Contact Information: Contact: Martin Levy Martin Levy Public Relations 206.851.7256
Tough Economic Conditions Make Reining in Project Budgets a Must
Five Ways Project Portfolio Management (PPM) Helps Organizations Do More With Less
| Quelle: Innotas
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - June 2, 2008) - When economic conditions get tough,
leaders look for ways to control costs and do more with less. One way is
to rein in project budgets, and this effort usually starts by analyzing the
project portfolio to understand answers to basic questions: What are the
current projects? What projects can be trimmed or cut? How can we do more
with less and better focus our resources and energies?
Many companies are finding that an effective way to evaluate the entire
project portfolio and control costs is to use a Project Portfolio
Management (PPM) solution. PPM solutions make it much easier to look at
projects as an aggregate collection of expense buckets to determine where
excess fat can be trimmed.
For example, with PPM, organizations can more easily determine which
projects add the most value to the business, and find areas where they can
eliminate duplication of projects and effort.
"In tough economic times, leaders need to streamline the project portfolio
in order to get leaner while still maintaining their ability to produce
value. But without an integrated PPM solution, the entire exercise of
prioritizing the project portfolio can become uninformed guesswork," says
Keith Carlson, CEO of on-demand PPM vendor Innotas (www.innotas.com).
Moreover, with the emergence of web-based, software-as-a-service (SaaS)
solutions, PPM is now available at a fraction of the price of installed
solutions, which can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Instead of
requiring commitment to costly and inefficient enterprise-wide site
licenses, SaaS PPM solutions can be deployed on a subscription or per-seat
basis, and users can be added or subtracted at any time. SaaS solutions are
also faster to implement and carry a much lower risk burden than
traditional enterprise software.
Says Carlson, "With SaaS, organizations no longer have to put off
implementing a PPM solution due to cost. More important, because SaaS PPM
solutions are implemented in days or weeks, organizations can begin
analyzing the project portfolio and begin the process of cost containment
and cost savings almost immediately."
Whatever type of PPM solution an organization chooses -- installed or SaaS
-- here are five key steps to evaluating the project portfolio and
analyzing which projects are the most valuable or which may be the best to
cut or reduce in scope:
1. Assess the overall project portfolio to find obvious places to cut
costs:
In cases in which PPM has not already been implemented, it is common for a
project-driven organization to have many more active projects than
leadership realizes. It is, in fact, not uncommon to underestimate the
active project list by as much as 300%.
For example, Hamilton Beach Brands recently deployed an on-demand PPM
solution from Innotas. "Before we implemented Innotas, we suspected that we
had about 20 identified projects. Once we cataloged all our projects, we
learned that there were more than 60. We were surprised by the size of the
variance," says Jerry Hodge, senior director for information services at
Hamilton Beach Brands.
Hodge continues, "Innotas helped us quantify the demand for IS projects
across our business units, better understand the status of the resources we
have available, and then allowed us to more effectively work the business
units to make sure IT was focused on the most critical projects and/or the
projects that drive the most value to Hamilton Beach."
2. Compare high-value projects to decide on the right combination to
fund:
Next, evaluate and rank which projects are the most valuable to the
organization. With PPM, redundant projects can be consolidated, or
projects that should never have been started in the first place can be
eliminated. When there's urgency to rein in costs, one starts by pruning
the project catalog.
What's important here is that the project team must demonstrate that it has
control over its available resources. This is where PPM can become a huge
asset because without PPM, "visibility" is typically a black hole for CIOs.
Hodge said, "We thought our infrastructure team was spending a third of its
time on projects, a third of its time on break/fix incidents, and a third
on other service requests. What we discovered is that instead they were
spending over 50% on break/fix activities and not enough time advancing
projects that were most important. As a result, we identified corrective
action projects and realigned our project portfolio."
3. Look for ways to allocate limited resources to the most important
projects:
Next, ensure high-value projects are properly covered and the delivery
process is in place to ensure happy stakeholders. If not, then the
leadership team may need to make additional (and albeit some tough)
tradeoff decisions on where to make further cuts.
Once the portfolio has been streamlined, and the key stakeholders are able
to agree on what's in and what's out, then the project leadership team can
begin to reallocate available resources to get the best fit between the
team and the work. This revaluation can also lead to new-found, vastly
improved efficiencies and outputs.
4. Look for opportunities to merge projects and gain efficiencies:
While this may seem self-explanatory, there are often surprising
opportunities to combine projects into joint initiatives. Projects emerge
from many different places, and it is not uncommon for different projects
to share the same goals and objectives. Even if they don't immediately
appear to share goals, they may rely on quite similar fundamentals.
Questions to ask include: How do all these projects relate to each other?
Has the company developed a consistent and holistic view of the overall
project portfolio? Can these projects be combined into one integrated
initiative?
Some effort may be required to convince stakeholders that a joint
initiative represents an improvement; but stakeholders are generally
receptive to any creative ideas that allow them to continue moving toward
the original goals of the project they sponsored in the first place.
5. Monitor project performance closely to get better control of potential
cost overruns:
Finally, project performance can significantly impact company performance
and profitability. In some projects, cost overruns can be disastrous. In a
resource constrained environment, these overruns have a collateral damage
effect that can ripple through the entire portfolio. With PPM in place as
a centralized, visible management framework, these kinds of unforeseen
meltdowns can be avoided much more easily.
With a PPM solution, managers and teams gain a new level of visibility into
status and progress. This visibility forms the foundation for improved
execution in terms of the basics: scope, schedule, and financial
performance.
Says Mykolas Rambus, IT executive at Forbes, "Portfolio management and
project management are about delivering business value to the organization;
IT departments need to run the project portfolio like any other division --
like a business. By using Innotas we have the transparency into the project
portfolio and can determine which projects are bringing the most value to
the organization as a whole."
Innotas recently released a white paper, "Focus Under Pressure: Why Project
Portfolio Management Becomes Mission-Critical in a Down Economy," which
defines five key steps to evaluating the project portfolio with an eye for
cutting costs and doing more with less.
http://www.innotas.com/resources/whitepapers.html
About Innotas
Innotas provides the only on-demand Project Portfolio Management (PPM)
solution specifically designed to meet the needs of IT and IT Services
organizations. With Innotas, managers and team members improve
collaboration and can more effectively and efficiently manage IT
initiatives, projects, and resources. For CIOs and executives, Innotas
delivers deep visibility, automation, and analysis of the project
portfolio, and resource planning and utilization. Our customers, including
Crayola, Forbes, Hamilton Beach, Jo-Ann Stores, WorldVision and many
others, span a wide range of industries including financial services,
healthcare, retail, technology, telecommunications and energy. For more
information please visit www.innotas.com or contact us at +1 415.814.7700.