A Quick Glance

  • black-arrow

    Give you a way of addressing reasonable advantage by adding value

  • black-arrow

    Endorses sustainable decision making, depending on adding value, by addressing both monetary and non- monetary factors

  • black-arrow

    Provide a way to define aims and scope clearly regarding the organisation’s and end user’s short and long term needs

  • black-arrow

    Supplement current management practices to increase the value delivered and make better use of resources

  • black-arrow

    Increase value in line with the programme, project objectives and key stakeholder requirements

Management of Value (MoV®) Practitioner Training is a two-day training course will provide delegates with an understanding of the concepts which are designed to get maximum value within project objectives and the deliver projects according to requirements of key stakeholders.

MoV® gives a definition of value that includes both monetary and non-monetary benefits. It gives a method, supported by techniques, for allocating funds as efficiently as possible. The concepts of MoV® has developed from the successful use of value management across many sectors, over the period of years. This course describes methods that are as important as ever, although their use is frequently ignored and misapplied.

Who should take this course

MoV® Practitioner course is focussed for those who have already done with the MoV® Foundation course. Also, delegates who wish to enhance their knowledge and develop their skills. Also, it will be beneficial for professionals such as:

  • Project Manager
  • Co-Operate Manager
  • Program Manager
More

Prerequisites

Delegates should have completed with MoV® Foundation course.

More

What Will You Learn

  • The primary processes and techniques used within MoV® and the reasons for using them
  • Increase benefits, decrease expenditure and speed up delivery without affecting essential project scope or quality of service
  • Enable more effective delivery by employing fewer resources to better effect.
  • Learn the better way to respond to both external and internal
  • Allows delegates to increase the value they deliver and use resources in much better way make better use of resources
  • Know the best way to respond influences either external or internal
  • How MoV® may be applied at portfolio, programme, project and operational levels
  • Get optimal balance between investment and long-term operating expenditure
  • Supports sustainable decision making, depends upon adding value, by addressing both monetary and non-monetary factors
  • Allows delegates to enhance the value they deliver and uses resources in much better way
  • Learn concept of value and how value may be improved
  • Understand benefits arising from the use of MoV®
  • Know Principle of implementing MoV® into an organisation
  • Encourages innovation that is well aligned to the organisation’s goals
  • Know about Approaches for implementing MoV®
  • The differences in implementing MoV® at variety of stages in a project and the expected outputs from a MoV® study at each stage
  • Know about circumstances under which MoV® should be used
  • Primary processes and techniques applied in the MoV and the reasons for using them
More

What's included

  Course Overview

MoV® provides necessary knowledge on the most effective use of resources to maximise the benefits from programmes, portfolios, and projects. MoV is a combination of a set of principles, processes and techniques.The MoV® Practitioner course will upgrade the learning and knowledge the delegates get from MoV® Foundation course and includes further chances to use some of the techniques and concepts through practical demonstration. Management of Value (MoV®) has emerged from the tried and successful practice of value management across different sectors and over many years.

Our value management training course is aimed at all those involved in supporting, managing,   delivering portfolios, directing, programmes and projects. MoV® is all about enhancing value in line with the programme and project objectives and the requirements of key stakeholder. It is not merely about minimising costs.

MoV® is focussed on improving benefits and reducing expenses to speed up the delivery without impacting vital project scope or service quality. It is not just about reducing the costs. MoV is all about increasing value in line with project objectives. It captures fundamental stakeholder necessities for what products should do rather than what they are.

