Monday, May 26, 2008

My first experience with Mac OS X version 10.5 “Leopard”


I had always been a "windows" guy till one day fate happened to bring me to one of the Apple Stores. One of my client finally was able to impress upon his better half and persuade allowing to buy an iphone and he took me along to buy one at an Apple store. And there I laid my eyes for the first time on these eye catchers, very impressive and elegant looking machines and it was like the slogan used by Apple for Leopard introduction "Hello, Tomorrow!".

I spent around 15 minutes browsing through the features of new Mac 10.5 (Leopard) OS on
MacBook Pro and I was already in love and awe with its wonderful features and flexibility. It was like experiencing something new and amazing all together. It was then I decided which would be my new laptop. MacBook Pro was little on the higher side of my budget but it is worth every penny. What attracted me even more was its flexibility allowing me to run both Windows XP and Mac OS in parallel. This way I need not worry about losing some of the commonly used applications (Some windows apps are still on my favorite list).

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Chanakya's Quotes


Chanakya's (Indian politician, strategist and writer, 350 BC 75 BC) Quotes

"A person should not be too honest.
Straight trees are cut first
and Honest people are victimized first."

"Even if a snake is not poisonous,
it should pretend to be venomous."

"The biggest guru-mantra is:
Never share your secrets with anybody. !
It will destroy you."

"There is some self-interest behind every friendship.
There is no Friendship without self-interests.
This is a bitter truth."

"Before you start some work, always ask yourself three questions -
Why am I doing it,
What the results might be and
Will I be successful.
Only when you think deeply and find satisfactory answers to these questions, go ahead."

"As soon as the fear approaches near,
attack and destroy it."

"Once you start a working on something,
don't be afraid of failure and don't abandon it.
People who work sincerely are the happiest."

"The fragrance of flowers spreads only in the direction of the wind.
But the goodness of a person spreads in all direction."

"A man is great by deeds, not by birth."

"Treat your kid like a darling for the first five years. For the next five years, scold them.
By the time they turn sixteen, treat them like a friend. Your grown up children are your best friends."

"Books are as useful to a stupid person
as a mirror is useful to a blind person."

"Education is the best friend.
An educated person is respected everywhere.
Education beats the beauty and the youth."

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Difference between a leader and a great leader


To quote Rosalyn Carter

A good leader is a person who takes the others to where he/she wants to go.


A great leader is a person who takes the others where he/she ought to go.



That's the difference between a leader and a great leader."




Saturday, May 10, 2008

My Notes on PMP (Formulas)

Following are the Formulas I consolidated for PMP preparation

Earned Value Analysis
PV (Planned Value) = BCWS (Budgeted Cost of Work Schedule)
EV (Earned Value) = BCWP (Budgeted Cost of Work Performed)
AC (Actual Cost) = ACWP (Actual Cost of Work Performed)

CV = EV – AC
SV = EV – PV
CPI = EV / AC
SPI = EV / PV

ETC = BAC – EV [Future Variances are Atypical or Not Consistent or Di similar]
ETC = (BAC – EV) / CPI [Future Variances are Typical or Consistent or similar]

EAC = BAC / CPI [simplest formula: typical or no variances]
EAC = AC + ETC [Initial Estimates are flawed]
EAC = AC + BAC – EV [Future variances are Atypical or Not Consistent or Di similar]
EAC = AC + BAC – EV / CPI [Future Variances are Typical or Consistent or similar]

VAC = BAC – EAC

% COMPLETE = EV / BAC x 100
% SPENT = AC / BAC x 100

CV% = CV / EV x 100
SV% = SV / PV x 100

Float or Slack
LS - ES and LF – EF

MEAN -> Average
MODE -> The “most found” number
RANGE -> Largest - Smallest Measure.
MEDIUM -> No in the middle or avg. of 2 middle Nos

PERT = O + 4ML + P / 6
STD. DEV. OF TASK = P – O / 6
TASK VAR. = [(P - O)/6 ] squared = Std. Dev ^ 2
CP STD. DEV. = √ σ² + σ² + σ²

SIGMA
1 = 68.26

2 = 95.46
3 = 99.73
6 = 99.99

Channels of Communication (N x (N – 1)) / 2

Project Selection
PV = F V / (1+r)ⁿ (or) FV = PV x (1+r)ⁿ

Cash Flow = Cash Inflow – Cash Outflow
Discounted Cash Flow = CF x Discount Factor
ARR = S Cash Flow / No. of Years
ROI = (ARR / Investment) * 100 % Bigger is better
BCR = Benefits / Cost

Benefit Cost Ratio (BCR) Bigger is better
((BCR or Benefit / Cost)
Revenue or Payback VS. cost) Or PV or Revenue / PV of Cost

Net Present Value (NPV) = Net Present Value Bigger is better

Internal Rate of Return (IRR) Bigger is better

Payback Period Less is better Net Investment / Avg. Annual cash flow

Exp. Value = Probability % x Consequence $

Class of Estimates
Definitive +5%
Capital Cost +10-15%
Appropriation +15-25%
Feasibility +25-35%
Order of Magnitude > +35% (-50 - 75%)

Contract Incentives
Savings = Target Cost – Actual Cost
Bonus = Savings x Percentage
Contract Cost = Bonus + Fees
Total Cost = Actual Cost + Contract Cost

Expected Monetary Value Probability * Impact

Point of Total Assumption (PTA) ((Ceiling Price - Target Price) / buyer's Share Ratio)
+
Target Cost


To Complete Performance Index [TCPI]
Values for the TCPI index of less then 1.0 is good because it indicates the efficiency to complete is less than planned. How efficient must the project team be to complete the remaining work with the remaining money?
( BAC - EV ) / ( BAC - AC )

Cost of Quality (CoQ) =
( ( Review Efforts + Test Efforts + Training Efforts + Rework Efforts + Efforts of Prevention) / Total efforts) x 100 %

My Notes on PMP

Note: My new PMBOK V4 are shared under My Notes for PMBOK V4

My Condensed Notes on PMP Preparation


  1. According to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK), a “project” is a temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique product or service.”
  2. Triple constraint- project scope, time and cost
  3. A portfolio is a collection of projects or programs and other work that are grouped
    together to facilitate effective management of that work to meet strategic business
    objectives. The projects or programs in the portfolio may not necessarily be
    interdependent or directly related
  4. Project Portfolio Management is a management process to select the projects that
    should be invested in. Specifically, it is the selection process based on the need,
    profitability, and affordability of the proposed projects.
  5. A project management office (PMO) is an organizational unit to centralize and
    coordinate the management of projects under its domain. A PMO can also be referred
    to as a "program management office," "project office," or "program office." A PMO
    oversees the management of projects, programs, or a combination of both
  6. Project management is a set of tools and techniques that are used to organize the
    work of the project to help bring about a successful project.
  7. The contract between the organization and the vendor super cedes all other workrelated
    documents
  8. Customers, internal or external, are the most important stakeholders in a project
  9. Scope verification must take place at the end of each phase
  10. Money already spent on a project is called sunk cost and should not be taken into
    consideration when determining if a project should continue. Instead, the cost of the
    work to complete is one of the elements that should be taken into consideration when
    considering to kill a project
  11. Phase end reviews are also called phase exits, phase gates, or kill points.
  12. The project life cycle goes through a series of phases to create the product
  13. Project managers manage things, but lead people. What's the difference?
    Management is the process of getting the results that are expected by project
    stakeholders.
    Leadership is the ability to motivate and inspire individuals to work towards those
    expected results.
  14. Project
    1. Projects don't last forever. They are temporary and unique
    2. Projects pass through logical phases to reach their completion
    3. Purpose of Project is to attain its objective and then terminate
  15. Operations
    1. Operations, however, do go on and on. They are ongoing and repetitive
    2. Operations may be influenced, or even created, by the outcome of a project
    3. Objective of an ongoing operation is to sustain business
  16. Organization Structure
    1. Functional
    2. Matrix
      1. Weak
      2. Balanced
      3. Strong
    3. Projectized
  17. Organization Structure And Project Characteristics
    1. Functional
      1. PM's Authority [Little or none]
      2. Resource Availability [Little or none]
      3. Who controls Project Budget [Functional Manager]
      4. PM's Role [Part - Time]
      5. PM Admin Staff [Part - Time]
    2. Weak Matrix
      1. PM's Authority [Limited]
      2. Resource Availability [Limited]
      3. Who controls Project Budget [Functional Manager]
      4. PM's Role [Part - Time]
      5. PM Admin Staff [Part - Time]
    3. Balanced Matrix
      1. PM's Authority [Low to moderate]
      2. Resource Availability [Low to moderate]
      3. Who controls Project Budget [Mixed]
      4. PM's Role [Full - Time]
      5. PM Admin Staff [Part - Time]
    4. Strong Matrix
      1. PM's Authority [Moderate to high]
      2. Resource Availability [Moderate to high]
      3. Who controls Project Budget [Project Manager]
      4. PM's Role [Full - Time]
      5. PM Admin Staff [Full - Time]
    5. Projectized
      1. PM's Authority [High to almost total]
      2. Resource Availability [High to almost total]
      3. Who controls Project Budget [Project Manager]
      4. PM's Role [Full - Time]
      5. PM Admin Staff [Full - Time]
  18. The WBS is a decomposition of all the deliverables the project will create
  19. Inspections may also be known as:
    a. Reviews
    b. Product reviews
    c. Audits
    d. Walk-throughs
  20. Graphical evaluation and review technique (GERT) models allow for loops and
    conditional branching
  21. Crashing adds more resources to activities to decrease their duration, which typically
    adds cost
  22. Project calendar This calendar shows when work is allowed on the project. For
    example, a project may require the project team to work nights and weekends so as
    not to disturb the ongoing operations of the organization during working hours. In
    addition, the project calendar accounts for holidays, working hours, and work shifts
    that the project will cover
  23. Resource calendar The resource calendar controls when resources, such as project
    team members, consultants, and SMEs are available to work on the project. It takes
    into account vacations, other commitments within the organization, or restrictions on
    contracted work, overtime issues, and so on
  24. Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) uses a weighted average
    formula to predict the length of activities and the project. Specifically, PERT uses a
    'pessimistic,' 'optimistic,' and 'most likely' estimate to predict when the project will be
    completed
  25. The critical path is the longest path to completion in the network diagram.
  26. Activities on the critical path have no float or slack.
  27. Free float is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without affecting the next
    activity's scheduled start date.
  28. Total float is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without affecting the
    project end date.
  29. Heuristic is simply a rule of thumb
  30. Crashing involves adding resources, which typically increases cost.
  31. Fast tracking adds risk as tasks are allowed to overlap
  32. Each resource in the project must be accounted for and assigned to a cost category.
    Categories include the following:
    a. Labor costs
    b. Material costs
    c. Travel costs
    d. Supplies
    e. Hardware costs
    f. Software costs
    g. Special categories (inflation, cost reserve, and so on)
  33. There are three generally accepted categories of estimating accuracy:
    a. Rough order of magnitude This estimate is “rough” and is used during the
    Initiating processes and in top-down estimates. The range of variance for the
    estimate can be –25 percent to +75 percent.
    b. Budget estimate This estimate is also somewhat broad and is used early in
    the planning processes and also in top-down estimates. The range of variance
    for the estimate can be –10 percent to +25 percent.
    c. Definitive estimates This estimate type is one of the most accurate. It is used
    late in the planning processes and is associated with bottom-up estimating. The
    range of variance for the estimate can be –5 percent to +10 percent.
  34. The opportunity cost is the amount of the project that was not chosen
  35. Quality is the sum of the characteristics of a product that allow it to meet the demands
    or expectations of the project
  36. Grade, according to the PMBOK, “is a category or rank given to entities having the
    same functional use but different technical characteristics.”
    For example, there are different grades of paint, different grades of metal, and even
    different grades of travel.
  37. The design of experiments (DOE) approach relies on statistical what-if scenarios to determine what variables within a project will result in the best outcome.
  38. Design of experiments is an analytical technique that identifies the elements or
    variables that will have the greatest effect on overall project outcomes
