Program Manager, PPM&PMO Specialist.| Coppel, Mexico.Culiacán, Sinaloa, Mexico
Can you share your experiences in defining the complexity and size of projects/programs to assign the appropriate project/program manager? Specifying the variables to use. Saving Changes...
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten AssociatesNew Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Francisco, I do recommend taking a look at the DA resources recommended by Kiron. That said, for each project and program, there are unique main factors to take into consideration when assessing complexity. For some, it could be Risk Level, for others it could be the Client itself (Big Client, New Client, Difficult Client) or it could be a mix of many factors. Regarding the size, each company defines size based on their own parameters, for example, for us any projects that extends beyond 2 years and has a budget of over $50 Mil is considered Medium size project, anything less, is small, anything more than $100 Mil is large so size is assessed based on time and budget.
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1 reply by Francisco Herrera
Apr 23, 2024 8:21 PM
Francisco Herrera
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Excellent! I will definitely review them! Thank you!
The DA resources are excellent, although I got a 404 error on the link Kiron posted. I completely agree with Rami that you must assess each project in context and that terms like large and small are highly dependent on the business. I haven't created a formula, but will share my mental model for breaking down the context.
I consider where I think the project will be most difficult in 4 main categories: a) Technical constraints b) Economic constraints c) Time constraints d) Personality fit
Some senior PMs can take on anything. Some projects benefit from the right tech background, others from working through a lot of budget compromises or time crunches. Some people can work with different stakeholders better than others, and the stakeholders vary at different cost levels.
An important constraint to consider for the person assigning projects is that you often have limited choice on who is available at the right time. As my teammates or I start realizing that we are winding one project down, we start looking for the next so that we can get one we want. The ideal PM is already committed. The next best choice is who you can help coach in the areas where they are not the best fit and bring them up a level.
The DA resources are excellent, although I got a 404 error on the link Kiron posted. I completely agree with Rami that you must assess each project in context and that terms like large and small are highly dependent on the business. I haven't created a formula, but will share my mental model for breaking down the context.
I consider where I think the project will be most difficult in 4 main categories: a) Technical constraints b) Economic constraints c) Time constraints d) Personality fit
Some senior PMs can take on anything. Some projects benefit from the right tech background, others from working through a lot of budget compromises or time crunches. Some people can work with different stakeholders better than others, and the stakeholders vary at different cost levels.
An important constraint to consider for the person assigning projects is that you often have limited choice on who is available at the right time. As my teammates or I start realizing that we are winding one project down, we start looking for the next so that we can get one we want. The ideal PM is already committed. The next best choice is who you can help coach in the areas where they are not the best fit and bring them up a level.
Sergio Luis ConteHelping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based OrganizationsBuenos Aires, Argentina
My recommendation is taking a look to SAFe approach to define value streams and development streams. You can take a look to Amplio approach which is Al Shalloway approach. It is useful no matter you do not use Agile/Lean based approaches in you life cycle.
Program Manager, PPM&PMO Specialist.| Coppel, Mexico.Culiacán, Sinaloa, Mexico
Apr 15, 2024 2:12 PM
Replying to Rami Kaibni
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Francisco, I do recommend taking a look at the DA resources recommended by Kiron. That said, for each project and program, there are unique main factors to take into consideration when assessing complexity. For some, it could be Risk Level, for others it could be the Client itself (Big Client, New Client, Difficult Client) or it could be a mix of many factors. Regarding the size, each company defines size based on their own parameters, for example, for us any projects that extends beyond 2 years and has a budget of over $50 Mil is considered Medium size project, anything less, is small, anything more than $100 Mil is large so size is assessed based on time and budget.
Excellent! I will definitely review them! Thank you! Saving Changes...
Program Manager, PPM&PMO Specialist.| Coppel, Mexico.Culiacán, Sinaloa, Mexico
Apr 15, 2024 10:46 PM
Replying to Keith Novak
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The DA resources are excellent, although I got a 404 error on the link Kiron posted. I completely agree with Rami that you must assess each project in context and that terms like large and small are highly dependent on the business. I haven't created a formula, but will share my mental model for breaking down the context.
I consider where I think the project will be most difficult in 4 main categories: a) Technical constraints b) Economic constraints c) Time constraints d) Personality fit
Some senior PMs can take on anything. Some projects benefit from the right tech background, others from working through a lot of budget compromises or time crunches. Some people can work with different stakeholders better than others, and the stakeholders vary at different cost levels.
An important constraint to consider for the person assigning projects is that you often have limited choice on who is available at the right time. As my teammates or I start realizing that we are winding one project down, we start looking for the next so that we can get one we want. The ideal PM is already committed. The next best choice is who you can help coach in the areas where they are not the best fit and bring them up a level.
I check the link and it has a type error at the end, this is the correct link: