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The approach taken when planning a project should be based upon the primary project constraint. Attributes of that constraint are planned first and then other aspects of the project are planned to support the primary constraint.
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Quick reference
Primary Constraint
The approach taken when planning a project should be based upon the primary project constraint. Attributes of that constraint are planned first and then other aspects of the project are planned to support the primary constraint.
When to use
The principles of managing from the primary constraint are applied when creating the detailed project plan. This will be at the beginning of a project and often at the beginning of each stage when using a stage and gate project management methodology.
Instructions
First determine which is the primary constraint: scope/quality, schedule, or resources. Depending upon the constraint, follow the steps in the listed order.
Scope constraint
- Identify all project deliverables.
- Set quality objectives for each deliverable.
- Determine best resource to complete each deliverable.
- Estimate amount of resource needed to complete the deliverable.
- Schedule based upon resource availability.
- Budget based upon deliverables, cost of resource, and schedule.
Schedule constraint
- Identify project schedule boundary.
- Set interim project milestones to support boundary.
- Determine resources available to support each milestone.
- Estimate deliverables and quality level that available resource could complete in available time.
- Budget based upon deliverables, cost of resource, and schedule.
Resource constraint
- Identify project resource constraint:
- Cash, personnel, equipment
- Both amount and timing
- Estimate deliverables and quality level that available resources could generate.
- Schedule deliverables based upon resource availability.
- Create budget based upon deliverable, cost of resource, and schedule.
- 00:04 Hi, I'm Ray Sheen.
- 00:05 Let's talk today about an important principle to follow
- 00:09 when managing a project, and that's understanding the primary constraint.
- 00:13 We often describe a project as having three constraints,
- 00:17 which are represented by the three sides of the project management triangle.
- 00:21 These constraints are the scope or deliverables, the schedule,
- 00:25 and the resources.
- 00:27 A project is planned, executed, and
- 00:29 controlled to fit within these three constraints.
- 00:32 Meeting all three of those is usually the goal of the project management team.
- 00:36 I want to be very clear at this point,
- 00:39 all three sides of the triangle are important and should be met.
- 00:42 But, as I like to say, missing one side of the triangle will get you fired,
- 00:47 whereas missing another side, will just get a sharp reprimand.
- 00:51 Normally, one of these sides is more important than the other.
- 00:54 This side may be more important because the requirements,
- 00:58 the rationale of a project, or
- 01:00 it may be because of another external constraint, such as a compliance issue.
- 01:06 The reason one side is most important,
- 01:08 may be totally outside the control of the team of the organization.
- 01:12 Whichever side is most important will govern how we approach the other phases of
- 01:17 project management.
- 01:18 So it's critical that we determine this now during project initiation.
- 01:22 Let's start with what we do when the scope is most important.
- 01:27 This means that the quality or type of deliverables being created are more
- 01:31 important than how long it takes or how much it costs.
- 01:35 We start with defining the deliverables.
- 01:37 These are often listed in the project charter or
- 01:39 the project requirements documents.
- 01:41 Once we have the deliverables, we set the quality objective for each deliverable,
- 01:46 the definition of done, then we determine the resources we need to achieve that
- 01:51 quality level on that deliverable.
- 01:53 Now that we know the activities that must be done and the resource types
- 01:57 that are required, we can estimate the effort needed for each activity.
- 02:01 We can convert that estimate into a schedule duration, and create a project
- 02:05 schedule, and we can convert that estimate into an amount of money and
- 02:10 create a budget baseline.
- 02:11 Incidentally, this is the approach associated with what's called
- 02:15 the predictive or traditional project lifecycle.
- 02:18 And it's what has been taught in most business schools as the best practice,
- 02:22 it is the best practice when the scope is most important.
- 02:26 Sometimes the schedule is most important.
- 02:29 We must add a specific end date for the project.
- 02:32 We can modify the scope and miss the budget target, but we can't be late.
- 02:36 Some of you may be old enough to remember the Y2K projects which were in this
- 02:40 category.
- 02:41 We start with the schedule boundary, the end date of the project.
- 02:46 With that end date in mind, we create some interim project milestones that would lead
- 02:51 us from where we are now to the end of the project, we can determine what resources
- 02:56 are available within each of those time periods defined by the milestones.
- 03:00 Given those resources, and the time that is allocated between the milestones,
- 03:05 we decide what deliverables can be created, and
- 03:08 at what quality level can they be completed.
- 03:10 We've now determined the timing, the resources and the scope.
- 03:14 We can create a budget baseline by costing those resources.
- 03:17 This technique is often associated with adaptive projects.
- 03:22 The third type of project constraint is a resource constraint,
- 03:26 there is a limited amount of resource available, and
- 03:30 the project plan comes down to what can be done for that much money.
- 03:34 Start with the resource constraint, it's normally money, but it may actually
- 03:39 be another resource, such as a raw material, or computer processing capacity.
- 03:45 Also the resource constraint may be how much of that resource exists, or
- 03:49 could even be when that resource is available.
- 03:53 Once we understand the resource constraints, then we can estimate
- 03:57 the deliverables and the quality level that that resource is able to achieve.
- 04:03 We then schedule those deliverables based upon the resource availability.
- 04:07 And once again, we create a budget baseline by costing those resources and
- 04:11 assigning them at the scheduled time to complete the identified requirements.
- 04:16 Whichever constraint is the most important should
- 04:20 determine your project management approach,
- 04:24 by following a project management process that ensures you meet the primary
- 04:31 constraint first, you reduce the overall risk on the project
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