  39. There are five types of powers the project manager yields: (R F C E R)
    a. Reward
    b. Formal
    c. Coercive (penalty) d. Expert
    e. Referent
  40. Among the above powers Reward, Formal & Coercive (penalty) come with the "Position"
  41. Expert & Reward are considered the best types of powers and Coercive (penalty) is "Least" for obvious reasons
  42. Seven reasons for conflict, in order of most common to least common:
    a. Schedules
    b. Priorities
    c. Resources
    d. Technical beliefs
    e. Administrative policies and procedures
    f. Costs
    g. Personalities
  43. Five different approaches to conflict resolution
    a. Problem solving (win - win) [BEST]
    b. Forcing (win - lose)
    c. Compromising (lose - lose)
    d. Smoothing
    e. Withdrawal
    NOTE: Forcing (win - lose) and Problem Solving (win - win) are the ONLY two
    modes that result in a RESOLUTION to the conflict.
  44. The halo effect is the promoting the person to manage projects since he/she is good at a technology
  45. Confronting (Problem Solving) is the best problem-solving technique since it meets the problem directly
  46. In a Weak Matrix structure, functional management will have more authority than the
    project manager
  47. Within communicating there are five characteristics that affect the message:
    a. Paralingual: pitch, tone, and voice inflections
    b. Feedback: sender confirmation of the message by asking questions, for a
    response, or other confirmation signals
    c. Active listening: receiver confirms message receipt
    d. Effective listening: receiver offers confirmation of the message, such as nodding
    their head, asking questions, or other interactions.
    e. Nonverbal: facial expressions, hand gestures, and body language
  48. One of the first inputs to risk management is the project charter
  49. Historical information is always an excellent source of information for risk identification
  50. Brainstorming is likely the most common approach to risk identification
  51. Force majeure is a powerful and unexpected event, such as a hurricane or other
    disaster
  52. Contracts are known by many names:
    a. Agreement
    b. Subcontract
    c. Purchase order
    d. Memorandum of understanding
  53. All contracts in the United States are backed by the US court systems
  54. According to the Guide to the PMBOK, the project charter should be published by a
    manager external to the project but with sufficient power and authority to carry it off.
  55. When a project is performed under contract, the contract can serve as the project
    charter
  56. Cost reimbursable contracts are used when the degree of uncertainty is high and when
    the project requires a large investment prior to completion of the project
  57. The scope statement contains an exhaustive list of the project deliverables, their
    requirements, and measurable criteria used to determine project completion
  58. The scope statement is an output to the Scope Definition process and is used to create
    the WBS
  59. Cause-and-effect diagrams, also called Ishikawa or fishbone diagrams, show the
    relationship between the effects of quality problems and their causes
  60. The primary function of the Closing process is to formalize project completion and
    disseminate this information to the project participants
  61. According to the Guide to the PMBOK, the project manager is identified and assigned
    as an output of the Initiation process. In practice, project managers are very often
    assigned at the beginning of this process.
  62. The work package level is the lowest level in the WBS. Time and cost estimation is
    easily determined at this level as are resource assignments. Quality control
    measurements can be determined at this level as well.
  63. The code of accounts is assigned to the elements in the WBS
  64. Each element in the WBS is assigned a unique identifier. These are collectively known
    as the code of accounts
  65. The Responsibility Assignment Matrix (RAM) links project roles and responsibilities with
    project activities
  66. The WBS is the deliverables-oriented hierarchy of project work.
  67. The staffing management plan details how and when human resources will be added to
    and taken off the project. It is an output of Organizational Planning
  68. Analogous estimating is not a qualitatively based technique. It is a top-down
    estimating technique that considers previous similar activities when calculating
    estimates
  69. Mandatory dependency, also known as hard logic. Mandatory dependencies are
    inherent in the nature of the work
  70. Discretionary dependencies, also called preferred logic, preferential logic, and soft
    logic, are defined by the project management team
  71. "Best Practice” often refers to a specific sequence of work, described in terms of “Soft
    Logic”. Sometimes "Experience" is also attributes to Soft Logic
  72. Finish to start is the most commonly used logical relationship in PDM and most project
    management software packages
  73. There are three major documents and each has a specific purpose:
    a. Project Charter. Formally authorizes the project.
    b. Project Scope Statement. States what work is to be accomplished and what
    deliverables need to be produced.
    c. Project Management Plan. States how the work will be performed
  74. Philip Crosby devised the zero defects theory, meaning do it right the first time. Proper
    Quality Planning leads to less rework and higher productivity
  75. According to Bruce Tuckmann, “Forming, Storming, Norming and Performing ” are the
    stages of team development
  76. The performing stage is similar to Maslow’s self-actualization
  77. Myers Brigg’s theory states that “Sensing” and “Intuition” personality types are related
    to “Information” preference in other words ‘Hard Data verses what might be’
  78. Juran = Fitness for use, conformance. Quality by design.
  79. Joseph M. Juran is noted for his fitness for use premise. Simply put, this means the
    stakeholders’ and customers’ expectations are met or exceeded.
  80. W. Edwards Deming suggested that as much as 85 percent of the cost of quality is a
    management problem
  81. Shewhart = Plan-Do-Check-Act cycle.
  82. TQM = Quality must be managed in and must be a continuous process
  83. Six Sigma = Six Sigma is a measurement-based strategy; no more than 3.4 defects
    per million.
  84. Kaizen = Continuous improvement; improve quality of people first.
  85. Continuous improvement = Watch continuously for ways to improve quality.
  86. Statement of work (SOW) comprises of
    1. Business Need
    2. Product Scope Description and
    3. Strategic Plan
  87. Conflict should be addressed early and usually in private, using a direct, collaborative
    approach
  88. Organization, Environmental & external assumptions should be addressed by the
    Project Charter
  89. WBS Dictionary” is a document which describes the details for each component in the
    WBS. It includes a breif description of the of the “Scope” or “Statement of the work” ,
    defined deliverables, a list of associated activities, and a list of milestones
  90. Project Manager must consider “cultural differences” while deciding upon
    recongnization and rewards during team development.
  91. Technical inability and poor risk management by the contractor is mostly the reason
    for the project not to meet the customer expectations
  92. Critical Chain Project Management” is typically the “Management of Buffers”
  93. Critical Chain is another schedule network analysis technique that modifies the project
    schedule to account for limited resources
  94. The Critical Chain method adds duration buffers that are non-work schedule activities
    to maintain focus on the planned activity durations
  95. Cost Of Quality (COQ) are the cost types in modern quality management
    1. “Prevention Costs”,
    2. “appraisal costs” &
    3. “failure costs”
  96. The key components of the communication model include:
    a. Encode.
    b. Message.
    c. Medium.
    d. Noise.
    e. Decode.

