A Quick Glance

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    Learn to Allocate Project Resources

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    Understand The Various Change Control Procedures

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    Define Quality and Learn The Various Terms Associated With it

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    Understand the Relationship between Programmes and Projects

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    Learn from Certified Instructors

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    Train from Globally Known Training Providers

Project planning, monitoring and control and change control have always been at the helm of affairs while managing an organisation and the various processes in it. To successfully manage projects in an agile manner current or aspiring Project Managers can enroll for The BCS Foundation Certificate in IS Project Management. This course provides an understanding of the principles of project management, along with those that relate to project planning, monitoring and control, change control and configuration management. Besides, it also helps the delegates to understand effort estimation, quality and risk management and communication between project stakeholders. We, at Pentagon Training, help the delegates learn the course from those who are certified in this course.

Who should take this course

Those who are affected by IT Projects whether directly or indirectly fall under the scope of the program. Also, the course is aimed at delegates who are new to project management and work within an IT project environment.

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Prerequisites

The course has no prerequisites but a training with a BCS accredited training provider is recommended.

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What Will You Learn

By the end of the course the delegates will have become familiar with the following concepts:

  • Planning Projects and their purpose
  • Implementation Strategies
  • How Products and Activities are related
  • Resource Allocation
  • Work Schedules, Gantt Charts
  • How to Monitor and Control Projects
  • Change Control Procedures
  • What is Quality Control and Quality Assurance
  • Approaches to Estimating
  • Risk – Identification and Prioritisation
  • Relationship between Programmes and Projects
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What's included

  Course Overview

This course is a suitable addition for individuals alraedy having PRINCE qualification.

At a high level, PRINCE2 provides a framework for projects in terms of what needs to be done, by whom and by when. The Foundation Certificate in IS Project Management provides a range of techniques of how those things can be done.  The course provides an explanation and an analysis of various estimating techniques that are available so that a Project Manager or Business Analyst can decide which would be most suitable to use.

Exam

The BCS Foundation Certificate in IS Project Management exam is taken on the afternoon of the last day of the course. The delegates are given a period of one hour to answer the 40 questions. They need to score 26 marks out of 40 to pass this multiple-choice closed book exam. Candidates passing the examination are awarded the BCS Foundation Certificate in IS Project Management.

