Project Portfolio Management Tools and Techniques PDF
Project Portfolio Management Tools and Techniques PDF
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Project portfolio management tools and
techniques
Introduction
The last year of latent markets, reduced profits and continued increases in competition have led firms to demand more productivity
from its workforce, which is often frozen or shrinking in size. Unfortunately for many project management professionals, this
sequence of events and circumstances came to pass shortly after a sharp rise in the popularity of the project office, which proposed
to improve the bottom line through increased project success and predictability. The project professionals began to feel the pressure
to do even more than previously planned—they were expected to help make the organization more successful by aligning it tightly
with its strategy. In short, it is not enough for a firm to be successful at projects—it must choose to work on projects that make it
successful— which is exactly the purpose of project portfolio management.
Although the concepts of portfolio management are not new, having been practiced as early as the 1960s in manufacturing and long
before that in investment management, there is still a degree of uncertainty regarding what portfolio management is and what it has
to offer. Project portfolio management involves “balancing the management skills and resources to achieve optimum strategic,
financial and operational impacts … in all life-cycle phases” (Ausura, 2002). Just as investment portfolio managers adjust holdings to
manage risk and maximize return on investment, so too can project portfolio managers minimize wasted expenditures and improve
on the company's strategic and financial performance. The analysis of the portfolio of projects must continually be revised and
renewed, especially if the organization competes in a market that experiences quick change, high competition or prolific merger and
acquisition activity. The competitive landscape is an essential factor in determining the portfolio management process of a firm.
An even more significant influence on portfolio management is the corporate structure and culture. Whereas processes like project
management, system development and product development lead from point A to point B, portfolio management is an ongoing
process of decision-making. Portfolio management is focused on deciding what to work on, not how to do the work. Naturally, each
company is structured differently, with its own way of making decisions and obtaining approvals for the expenditures that accompany
a portfolio of projects. In organizations that are part of a parent company and are subject to approvals from that firm, the portfolio
man-agement process may incorporate an increased number of reviews and approvals. The decisions may be driven by additional
layers of complexity, trying to incorporate the strategic priorities of more than one firm and the politics that arise when the parent
owns multiple companies competing in the same space. All these factors influence the portfolio management process by adding
more considerations for evaluating projects and adding layers of approval. Further, the business space a company fills may impact
what types of projects fill the portfolio. For example, a software vendor may find that 80–90% of its projects are product related—
development, enhancement, or R&D. Whereas a processing company may spend more than 50% of its project expenditures on
projects that aim to improve the efficiencies of workflows and internal operations. This can significantly affect the types of metrics
and analysis that go into the portfolio selection process. Thus, there are many factors that drive companies to have the particular
portfolio management process that works for them. As long as the process is effective at making the company more successful in
terms of gaining the maximum benefit from the expenditure of resources, then portfolio management is successful—regardless of
the exact process.
Analytic Tools/Techniques
Just as there are infinite manipulations on the process, there seems to be an ever-growing collection of analytic techniques that
project professionals can utilize to help them manage the portfolio. While this growing selection of metrics can seem confusing, it
helps to organize them into three general categories, and then determine the importance of these categories for your organization.
One of the categorical breakdowns for these analytics includes Value/Cost Performance, Strategic Alignment, and Continuous
Improvement. The many metrics that are available, and the many more that will be created in the future, may fit into more than one
of the these categories, which may indicate a metric that is particularly useful. For example, a company that is trying to balance the
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importance of financial performance and the strategic fit of its portfolio may prefer to use metrics that provide information on both
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categories. However, before worrying about the specific measurements to use, it can be helpful to begin with some consideration of
the categories and the purpose each one serves.
The Value/Cost Performance metrics are not always about ROI, though certainly this is one of the key indicators that is used in
project selection. This collection of analytics is designed to point out what the company is spending money on, how that investment
will return, how the spending compares with company history or competitors and how the value/cost relationship will stand across a
portfolio of projects (Popper, 2000). For example, one of the metrics that CIO's often use to reflect their performance is a strategic
spend rate, a percentage of the IT spending that goes toward strategic developments. While this sounds like a strategic metric, and
to some degree it is, to a larger degree it is a measurement of the value of those expenditures.