  97. Common formats for performance reports include
    1. Bar charts,
    2. S curves,
    3. Histograms, and
    4. Tables.
  98. Face-to-face meetings are the most effective means for communicating and resolving
    issues with stakeholders.
  99. Order of Magnitude estimates are also knows as conceptual, ballpark or preliminary
    estimates
  100. “Tight Matrix” is putting all project personnel together. Also referred as “collocated”
  101. Strategies for “Negative Risks or threats” (Avoid Transfer Mitigate)
  102. Strategies for “Postive Risks or Opportunities” (Share Exploit Enhance)
  103. Common Strategy for both threats and opportunities is “Acceptance”
  104. There are 3 stages of “reaction to stress” (Alarm, Resistance & Exhaustion)
  105. Some of the traits/qualities exhibited by effective leaders are
    1. Flexibility,
    2. Ambition,
    3. Intelligence,
    4. Decisiveness,
    5. Creativity,
    6. Persistence and
    7. Energy
  106. Detailed Tasks are detailed in “Project Schedule”, which is part of Project Plan
    and note its NOT WBS. WBS is a “deliverable oriented document”
  107. An abnormal trend is formed when seven or more consecutive data points reflect a
    steadily increasing or decreasing pattern over time
  108. Scope Verification is concerned with the acceptance of deliverables
  109. Quality control is concerned with making sure the deliverables meet quality
    requirements. Quality Control is done first; both are Monitoring and Controlling
    processes.
  110. Quality Assurance (Executing) is focused on process: process analysis, quality audits,
    etc.
  111. Quality Control (Monitoring and Controlling) is focused on sampling results to see if
    they meet quality standards
  112. Code of Accounts identifies WBS items; Chart of Accounts monitors project costs by
    category
  113. In decision tree, a circle is a chance
  114. In Precedence Diagramming Method (PDM) or Activity on Node (AON) network
    diagrams, nodes are activities and arrows are dependencies
  115. In Arrow Diagramming Method (ADM) or Activity on Arrow (AOA) network diagrams,
    arrows are activities and nodes are dependencies
  116. Dummies are only used on ADM
  117. ADM tasks can only have FS relationships
  118. PDM uses one time estimate to determine duration, while ADM can use more than one time estimate.
  119. Scope Verification is done during Project monitoring and controlling BUT Product
    verification is done during the Project Closing
  120. Audits:
    o Quality Audit in Perform QA,
    o Risk Audit in Risk Monitoring and Control,
    o Inspections and Audits in Contract Administration,
    o Procurement Audits in Close Contracts
  121. The outputs of process groups are:
    o initiating: charter and preliminary scope statement;
    o planning: project management plan;
    o executing: work results;
    o monitoring: corrective actions;
    o closing: project product.
  122. Reporting formats:
    o Forecast Report (what is expected to happen on a project),
    o Progress Report (what happened since the last report),
    o Status Report (state of the project at the current time),
    o Earned Value Report (focuses on Earned Value Management),
    o Variance Report (what happened vs. what should have happened).
  123. Performance Reporting is a Controlling process. It creates Performance Reports, which
    are comparisons of performance to the performance baselines. These are typically
    done in tabular or graphical format.
  124. Information Distribution is an Executing process. It creates Organizational Process
    Assets such as project presentations, stakeholder notifications and status reports.
  125. Develop Project Team is an Executing Process. It creates a Team Performance
    Assessment, and helps you determine what additional training would be beneficial.
  126. Manage Project Team is a Controlling Process. It creates input to performance
    appraisals as well as recommended changes, corrective actions and preventative
    actions.
  127. Scope Baseline includes
    1. Project Scope Statement,
    2. WBS, &
    3. WBS Dictionary
  128. A large portion of the PM’s time while the work is being done is spent measuring and
    implementing corrective actions
  129. Project Close Process includes creation of two procedures
    o Administrative closure procedure and
    o Contract closure procedure
    The difference between the two is focus, formality and frequency. Administrative
    closure focuses on closing the project or project phase whereas Contract closure
    focuses on closing a contract that is part of the project
  130. Contingency Reserve (Known Unknowns) is for the risks remaining after the Risk Response Planning
    Management Reserve (Unknown Unknows is any extra amount reserved t cover “unforeseen risks”
    Cost Baseline will include the Contingency Reserve
    Cost Budget will include the Management Reserve
  131. Quality is defined as the degree to which the project fulfills requirement
  132. Quality MUST BE PLANNED IN AND NOT INSPECTED IN
  133. The Project Manager ultimately has the responsibility for the Product of the Project and
  134. Senior Management is responsible for the Quality of entire Organization
  135. Cost of Nonconformance is greater than the cost of conformance
  136. Most projects will fit one of the six needs and demands
    o Market demand
    o Business need
    o Customer request
    o Technological advance
    o Legal requirement
    o Social need
  137. The project charter (which is an output of the Develop the Project Charter process) is the
    written acknowledgment that the project exists. The project charter names the project
    manager and gives that person the authority to assign organizational resources to the
    project
  138. Net present value (NPV) assumes reinvestment is made at the cost of capital
  139. IRR assumes reinvestment at the IRR rate and is the discount rate when NPV is equal to
    zero
  140. Payback period does not consider the time value of money and is therefore the least
    precise of all the cash flow analysis techniques
  141. Preliminary project scope statement describes the objectives of the project and the high level requirements needed to satisfy stakeholder expectations
  142. The PMIS in the Develop Project Management Plan process includes a subsystem called the
    configuration management system
  143. Change control system, which is a subsystem of the configuration management system
  144. Stakeholder analysis is a tool and technique of Scope Definition used to determine and
    document the needs, wants, and expectations of stakeholders and prioritize and quantify
