risk Council IT PMO Change Advisory Board Enterprise: Defines organizational goals. Directs or regulates the performance and behavior of the enterprise, ensuring it has the structure and capabilities to achieve its goals. Enterprise Risk Committee Executive Leadership Committee Board Architectural Review Board

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