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Project Governance: Maintaining Control Over Organizational Projects

Project Governance is not project management. It is the higher-level framework inside an organization to measure and manage projects. Some organizations will have an established Project Management Office (PMO), which may define a governance framework for projects and portfolio management. A Project Governance framework often means defined requirements for a project at various stages and periodic reviews as the project progress.

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Project Governance: Maintaining Control Over Organizational Projects

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  1. Project Governance: Maintaining Control Over Organizational Projects Project Governance is not project management.It is the higher-level framework inside an organization to measure and manage projects. Some organizations will have an established Project Management Office (PMO), which may define a governance framework for projects and portfolio management What does a Project Governance Framework look like? Start simple, each project governance model should require the following: 1.A Project Sponsor 2.A Complete Project Plan (more than a Gantt chart) 3.Clear Check-in/Reporting Gates 4.Active Stakeholder Engagement & Communication 5.Defined and Communicated Roles and Responsibilities 6.A Formal Lessons Learned Methodology A Project Sponsor You really can’t have a project without a Project Sponsor. This is the person who provides the business requirements and provides the business context to the project delivery and project success. Ultimately, they are the link between the project and the business community ensuring good governance. They assist in decision-making during the project and provide business guidance. They are your first stop for escalation for issues beyond the authority of the project manager Your project sponsor should be the project champion. They ensure that the organization and the customer is on board with an effective project.

  2. Your sponsor can be one person, (often a manager or executive) or two. More than two and you will struggle for consensus when it come to board the project and making a business case. They will have overall accountability for the project. It is important that the sponsor is selected early in the planning of the project. A Complete Project Plan (more than a Gantt chart) Your project plan is more than a Gantt chart. In addition to the high-level timeline, you need tasks broken down into manageable work packages. You need to have a formal communication plan and a Risk Strategy. These are all things that are included in your Project management and governance Plan For a smaller project, these might simply be cut-and-paste, from one project to the next. It is a good practice to walk through the components of a project plan, even on the smallest, to ensure you’ve covered your bases. This plan should be developed in the initial stages of the project, published and updated periodically throughout the project. A Complete Project Plan (more than a Gantt chart) A Project Governance framework often means defined requirements for a project at various stages and periodic reviews as the project progress. It might look something like this – •Monthly PMO Governance Reviews including the required documents at the defined project stages. Project Concept/Approval •Proposed Project Charter •Proposed Project Budget Project Planning •Project Timeline •Project Communications Plan •Project Roles & Responsibilities •Project Risk Matrix Requirements & Design •Requirements Documented •Proposed Design Documented •Updated Project Plan •Updated Project Timeline •Updated Project Risks Development/Implementation •Test and Validation Plan •Implementation Plan •Updated Project Plan •Updated Project Timeline

  3. •Updated Project Risks Project Closure •Final Transition Documentation •Lessons Learned Document The Governance model will define which documents are to be completed at each stage of the project and include a review of the project status to senior leadership. These check-in points may be scheduled at various phases of the project or on a periodic basis, such as monthly or quarterly. It will also be important to utilize document templates for the required documentation. Having like documentation from project to project will make both the project managers job easier, as well as the Governance team, so they are looking at similar documents. Active Stakeholder Engagement & Communication Part of an effective Governance model will include frequent project communication and interaction with the Project Stakeholders and steering committee. Your stakeholders are going to be the voice of your project. These are the folks impacted, they are the ones who will complain when things don’t go well. You will need to keep them engaged throughout the project. Your project governance model will define requirements for identifying and communicating with project stakeholders. Defined and Communicated Roles and Responsibilities This is the project team, the sponsors, the stakeholders and leadership. Defining Roles and Responsibilities will prevent miscommunications and duplicating efforts. It will help team members know who to ask when they need something. As the project manager, this will help you determine if you have covered all your bases. A Formal Lessons Learned Methodology Most projects collect feedback at the end of the project, but that’s where it ends. There is not an active effort to re-tool the Project Management methodology to incorporate the feedback. Sometimes the feedback is for other groups or organizations. You need a formal process for sharing the feedback and ensuring that there is action taken to make improvements. Project governance is the management framework within which project decisions are made. Governance ensures that projects are all meet the same standards. Each project is required to meet the governed check-ins or gates. Each project is required to have the same documentation, the same meeting cadence and the same leadership approval. Creating this framework will make incorporating feedback and process improvement easier and consistent across all projects. Don’t be afraid of creating standards for your organization. It may seem like additional bureaucracy – and it is – but it is a necessary evil to get the advantages or repeatable processes and consistent delivery and management.

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