    those needs into project requirements
  145. The purpose of the project scope statement is to document the project objectives,
    deliverables, and requirements so that they can be used to direct the project team’s work
    and as a basis for future project decisions
  146. The scope statement further elaborates the project objectives, deliverables, requirements,
    and constraints and assumptions defined in the preliminary scope statement. It serves as a basis for future project decisions
  147. Alternatives identification is a tool and technique of the Scope Definition process that
    includes brainstorming and lateral thinking techniques
  148. Poor scope definition might lead to cost increases, rework, schedule delays, and poor
    morale
  149. According to the PMBOK Guide, functionality and specific conditions that must be met in
    order to satisfy the project, contract, standard, or specification describe the criteria for
    requirements, not objectives
  150. Product analysis (TT Scope Definition) includes techniques such as value engineering, value analysis, systems analysis, systems engineering, product breakdown, and functional
    analysis
  151. The product scope description can be used as an input to the Scope Definition process
    when the project charter and/or preliminary project scope statement are missing
  152. The lowest level of any WBS is called the work package level
  153. For the exam, remember that the key to DOE is that it equips you with a statistical
    framework that allows you to change the variables that have the greatest effect on overall
    project outcomes at once instead of changing one variable at a time.
  154. Quality checklists are an output of the Quality Planning process, and checklist analysis is a
    tool and technique of the Risk Identification process
  155. Cost-benefit analysis considers trade-offs in the Quality Planning process
  156. Benchmarking compares previous similar activities to the current project activities to
    provide a standard to measure performance against.
  157. Failure costs; is also known as the cost of poor quality. Failure costs include both internal and external costs.
    Internal failure costs are costs associated with not meeting the customer’s expectations
    while you still had control over the product. This results in rework, scrapping, and
    downtime.
  158. The process improvement plan is a subsidiary plan of the project management plan and
    targets inefficiencies in a process or activity. The quality baseline is used to document the
    quality objectives of the project and is used as a basis for future Quality processes
  159. The WBS dictionary should be documented with the code of account identifier, an SOW, the responsible organization, and a milestone schedule for the WBS components
  160. Design of experiments is a tool and technique of the Quality Planning process that provides statistical analysis for changing key product or process elements all at once (not one at a time) to optimize the process
  161. According to the PMBOK Guide, the risk management plan should include the following
    elements:
    o Methodology
    o Roles and responsibilities
    o Budgeting
    o Timing
    o Risk categories
    o Definitions of risk probability and impact
    o Probability and impact matrix
    o Revised stakeholder tolerances
    o Reporting formats
    o Tracking
  162. The output of the Risk Identification process is the risk register. The risk register contains
    the following elements:
    o List of identified risks
    o List of potential responses
    o Root causes of risks
    o Updated risk categories
  163. Risk urgency assessment is a tool and technique of Qualitative Risk Analysis process
  164. Qualitative Risk Analysis is a fast and easy method of determining probability and impact
  165. The risk management plan details how risk management processes will be implemented,
    monitored, and controlled throughout the life of the project.
  166. The risk management plan does not include responses to risks or triggers. Responses to
    risks are documented in the risk register as part of the Risk Response Planning process
  167. The information-gathering techniques in the Risk Identification process are
    o brainstorming,
    o the Delphi technique,
    o interviewing,
    o root cause identification, and
    o SWOT analysis.
  168. Quantitative Risk Analysis analyzes the probability of risks and their consequences using a
    numerical rating
  169. Monte Carlo analysis is a simulation technique & not a Modeling technique
  170. When the question describes sensitivity analysis, which is a tool and technique of the
    Quantitative Risk Analysis process. Tornado diagrams are often used to display sensitivity
    analysis data
  171. The simplest form of “Risk Analysis” is “Sensitivity Analysis”
  172. Following options are diagramming techniques of the Risk Identification process
    o Ishikawa diagram
    o Process flowchart
    o Influence diagram
  173. Passive acceptance is when the team has decided to take no action and make no plans for
    the risk. This is a strategy that can be used for either positive or negative risks.
  174. The PMBOK Guide divides contracts into three categories:
    o Fixed price or lump sum (biggest risk is borne by the seller & good when
    original scope is well defined)
    o Cost reimbursable (biggest risk is borne by the buyer)
    o Time and materials (T&M)
  175. The three outputs of the Plan Contracting process are
    o procurement documents (request for proposal (RFP), request for information
    (RFI), invitation for bid (IFB), request for quotation (RFQ)),
    o evaluation criteria,and
    o contract statement of work updates.
  176. Understand the difference between bid and/or quotation and proposal for the exam. Bids or quotations are used when price is the only deciding factor among bidders. Proposals are
    used when there are considerations other than price
  177. A contract statement of work (SOW) contains the details of the procurement item in clear,
    concise terms. It includes the following elements:
    o The project objectives
    o A description of the work of the project and any post project operational
    support needed
    o Concise specifications of the product or services required
    o The project schedule, time period of services, and work location
  178. According to the PMBOK Guide, using templates and checklists is one way to ensure that
    you don’t miss any key responsibilities when planning the project and will help reduce the
    amount of time spent on project planning
  179. According to the PMBOK Guide, the RAM (Responsibility Assignment Matrix) relates the
