FruitNotes beta
Your All-in-One Online Notebook
FruitNotes Blogs | Home  
Project Integration Management Processes
Last updated at (Fri Mar 14 2008 15:03:28)
Posted by: Ankur Barua
0%




Project integration management is primarily concerned with integrating processes to accomplish project objectives.
The seven process are:

  1. Develop Project Charter – Develop the Project charter is initiates the project. The derived project charter approves and sanctions the project and gives the project manager the authority to act and apply organizational resources to the project.
  2. Develop Preliminary Project Scope Statement – The preliminary project scope statement is an initial, high-level definition of the project scope. This document defines the project’s product or service, methods of approval, and tactical strategies for the change control process.
  3. Develop the Project Management Plan – Developing the Project Management Plan includes all activities needed to create and integrate all subsidiary plans into the Project Management Plan. This plan will be how the project is executed, managed, and monitored.
  4. Direct and Manage Project Execution - Directing and Managing Project execution is orchestrating how the project team performs the actions to implement the Project Management Plan and complete the work detailed in the Project Scope Statement.
  5. Monitor and Control Project Work – Monitoring and Controlling Project work measures and balance the projects progress and any corrective or preventative actions needed to assure all project objectives are met.
  6. Integrated Change Control – Integrated Change Control is the change control process for the project which includes evaluating all change requests, authorizing changes, and managing changes to project plans and deliverables. The key benefit to this process is that only validated approved changes are implemented.
  7. Close Project – Closing the project equates to completing all project activities, delivering the final project, turning over continual support to operations, and obtaining the client approval to formally close the project.

The seven processes in the Project Integration Management knowledge area work in concert to facilitate proper project coordination. The project integration requires each process seamlessly links and fuels the next process
All project management processes are divided into the following five project process groups:
  • Initiating - The Initiating Process Group includes those processes necessary for formally authorizing the beginning of a new project. The processes for developing the Project Charter and developing the preliminary Project Scope Statement occur in the Initiating Process Group.
  • Planning Process Group - The Planning Process Group includes those processes that establish the project scope, create the Project Management Plan, and identify and schedule the project activities. The process for developing the Project Management Plan occurs in the Planning Process Group.
  • Executing Process Group – The Executing Process Group consists of those processes necessary for completing the work outlined in the Project Management Plan to achieve the project's objectives. The process for directing and managing project execution, which ensures that the Project Management Plan is implemented properly, occurs in the Executing Process Group.
  • Monitoring and Controlling Process Group - The Monitoring and Controlling Process Group is necessary for gathering, assessing, and distributing performance information and analyzing measurements and trends to make continual process improvements. The processes for monitoring and controlling project work and implementing integrated change control occur in the Monitoring and Controlling Process Group.
  • Closing Process Group – The Closing Process group consists of those processes necessary for officially ending project activities and handing off the completed product to others. This also includes closing a project that has been canceled.


The project process groups overlap, interact, and directly affect one another as they all play out the greater project plan. These interactions create project management synchronization.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Project Integration Management Knowledge Area includes the processes and activities needed to identify, define, combine, unify, and coordinate the various processes and project management activities within the Project Management Process Groups. In the project management context, integration includes characteristics of unification, consolidation, articulation, and integrative actions that are crucial to project completion, successfully meeting customer and other stakeholder requirements, and managing expectations. Integration, in the context of managing a project, is making choices about where to concentrate resources and effort on any given day, anticipating potential issues, dealing with these issues before they become critical, and coordinating work for the overall project good. The integration effort also involves making trade-offs among competing objectives and alternatives. The project management processes are usually presented as discrete components with well-defined interfaces while, in practice, they overlap and interact in ways that cannot be completely detailed in any guide.


The need for integration in project management becomes evident in situations where individual processes interact. For example, a cost estimate needed for a contingency plan involves integration of the planning processes described in greater detail in the Project Cost Management processes, Project Time Management processes, and Project Risk Management processes. When additional risks associated with various staffing alternatives are identified, then one or more of those processes must be revisited. The project deliverables also need to be integrated with ongoing operations of either the performing organization or the customer’s organization, or with the long-term strategic planning that takes future problems and opportunities into consideration.


Most experienced project management practitioners know there is no single way to manage a project. They apply project management knowledge, skills, and processes in different orders and degrees of rigor to achieve the desired project performance. However, the perception that a particular process is not required does not mean that it should not be addressed. The project manager and project team must address every process, and the level of implementation for each process must be determined for each specific project.


The integrative nature of projects and project management can be better understood if we think of the other activities performed while completing a project. For example, some activities performed by the project management team could be to:

. • Analyze and understand the scope. This includes the project and product requirements, criteria, assumptions, constraints, and other influences related to a project, and how each will be managed or addressed within the project.

. • Document specific criteria of the product requirements.

. • Understand how to take the identified information and transform it into a project management plan using the Planning Process Group.

. • Prepare the work breakdown structure.

. • Take appropriate action to have the project performed in accordance with the project management plan, the planned set of integrated processes, and the planned scope.

. • Measure and monitor project status, processes and products.

. • Analyze project risks. Among the processes in the Project Management Process Groups, the links are often iterated. The Planning Process Group provides the Executing Process Group with a documented project management plan early in the project and then facilitates updates to the project management plan if changes occur as the project progresses. Integration is primarily concerned with effectively integrating the processes among the Project Management Process Groups that are required to accomplish project objectives within an organization’s defined procedures.

The integrative project management processes include:

1. Develop Project Charter – developing the project charter that formally authorizes a project or a project phase.

2. Develop Preliminary Project Scope Statement – developing the preliminary project scope statement that provides a high-level scope narrative.

3. Develop Project Management Plan – documenting the actions necessary to define, prepare, integrate, and coordinate all subsidiary plans into a project management plan.

4. Direct and Manage Project Execution – executing the work defined in the project management plan to achieve the project’s requirements defined in the project scope statement.

5. Monitor and Control Project Work – monitoring and controlling the processes used to initiate, plan, execute, and close a project to meet the performance objectives defined in the project management plan.

6. Integrated Change Control – reviewing all change requests, approving changes, and controlling changes to the deliverables and organizational process assets.

7. Close Project – finalizing all activities across all of the Project Management Process Groups to formally close the project or a project phase.

 

 


Rate this blog

   Report Abuse


Comments


From furqan ahmed at Thu Nov 05 18:09:12 2009

  1. furqan
  2. ahmed
  3. is
  4. aa
  5. sda
  6. sdfsd

 



-----------
From furqan ahmed at Thu Nov 05 18:05:59 2009

keep up with your good work



-----------

Leave your comment(s) below:
To start Your own Blog




Other Blogs
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
» 
2007 FruitNotes.com - All Rights Reserved.