Concept Symposium 2010 Oscarsborg, Norway 16 – 17 September
Transcription
Concept Symposium 2010 Oscarsborg, Norway 16 – 17 September
Concept Symposium 2010 Oscarsborg, Norway 16 – 17 September 2010 Symposium web-site: http://www.conceptsymposium.no/ Concept Research Programme: http://www.concept.ntnu.no/english/ Project Governance Procedural Staight Jacket or Freedom of Arts? Dr Ralf Müller Umeå University Norwegian School of Management BI SKEMA Business School CONCEPT Symposium, 16-17 September 2010, Oscarsborg, Norway Corporation C Corporate t governance Project Management Projects Portfolio Program Project Project Project Governance of project management Governance of projects, programs and portfolios Project governance – a definition • Governance of portfolios, programs, projects, and project management, coexists within the corporate governance framework. • It comprises the value system, responsibilities, processes and p p policies that allow p projects j to achieve organizational objectives and foster implementation p that is in the best interests of all the stakeholders, internal and external, and the corporation p itself. What does project governance do? • Defines the objectives j of an organization / project. • Provides P o ides the means to achieve achie e those objectives. • Controls progress. Outcome e.g.project gp j outcome (Brown & Eisenhardt, 1997) Shareholder Theory: Companies maximize RoI for their shareholders (Clarke, 2004) Flexible Economist Conformist Versatile Artist Agile pragmatist Compliance e.g.project process (Brown & Eisenhardt, 1997) Stakeholder St k h ld Theory: Companies maximize i i b benefits fi for a wide set of stakeholders (Clarke 2004) (Clarke, Shareholder orientation Flexible Economist Paradigm Outcome control focus • Highest possible Return on Investment (ROI) • Project management as core competence • Professional project managers • Guided by tactical Project Management Offices (PMO) Conformist Paradigm Stakeholder orientation Versatile Artist Paradigm • Balancing requirements of a wide range of stakeholders • Tailoring of methods • Project management a core competence • Project management a profession • Guided by a strategic PMO Agile Pragmatist Paradigm shareholder return • Balances the diverse Compliance •• Maximizing Project management a subset of requirements of a variety of focus development processes for stakeholders by maximizing technical products or services. their collective benefits (behavior • Maximize • Project P j t managementt is i M i i value l by strict b t i t control) understood as on-the-side task prioritization of user needs. Institutions for project governance Project governance • Sponsor & Steering Group • Program management • Portfolio management Project P j t managementt governance • Board of Directors • Middle management • PMO Institutional setup for project governance Customer Project Customer interface Project/program/ portfolio tf li stewardship t d hi Usually made up of top project managers g Develops tools/ methods/policies /quality standards Program continue/ stop / hold, resources PROGRAM Framework of methods, tools and processes to use Best practice Support Program info Project info PROJECT Focus: scope time, scope, time cost, end results and others Strategic goals Project// program continue/ stop/hold, resources ’Go’ decision for projects & programs Project Portfolio Management P j Project selection l i Project priority Goal setting Contribution to portfolio objectives Providing appropriate project j t managers Ad i S Admin. Supportt Reviews, trains, consults Prepares project /program info Type of business Level of maturity PM capacity PMO? Ultimate success responsibility Project continue/ stop /hold, resources Management Office Board of Directors Steering Group Provide resources PPM project / program info transfer Middle Management Nb. of PMs Skills profile Areas of specialization Centralized pool or distributed Setting the framework of skills, knowledge and resource availability Governance structure • Governance defines the processes, roles, and accountabilities bili i off the h managers in i the h different diff governance institutions Governance of project management Constraints Very strong technology focus Strong project control focus Methodology Incremental Project Management Governance steps E bl Enablers Better project results needed Resistance to change existing practices Advanced Training C tifi ti Certification Steering Committee PMO PSO Bench Benchmarking e e s& Reviews Audits Mentoring Maturity atu ty Models Role and career for project managers Project management as strategic capability Governance perspectives towards projects j • A transaction to be performed – Goal: Minimize transaction costs – contract, contract process, process method and output • An agency performing the transaction – Goal: Minimize agency costs – Adverse selection problem – Moral hazard problem • A legitimate piece of work – Goal: a socially acceptable endeavor – conform with society’s society s and stakeholders values and expectations Legitimacy Legitimacy is a generalized perception or assumption that the actions of an entity are desirable, proper, or appropriate within some socially constructed system of norms, values, beliefs, and definitions. (Suchman 1995) Legitimacy • Morale legitimacy – Ethical approval of actions. Congruency with broader norms of the society • Cognitive legitimacy – Comprehensibility and taken-for-grantedness • Pragmatic legitimacy – Benefit in the eyes of stakeholders or society (Suchman 1995) perspecttive A Agency T Theory p Steering Group (legitimacy perspective) Instance of governance Project management Initiation Planning Project Manager ((Agency) g y) Implementation Project process TCE perspective Close-out Project in governance context Legitimacy Project Transaction Agency Board of Directors (legitimacy perspective) Strategic Objectives Portfolio management Portfolio Manager (Agent) Steering g Group p or Program management Program Manager (Agent) Project Management Office Project management Project Manager (A (Agent) t) Tactical PMO Strategic PMO Linking g Governance of Project j and Project j Management Through the Organizational Governance Paradigm Governance of project management Governance of portfolios, tf li programs and projects Governance paradigm The four governance paradigms tie together h and d categorize: i • th the corporate t governance approach h chosen, h either primarily stakeholder or primarily shareholder h h ld oriented i t d • The ways of managing a project, given the implication stemming from TCE, agency theory and legitimacy. • the project management capabilities and practices deemed appropriate p pp p for all p projects j throughout the organization Thank You References • Brown, S., & Eisenhardt, K. M. (1997). The Art of Continuous Change: Linking Complexity Theory and Time-paced Time paced Evolution in Relentlessly Shifting Organizations. Administrative Science Quarterly, 42(1), 1-34. • Clarke, T. (2004). The Stakeholder Corporation: A Business Philosophy for the Information Age Theories of Corporate Governance: The Philosophical p Foundations of Corporate p Governance (pp. 189-202). London, UK: Routledge. • Müller, R. (2009). Project Governance. Aldershot, UK Gower Publishing. Publishing • Suchman, M. C. (1995). Managing Legitimacy: Strategic and Institutional Approaches. Academy of Management Review, 20(3), 571-610.