    OBS to the WBS to assure that every component of the work of the project is assigned to
    an individual.
  180. The letters in the acronym RACI (sample portion of a type of RAM) are the designations are
    o R = Responsible for performing the work
    o A = Accountable, the one who is responsible for producing the deliverable or
    work package and approves or signs off on the work
    o C = Consult, someone who has input to the work or decisions
    o I = Inform, someone who must be informed of the decisions or results
  181. The RAM and RACI charts are tools and techniques of Human Resource Planning process
  182. Standard forms are a tool and technique of the Plan Contracting process. Standard forms
    can be nondisclosure agreements, standardized contracts, and so on.
  183. Plan Purchases and Acquisitions can directly influence the project schedule, and the project schedule can directly influence this process
  184. Resource availability is an output of the Acquire Project Team and Select Seller processes
  185. For the exam, remember that resource availability isn’t determined until the Executing
    stage and becomes an input to the Activity Resource Estimating process
  186. Remember that you cannot perform Schedule Development until you have completed all
    the following processes of project Planning: Scope Planning, Scope Definition, Create WBS,
    Risk Identification, Risk Response Planning, Plan Purchases and Acquisitions, Activity
    Resource Estimating, Activity Definition, Activity Sequencing, and Activity Duration
    Estimating
  187. Schedule Development has 10 tools and techniques:
    o Schedule network analysis (produces the project schedule)
    o Critical path method ()
    o Schedule compression
    o What-if scenario analysis
    o Resource leveling
    o Critical chain method
    o Project management software
    o Applying calendars
    o Adjusting leads and lags
    o Schedule model
  188. The higher the standard deviation is for an activity, the higher the risk. Since standard
    deviation measures the difference between the pessimistic and the optimistic times, a
    greater spread between the two, which results in a higher number, indicates a greater risk.
    Conversely, a low standard deviation means less risk
  189. Monte Carlo is a simulation technique that shows the probability of all the possible project
    completion dates
  190. Monte Carlo analysis can be used in the Schedule Development process to determine
    multiple, probable project durations
  191. Resource leveling can cause the original critical path to change.
  192. CPM manages the total float of schedule networks paths, whereas critical chain manages
    buffer activity durations and resources
  193. Cost aggregation (TT of Cost Budgeting) is the process of tallying the schedule activity cost estimates at the work package level and then totaling the work package levels to higher level WBS component levels
  194. Funding limit reconciliation (TT of Cost Budgeting) involves reconciling the amount of funds spent with the amount of funds budgeted for the project
  195. Cost baselines are displayed as an S curve.
  196. The primary output of Cost Estimating is activity cost estimates
  197. Parametric estimating multiplies a known element—such as the quantity of materials
    needed—by the time it takes to install or complete one unit of materials. The result is a
    total estimate for the activity
  198. The project schedule determines the start and ending dates of activities, determines float
    times, generally shows resource assignments, and details the activity sequences and
    durations.
  199. Motivation can be extrinsic or intrinsic.
    o Extrinsic motivators are material rewards and might include bonuses, the use
    of a company car, stock options, gift certificates, training opportunities, extra
    time off, and so on
    o Intrinsic motivators are specific to the individual. Some people are just
    naturally driven to achieve—it’s part of their nature
  200. The introduction of a new team member will start the formation and development of the
    team all over again with the forming stage
  201. Teams in the norming stage of Develop Project Team exhibit affection and familiarity with
    one another and make joint decisions
  202. Request Seller Responses obtains bids and proposals from vendors.
  203. Select Sellers is the receipt of bids and proposals and the selection of a vendor
  204. Independent estimates (TT of Select Sellers), also called should cost estimates, are a way
    to check proposed pricing
  205. Fait accompli is a tactic used during contract negotiations where one party convinces the
    other that the particular issue is no longer relevant or cannot be changed
  206. The process analysis technique (TT of Perform Quality Assurance process) includes root
    cause analysis to analyze a problem and solution and to create preventive actions
  207. You are preparing project performance appraisals and have decided you’d like each team
    member to get feedback regarding their performance from several sources, including
    peers, superiors, and subordinates. This is called 360-degree feedback and is part of the
    project performance appraisals tool and technique of the Manage Project Team process.
  208. Understand for the exam that configuration management involves
    o identifying the physical characteristics of the product, service, or result of the
    project (or its individual components);
    o controlling changes to those characteristics; and
    o Documenting changes to verify that requirements are met.
    o It also includes the change management system and
    o documents the process for requesting, tracking, and determining whether
    change requests should be approved or denied.
  209. Activities associated with configuration change management in the Integrated Change
    Control process
    o Configuration identification
    o Configuration status accounting and
    o Configuration verification and auditing
  210. Integrated Change Control, Schedule Control, and Cost Control are all concerned with
    three issues:
    o influencing the things that cause change,
    o determining that change is needed or has happened,
    o and managing the change
  211. Change control systems are documented procedures that describe
    o How to submit change requests.
    o They track the status of the change requests,
    o document the management impacts of change,
    o track the change approval status, and
    o define the level of authority needed to approve changes.
  212. Change control systems do not approve or deny the changes—that’s the responsibility of the configuration control board (CCB)
