- Sydney J. Harris
Now that we know we’re discussing project change management, it’s time for a decision on how approved change will be addressed in the project. Let me describe a scenario to help illustrate the two schools of thought.
You start a project and complete and baseline the plan. It is a six month project. Three months into the project, you are now
one month behind when a key stakeholder requests a significant change to the
project scope (a new feature). You do
the planning for this new feature and it will add two months to the
project. What is the new completion
date?
One school says the new baseline is the former baseline plus
the new change, meaning the project is now baselined as an eight-month project
and still one month behind. The other
school says that the new baseline is current actual plus the new change,
meaning the project is now baselined as a nine-month project and on schedule. Advocates for the first method argue that the
baseline shouldn’t absorb the delay just because they’ve proposed a change –
and they’re right. Advocates for the
second method say that it doesn’t make sense to publish a new baseline with an
inaccurate end date – and they’re right.
The ultimate choice depends on subjective considerations over which of
the two better fits the organizational culture.
Since there is no absolute “right” or “wrong” choice between
these schools, the participants should all understand how change management
will work in this scenario (this would be a key section of the change
management sections of the Time Management Plan and Cost Management Plan). While this may not be a critical decision for
a P&SD
PM, for a consultancy
PM or a contracted third-party organization providing PM services, this
could be significant given that compensation (penalties and bonuses) may depend
on whether the project is early, late or on schedule.
Like many controversies where there is no absolute “right”
or “wrong,” this too will have practitioners who have an intuitive and firm
position one way or another; they may have
difficulty understanding or even acknowledging the other view. This can make discussions on the topic
difficult because they can get emotional.
If you follow the first scenario, the project team has an
incentive to “game” the change estimates, especially if there is a subjective
component to the estimate. That is, if
they are behind or over budget, this is their opportunity to catch up, so it
may not make much difference which school you prefer.
If you follow the second scenario, there may be stakeholders
who feel the project team is taking advantage of them to erase variances. Thus, in the end it comes down to the ethical
practices of the project manager and the project team.
Which method do you use and why? Have you experienced any problems caused by
this?
© 2013 Chuck
Morton. All Rights Reserved.