Strategic Alignment metrics, as the name suggests, are designed to determine the strategic fit of the projects and portfolio. These
metrics require some degree of scoring, which is quite often a subjective process. If a company outlines strategic categories, then
the projects that make up the proposed portfolio can be assigned a score on these items, indicating how well it serves the strategic
goal (see Exhibit 5). Certainly, there are plenty of scoring systems to choose from, and many of them will serve the purpose very
well. The important thing is that the scoring be applied consistently. Additionally, the scoring should not be assigned by an individual,
or by the project team, rather, the responsibility of whatever governing committee or group of executives makes the decisions
regarding the projects that get into the portfolio (Cooper et al., 2001). Scoring that is done in private is subject to the biases of the
people who are close to the project or have other reasons, personal or political, for seeing the project approved.
Finally, the Continuous Improvement metrics are designed to identify the level of “operational excellence” in the process of managing
the portfolio and managing the projects (Popper, 2000). In some cases, these analytics can identify opportunities for improving the
process, or simply finding patterns midstream that may have an impact downstream on a particular project in the portfolio.
The metrics in these three categories can be used at two levels. They can be designed to measure the value of a project, or they can
be used to measure the value of a portfolio. In many cases, the same metric can be used for both. Clearly, there is a purpose for
both levels, and the two must be considered together for optimal portfolio performance. Project-level analysis helps to see the value
of a project, which can be used to determine if it should be considered a better investment than other projects. This type of exercise
can help generate the prioritization of projects that is ultimately needed to make difficult Go/Kill decisions. However, just comparing
projects by these metrics will not result in the proper portfolio. The portfolio level view helps to decide what is the right mix of
projects, one that achieves the proper balance of strategic and financial value.
ECV=[(NPV*Pcs-C)*Pts]-D
Obviously, the use of ECV is intended for projects that have a commercial/marketable deliverable. A cost reduction project, for
example, would not work as nicely, because it does not have a commercial value or commercial success probability. Additionally,
some people are hesitant to use ECV because it requires probability estimates that are somewhat subjective. To help ease that
process, some firms use a scoring model to assign probability scores. For example, Celanese AG uses a model that asks four or five
fundamental questions and only offers four possible ratings—one, four, seven and ten (Cooper et al., 2001). Each rating has a
description of what characteristics would cause the project to earn that score, and the scoring is averaged and converted to a
percentage for the probability. Similarly, Royal Bank of Canada uses a scoring model that allows only three scores—one, five or nine
(Cooper et al., 2001). Creating these probability scores is a relatively small chore, and it enables a firm to use ECV. The use of ECV
is typically performed at the project level, and it can be used in both Top-Down and Bottom-Up environments.
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One way to see both the return of a portfolio across strategic initiatives and the proportionate return for effort hours is to overlay a
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line chart of effort hours with a bar chart of planned ROI. The relationship between the effort hours and the ROI for each strategic
category can help to identify disproportionate effectiveness from one category to another. For example, in Exhibit 3, the proposed
portfolio that makes up this chart has included some projects in the Pre-Trade Tools product group that do not have a projected ROI
that is proportionate to the forecast for the Trading Tools and Interface (API) groups. Because there may be other projects to choose
for the portfolio, the planners and decision-makers may want to reconsider this portfolio.
Of course, there are many more tools for the Value/Cost Performance category of portfolio analytics. In fact, of the companies that
employ portfolio management practices, the most commonly used metrics are financial performance metrics (Cooper et al., 2001).
However, the most successful firms employ more than just financial metrics. A recent benchmarking study conducted by Research-
Technology Management determined that companies that rely mostly on financial performance metrics deploy “unbalanced
portfolios” that are not well matched to the strategy of the firm (Foti, 2002). For that reason, most successful companies employ
analytics that tie the portfolio to the strategy.