  213. The configuration control board (CCB) has the authority to approve or deny change
    requests. Their authority is defined and outlined by the organization
  214. Recommended” corrective action is an output of several of the change control processes,
    including Scope Change Control, Schedule Control, Cost Control, Risk Monitoring and
    Control, and Perform Quality Control.
  215. “Approved” corrective action is an output of the Integrated Change Control process.
    Remember that Integrated Change Control is where all change requests are processed and
    either approved or denied.
  216. Also note that corrective action is an output of the Monitoring and Controlling processes
    and an input to the Executing processes
  217. Cost variances (both positive and negative) are calculated using a performance
    measurement analysis tool (specifically earned value techniques)
  218. EVT (earned value techniques) compares what you’ve received or produced to what you’ve
    spent.
  219. Workarounds are unplanned responses. Workarounds deal with negative risk events as
    they occur.
  220. Schedule variances will sometimes—but not always—impact the schedule. Changes to
    noncritical path tasks will not likely impact the schedule, but changes to critical path tasks
    will always impact the schedule
  221. Budget updates might require cost rebaselining
  222. You can remember the difference between Scope Verification and Perform Quality Control this way:
    o Scope Verification = accepting work results
    o Perform Quality Control = checking for correct work results (assuring that the
    quality requirements are met)
  223. Projects come to an end for several reasons:
    o They’re completed successfully.
    o They’re canceled or killed prior to completion.
    o They evolve into ongoing operations and no longer exist as projects.
  224. Four formal types of project endings exist that you might need to know for the exam:
    o Addition
    o Starvation
    o Integration
    o Extinction
  225. For the exam, remember that product verification performed during the Closing processes
    determines whether all of the work of the project was completed correctly according to the
    contract terms and satisfactorily according to stakeholder expectations, whereas product
    documentation is verified and accepted during the Scope Verification process. One more
    note: when projects end prematurely, the Scope Verification process is where the level of
    detail concerning the amount of work completed gets documented.
  226. Contract documentation is an input to both the Close Project and Contract Closure processes
  227. Note PMI defines “Scope Statement” as the basis for making future project decisions and for confirming or developing common understanding of project scope among project
    stakeholders.
  228. Scope Verification
    o Verified work results
  229. Perform Quality Control
    o Assured quality requirements were met
  230. Close Project
    o Product verification (work was correct and satisfactory)
    o Collecting project documents
    o Disseminating final acceptance notice
    o Documenting lessons learned
    o Archiving project records
  231. Contract Closure
    o Product verification (work was correct and satisfactory)
    o Formal acceptance and closure
  232. WBS element changes are scope changes. Schedule revisions are often required as a result of scope changes.
  233. Close Project and Contract Closure are the processes in the Closing process group and are
    performed in that order
  234. The work performance information is reviewed to determine the status of project activities
    and make certain the project goals and objectives are met. This is an input to the Close
    Project process
  235. According to the PMBOK Guide, the procurement audit examines the procurement process
    from Procurement Planning through Contract Administration
  236. Integrity means adhering to an ethical standard
  237. Hammocks are summary-level activities or aggregate activities shown as a summary activity on a project schedule network diagram.
  238. Contract Negotiation has “5’ Sequential steps (Note Agreement is AFTER Closure)
    o Protocol
    o Probing
    o Scratch Bargaining
    o Closure and
    o Agreement
  239. The Primary Objective of establishing a Quality Assurance Process is “For Quality
    Improvement”
  240. “Quality Function Deployment Process” identifies what the customer’s needs are
    (Spoken/unspoken words) and translates those needs into technical requirements. Appropriate for each stage of the product development life cycle
  241. Decision Tree is a diagram that describes a decision under consideration and the implications of choosing one of the alternatives
  242. The Project Charter provides the
    o high level requirements,
    o constraints,
    o assumptions,
    o stakeholders and
    o the measures of success.
  243. Based on this information, or the lack of it, the Charter is an excellent source to start to
    identify the Project Risks
  244. 9 ‘bilities’ (A MAP FOR US)
    Maintainability: The ability of a unit to be restored within a specified time to its
    performance capability under the environmental operating conditions within a
    specified, average period of time
    Usability: is the ability of a product to perform its intended function for the specified
    user under the prescribed conditions
    Reliability: is the degree to which a unit of equipment performs its intended function
    under specific conditions for specified period of time
    Availability: is the probability of the product being capable of performing a required
    function when called upon
  245. Activity Resource Estimating involves determining what physical resources (People,
    Equipment, etc) and what quantities should be used and when they would be needed to
    perform project activities
  246. Physical limitations are an attribute of “Mandatory Dependencies
  247. A Project Phase is “Marked by the completion of one or more deliverables”
  248. A “Product Description” should define the relationship between the product that is being
    created and the business need
  249. Contingency Plans can be best described as “Planned responses to Risk Events”
  250. Staff assignments and resource availability are the outputs of “Acquire the Project Team”
    Process
  251. Complex and large projects would be more effectively managed in “Strong” and ‘Projectized” Structure
  252. If Changes are well defined, its Fixed Price Contract but if they are not then its T & M
  253. Contract Management Plan is an OUTPUT to “Select Seller Process”
