“Projects are the means by which NASA explores space, expands scientific knowledge, and performs research on behalf of the nation” – NASA Space Flight Program and Project Management Handbook. http://go.nasa.gov/1QPkK8Z (Free download)
PROJECT CATEGORIZATION
Not all projects at NASA are huge. Many are actually very small. As the handbook says, projects “Vary in scope and complexity and require varying levels of oversight (notice the key word OVERSIGHT). They are assigned a category based upon
1. The project life-cycle cost estimate 2. The inclusion of radioactive material 3. If the system being developed is for human space flight
Personally, I never worked with a product of a project that had radioactive material included. But the other two categories – I have grown up in, work on and managed.
HOW ARE PROJECTS PRIORITIZED?
The first and absolute primary consideration is if the product of the project will be used for HUMAN spaceflight. That criteria out rules all others. Then the life-cycle costs are considered. It’s not the total in-house cost of the project that determines the degree of oversight, it’s the cost of design, acquisition of components, assembly, then putting the project’s product in the field and maintaining it. A PM’s first project will be small. But thrilling none the less. A young PM is subjected to all of the scrutiny and oversight that the most critical projects are.
THE GREAT VALUE OF OVERSIGHT (STANDARDIZED REVIEWS)
As the NASA project standard states: “These reviews are essential elements of conducting, managing, evaluating and approving space flight projects.” They are a combination of a marvelous learning environment and a way to ensure that each component of the project plan has been reviewed, understood and exposed to scrutiny.
To make sure all aspects of your project are reviewed, a “Standing Review Board” is brought in. This is a group of independent experts who assess and evaluate project activities, advise project managers and report their evaluations to the responsible organizations. They conduct independent reviews of a project and providing objective, expert judgments.
I freely admit that at first, it’s very scary to stand up in front of an auditorium of 100 plus experts and review your project’s “Magic 6” criteria. But after a while it becomes an adventure. I’ve told many people, that at first these standardized reviews feel like “Throw stones at Dave” time. But it wasn’t! Everyone was being constructive, lending their expertise and trying to help all of us succeed. With a large, experienced and expert audience, you can get concerns expressed that you would NEVER, EVER have thought of as a project team.
WHAT IS THE VALUE OF THESE REVIEWS?
The reviews provide the project (team) with an independent assessment of their plans, goals, techniques and risk assessment. EVERY AREA is open for inspection. They provide NASA senior management with an understanding of whether:
• The project is on track to meet objectives • The project is performing according to plan • Impediments to project success are addressed
The PMBOK Guide
This type of standardized review is missing from the PMBOK guide (V5), but I wish they weren’t. A disciplined system of peer reviews, system reviews and reviews by experts may seem expensive, but are a great stakeholder communication tool, a project team communication tool and team-building exercise as well as insuring you’re doing the job to the best of your ability. Saving Changes...