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Objectives Matrix
While scoring projects against strategic objectives may be a difficult process, the result allows a firm to assemble a portfolio of
projects into an Objectives Matrix (see Exhibit 5). This tool yields two very important scores: individual project scores for how well
projects support the strategic objectives and how well each objective ranks in the proposed portfolio. If the decision-makers see that
a strategic objective is relatively higher or lower than it should be, then they can adjust the portfolio to make amends. For example, in
Exhibit 5, the proposed portfolio favors the objective called “Reduce Operating Costs” more than any other, which might be
considered out of balance for a product focused company. An objectives matrix can be used in any firm, but it is particularly useful in
a Bottom-Up organization, because the wide variety of projects can all be displayed in one place.
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Continuous Improvement
There are easily as many continuous improvement analytics as there are for Value/Cost Relationship or Strategic Alignment, but
they are more prone to the nuances of the firm, such as structure or approval processes. For example, one of these analytics, which
is called a mortality rate, measures the number of projects that are requested of the project office and never find their way to the
portfolio or are not completed. The mortality rate can be measured at each gate or filter in your portfolio management practice.
Additionally, there are two general approaches to measuring Mortality Rates. The first is to look at the percentage of total project
requests that are killed at each gate or filter, and the second is to look at what percentage of surviving projects are killed at each gate
or filter. Such a metric is extremely useful in an environment that is more Bottom-Up oriented than it is Top-Down, because these
firms tend to generate more project ideas and requests. In this example, the mortality rate might indicate when too many projects are
being sponsored, or when the projects are not suitable for the portfolio based on strategic or financial inadequacies. On the other
hand, too low of a mortality rate may indicate that there are not enough good ideas circulating, which can lead to a weak portfolio.
Finally, too high of a mortality rate at later stages of the project life cycle may indicate weaknesses in early stages of the process.
Another analytic in this category is the tracking of effort spent in each stage of the methodology (both project and portfolio). Through
historical patterning, a firm can identify potentially harmful patterns and learn to make amends before the impact is felt. If the portfolio
management practice monitors for such deviations from the expected metrics, then it may be able to research the cause and
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intervene before impacts such as rework make their mark on the bottom line.
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Closing
Although this paper can only present a small selection of the types of metrics and analytics that are available to assist the portfolio
management process, the sampling is enough to hint at the types of functions that such measurements can serve. These metrics are
collected into a Summary Table that can be expanded as you continue to find new metrics that meet your own needs (see Exhibit 6).
The entire process of selecting the right projects centers around knowing what projects, and what combinations of projects, will yield
the best results for the organization. And while everyone may agree with the purpose of such disciplines, not everyone in an
organization will play along easily. In fact, some executives may resist severely, because such analytic approaches take away the
power systems they have worked so hard to develop over the years. Being on the losing end of a Go/Kill decision is a painful
experience. In fact, in product development materials, removing potential projects is called “drowning your puppies,” and the reality
of the practice is as uncomfortable as the expression implies. However, when decisions are made based on fact and reason, then
political pressures and false urgencies are less likely to steer the company away from its maximum potential. These insights into
project portfolios are especially important for the organization's success in tough economic times, or times of increased competition
due to regulatory changes or other factors.
References
Ausura, William J. 2002. Pragmatic Portfolio Management. PDMA Conference (February 2002).
Cooper, Robert G., Edgett, Dr. Scott J., & Kleinschmidt, Elko J. 2001. Portfolio Management for New Products. Cambridge, MA:
Perseus Books.
Edgett, Scott J. 2002. New Project Decisions: Choosing the Right. PDMA Conference (February 2002).
Popper, Charles. 2000. A Holistic Framework for IT Governance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
This material has been reproduced with the permission of the copyright owner. Unauthorized reproduction of this material is strictly
prohibited. For permission to reproduce this material, please contact PMI or any listed author.
Proceedings of the Project Management Institute Annual Seminars & Symposium
October 3–10, 2002 • San Antonio, Texas, USA
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