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  Course Content

  • Projects and Project Work
    • The definition of projects, as opposed to other types of work
    • Terms of reference for a project
    • The purpose of project planning and control
    • The typical activities in a system development life-cycle
    • System and project life cycles
    • Variations on the conventional project life cycle, such as the use of prototypes or an iterative approach (e.g. the creation and testing of a series of versions of a product that converge on the final deliverable) or incremental approach (i.e. the phased creation and delivery of a series of products to users)
    • Implementation strategies e.g. parallel running, ‘sudden death’, use of pilots
    • Purpose and content of business case reports; the utilization and significance of discounted cash flows in such reports (Note: knowledge of the method of calculation is NOT required)
    • Types of planning document: project initiation documents; project and stage plans, quality plan, communications plan, risk plan
    • Post implementation review
  • Project Planning
    • Project deliverables and intermediate products
    • Work and product breakdowns
    • Product definitions (including the identification of derived from, and component of relationships between products)
    • Relationship between products and activities in a project
    • Checkpoints and milestones
    • Lapsed time and effort required for activities
    • Activity networks (using ‘activity on node’ notation)
    • Calculation of earliest and latest start and end dates of activities and resulting float
    • Identification and significance of critical paths
    • Resource allocation, smoothing and levelling, including the use of resource histograms
    • Work schedules and Gantt charts
  • Monitoring and Control
    • The project control life cycle: including planning, monitoring achievement, identifying variances, taking corrective action
    • The nature of, and the purposes for which, information is gathered
    • Collecting progress information
      • Timesheets,
      • Team development meetings
      • Error and change reports etc
    • Presenting progress information
      • Content of progress reports
      • Graphical presentation of progress information e.g. accumulative resource charts (also known as S-curve charts)
      • Use of earned value analysis, including where it would be applied in project life-cycle (Note: it is not expected that candidates be able to calculate and interpret earned value figures)
    • The reporting cycle
      • Reporting structures in projects
      • Timing, personnel and purpose of different types of reporting meetings
    • Corrective action
      • Tolerance and contingency
      • Exception reports and plans
      • Management procedures involved in changing plans
      • Options, including extending or staggering deadlines, increasing resources, reducing Functionality or quality requirements, cancelling the project, etc.
    • Change Control and Configuration Management
      • Reasons for change and configuration management
      • Change control procedures
        • Role of change control boards
        • Generation of change requests
        • Change request evaluation (e.g. its impact on the business case)
        • Change request authorisation
      • Configuration management
        • Purpose and procedures
        • Identification of configuration items
        • Product baselines
        • Configuration management databases: content and use
      • Quality
        • Definitions of the term ‘quality’ e.g. ‘fitness for purpose’
        • Quality control versus quality assurance
        • Defining quality: definition and measurement
        • Detection of defects during the project life cycle
        • Quality procedures: entry, process and exit requirements
        • Defect removal processes, including testing and reviews
        • Types of testing (including unit, integration, user acceptance, and regression testing)
        • The inspection process, peer reviews
        • Principles of IS0 9001:2000 quality management systems
        • Supplier evaluation
      • Estimating
        • Effects of over and under-estimating
        • Effort versus duration; relationship between effort and cost
        • Estimates versus targets
        • Use of expert judgement (advantages and disadvantages)
        • The Delphi approach
        • Top-down estimating
          • Identification of size drivers (e.g. function points etc)
          • Identification of productivity rates (e.g. function points per day)
          • Need for past project data to establish productivity rates
          • Factors affecting productivity rates (e.g. staff experience)
          • Estimation of effort for new projects using productivity rates and size drivers
        • Bottom-up approaches to estimating
        • Use of analogy in estimating
      • Risk
        • Definition of the term ‘risk’; components of risk: risk events (or triggers), probability, impact
        • Ways of categorising risk, e.g. business versus project
        • Identification and prioritisation of risk
        • Assessment of risk exposure (i.e. combining consideration of potential damage and chance of loss)
        • Risk responses and actions: risk prevention, reduction, acceptance, transfer and contingency planning
        • Typical risks associated with information systems development
        • Assessment of the costs/benefits of risk reduction activities
        • Maintenance of risk registers and risk logs
      • Project Communications and Project Organisation
        • Relationship between programmes and projects
        • Identifying stakeholders and their concerns
        • The project sponsor
        • Establishment of the project authority (e.g. project board, steering committee, etc.)
        • Membership of project board/steering committee
        • Roles and responsibilities of project board, project manager, stage manager, team leader
        • Desirable characteristics of project manager
        • Role of project support office
        • The project team and matrix management
        • Reporting structures and responsibilities
        • Management styles and communication (including same time/same place; same time/different place, different time/same place, different time/different place)
        • Team building (including phases of team cohesion e.g. forming, storming, norming, performing, adjourning)

Team dynamics

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About Worcester

Worcester is one the main city in Worcestershire, United Kingdom, which is 31 miles (approx 50 km) south-west of Birmingham and 27 miles (approx 43 km) north of Gloucester. The population of Worcester is 100,000 approximately. The River Severn at the city’s western part, which is ignored by the Worcester Cathedral in 12th-century .

The well-known Battle of Worcester was the concluding battle of the English Civil War, In which army of Oliver defeated King Charles I's Cavaliers. It is known as the home of Royal Worcester Porcelain, composer Edward Elgar, Lea & Perrins, the University of Worcester and makers of traditional Worcestershire sauce.

History of Worcester

The trade route past of this city which at final stage formed as part of the Roman Ryknild Street from the times of Neolithic. The position commanded a ford over the River Severn  and was fortified by the Britons in 400 BC. 

Geography

Famous suburbs in Worcester are Blackpole, Barbourne Cherry Orchard, Claines,  Ronkswood, Red Hill, St Peter the Great, Warndon, Tolladine, Northwick, Diglis,  and Warndon Villages (which was main housing development in UK when this area was being built in the late 1980s and get completed in the very early 1990s).

Economy

The city of Worcester, situated on River Severn and with transport links to Birmingham and other different parts of the Midlands through the vast canal network, became a significant centre for many light industries. The last part Victorian period had witnessed the growth of iron founders, like  Hardy & Padmore, McKenzie & Holland and Heenan & Froude.

Glove industry

Glove making was one of the flourishing industries of Worcester. Worcester's Gloves industry peaked from 1790 to 1820 when 150 companies employed about 30 thousand people. At this point of time, approximately 50 percent of the Glove Manufacturers of UK were located in Worcestershire.            

Landmarks

The most well-known landmark in Worcester is Anglican Cathedral. Before the English Reformation, the current building known as Worcester Priory is officially named as The Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary. Construction began in 1084 while its crypt dates from the 10th century. The chapter house is only circular one in the country while the cathedral also has the difference of having the tomb of King John.

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