  254. Punitive Damages are the damages intended to punish the wrong doer
  255. “Utility Theory” considers the pains or tolerance level a stakeholder has to risk
  256. There are three key components to a Risk
    o Risk Event (The Event)
    o Probability of the Event
    o Impact or Effects of the Event (Amount at Stake)
  257. Delhi technique is a “Consensus Technique”
  258. Residual Risk are those that “Remain” after Risk Responses have been taken
  259. Inputs to Performance Reporting are
    o Work Performance Information
    o Performance Measurements
    o Forecasted Completion
    o QC Measurement
    o Project Plan
    o Approved Change Requests and
    o Deliverables
  260. Interpersonal communication takes three forms
    o Verbal
    o Non-verbal and
    o Written
  261. When distributing information, the total message impact from the sender is
    1. 7% words ,
    2. 38% vocal tones and
    3. 55% body language
  262. A ‘Planning Package” is a WBS component below the control account but above the work
    package. It is used for planning unknown work content that does not have detailed schedule activities
  263. There are two types of “Decision Models” that can be used for Project Selection during the initiation Process
    o Comparative (Benefit measurement Rating) Models
    o Constrained (Mathematical Decision Models)
  264. Comparative (Benefit measurement Rating) Models
    o Decision Tree
    o Criteria Profiling
    o Weighted Factor
    o Q-Sorting
    o Delphi Technique
  265. Constrained (Mathematical Decision Models)
    o Logical Framework Analysis
    o Linear Program Programming
  266. The “Control Points” in the WBS used for isolated assignment to work centers are referred to as the “Control Account Plan”
  267. Control account Plan (CAP) is a management control point where the integration of scope,
    budget and schedule take place and where the measurement of performance takes place.
    These CAPS are placed at the selected management points in the WBS.
  268. Cost Estimates include All Resources to be charged to the Project
  269. A Control Account is a management control point that can be placed at selected management points of the WBS above the Work Package Level
  270. To convey information between two or more parties, the communication process must have a medium. The three most common media are
    o Visual
    o Auditory and
    o Tactile
  271. Four steps of performing RCA (Root Cause Analysis) are
    o Data Collection
    o Casual Factor Charting
    o Root Cause Identification
    o Recommendation Generating and Implementation
  272. Scatter Diagrams are used to investigate the possible relationship between two variables that both relate to the same “EVENT”
  273. BCR (Benefit Cost Ratio) compares the benefits to the costs of the project where the Benefits are the same as Revenues or often referred to as the “Payback period”
  274. Project performance is impacted by Four Basic Cultures
    o World
    o National
    o Business and
    o Leadership
  275. When one considers their Culture to be superior, they are called “Ethnocentric”
  276. Use of personal space during social interaction is known as “Proxemics”
  277. Risk is the notion of dealing with “Uncertainty”
    o Knows at the extreme end of the Uncertainty Spectrum will definitely affect you,
    although you have no control over them
    o Knows-Unknowns are items that will affect you although you are not able to predict
    how or how much they will effect you
    o Unknown – Unknowns are items or situations whose existence we cannot imagine
    (Who knows?)
  278. A Records Management Systems is a specific set of processes, related control functions and automation tools used by the PM to manage contract documentation and records. Its the TT of Contract Administration Process
  279. Parametric (Top – Down) uses historical data and statistical relationships to determine costs
  280. Constructive team roles include Initiators, Information seekers, Information givers,
    Encouragers, Clarifiers, Harmonizers, Summarizers and Gate Keepers
  281. Destructive team roles include Aggressor, Withdrawer, Blocker, Devil’s advocate, Recognizer, Topic Jumper and Dominator
  282. “To Complete Performance Indicator” (TCPI) determines the cost performance efficiency
    required to complete the project within the original budget (BAC) or revised budget (EAC);
  283. TCPI > 1 is NOT good; To calculate TCPI, take the value of the work remaining over the value of funds remaining
  284. “Eustress” is a stress that will motivate and contribute to an increase in performance
  285. Quantitative based durations (Parametric technique) multiply a known element, like lines of code required by the time it takes to develop one line of code. The result is the total estimate for the activity
  286. Quality Metrics are the Outputs of Quality Planning. It is an operation definition that describes “what” something is and “how” it will be measured in very specific terms
  287. Straight-line depreciation is the simplest method of depreciating an asset and is frequently utilized on a project to determine its economic feasibility. Straight-line depreciation is a method that divides an asset’s cost and its expected salvage value by its expected utilization period
  288. Performance Reporting is an INPUT to all “Control” Process (Except Quality Control)
  289. Decision Trees are considered Quantitative while Influence diagram are considered
    Qualitative.
  290. Influence diagram shows the dependencies among the variables more clearly than the
    decision tree
  291. A “Bill of Material” (BOM) describes the product in terms of its assemblies, sub-assemblies
    and basic parts
  292. Allowing “Automatic Approval” of changes is a function of the Change Control System and
    NOT Configuration Management
  293. Contingency Plan document outlines the actions to be taken if an identified risk event should occur
  294. Variable and attribute sampling are forms of acceptance sampling.
    Variable sampling evaluates a characteristic measured on a numerical scale
    Attribute sampling tests for defective or non defective
  295. Parametric Modeling applies to only Project with Similar characteristics
  296. The point of total assumption (PTA) is a price determined by a fixed price plus incentive fee contract (FPIF) above which the seller bears all the loss of a cost overrun. It is also known as the "most pessimistic cost
  297. Variance analysis involves comparing actual project results to planned or expected results
  298. Trend analysis involves examining project results over time to determine if performance is
    improving