Approaches to Implement

approach to implement MoV

More

  Course Content

Overview to MoV®

  • Define Value
  • Define MoV®
  • Why It Is Needed
  • It's Place In The Cabinet Office Best Practice Guidance
  • It's Relationship To Other Management Methods

7 MoV® Principles

  • Alignment With Organisation's Objectives
  • Tailor methods to suit The Subject
  • Learn from experience and improve performance
  • Functions and Required Outcomes
  • Balancing the Variables To Maximise Value
  • Apply Throughout the Investment Decision
  • Assignment of Roles and Responsibilities
  • Build a Supportive Culture

MoV® Environment

  • Know external and internal factors that affect policies and strategies of MoV
  • Describe the portfolio, programme, project and operational environments

MoV® Embedding

  • Understand Process of Embedding
  • Key benefits of embedding MoV®
  • Key steps of embedding MoV®
  • Roles and responsibilities required when using MoV®
  • Overcoming barriers to implementation

The 7 MoV® Processes

  • Frame The Programme Or Project
  • Gather Information
  • Analyse Information
  • Process Information
  • Evaluate & Select
  • Develop Value Improving Proposals
  • Implement & Share Outputs

Applying MoV® Methods

  • Implementing MoV®
  • Preparation of MoV® methods
  • External and internal factors
  • Assortment, Plan, and Project thoughts
  • Operational deliberations
  • Implanting MoV into an organisation

MoV® Techniques

  • New Techniques in MoV®
  • Techniques that can be implemented within MoV®
  • Function Analysis
    • Function Analysis System Technique (FAST)
    • Traditional FAST
    • Technical FAST
    • Customer FAST
  • Value Trees
  • Measuring value
    • Value profiling (value benchmarking)
    • Simple multi-attribute rating technique (SMART)
    • Value index
    • Value metrics
    • Value for money ratio
    • Value Engineering / Analysis

Common techniques used in MoV®

  • Analysis of information
    • Benchmarking
    • Process Mapping
    • Root Cause Analysis
    • Discounted Cash Flow Analysis
  • Generating Ideas
    • Brainstorming
  • Evaluation and option selection
    • Option Selection Matrix
    • Idea selection
      • Allocation to Categories
      • Idea Selection Matrix
  • Weighting techniques
    • Paired Comparisons
    • Points Distribution
  • Developing VIPs
    • Developing Proposals
    • Cost Benefit Analysis
    • Building Decisions
  • Implementing VIPs
    • Implementation Plans
    • Feedback
  • Following up
    • Tracking Benefits

Implementing MoV®

  • Planning MoV® Activities
  • Responding To External & Internal Factors
  • Portfolio, Programme & Project Considerations
  • Operational Considerations
  • Embedding MoV® Into An Organisation
More


MoV® Practitioner Enquiry

 

Enquire Now


----- OR -------

Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Edinburgh

Edinburgh is the center city of Scotland. It is situated in Lothian on the Firth of Forth's southern coast.

Considered to be the  center of Scotland ,Edinburgh plays host to the  Scottish Parliament and the Royal Monarchs in Scotland. Factually part of Midlothian, the city has long been a center of learning. Its mainly a haven for those students who wish to study  medicine, Scots law, literature, the sciences and engineering. Next to London, it is the it is the main financial center. The city's past and cultural pulls have made it the United Kingdom's second most common traveler terminus after London. Edinburgh entices over one million overseas visitors each year.

The second most populous city in Scotland, Edinburgh ranks  seventh in the United Kingdom. The 2016 official population estimations are 464,990 for the city of Edinburgh.

Geography

Located in Scotland's Central Belt, Edinburgh lies on the Firth of Forth's southern shore. The city center is 2.5 miles southwest of the shoreline of Leith and 26 miles inland  from the east coast of Scotland and the North Sea at Dunbar. While the early burgh came up near the prominent Castle Rock, the modern city is often said to be constructed on seven hills. These hills  include Calton Hill, Corstorphine Hill, Craiglockhart Hill, Braid Hill, Blackford Hill, Arthur's Seat and the Castle Rock. They make it appear like the Seven Hills of Rome.

Edinburgh occupies a small  gap between the Firth of Forth to the north and the Pentland Hills and their outrunners to the south. It is spread over a landscape the product of early volcanic activity and later intensive glaciation. Much of the area is predominated by the Igneous activity that occurred between 350 and 400 million years ago. The actity was later coupled with faulting and led to the creation of tough basalt volcanic plugs. Glacial erosion on the north side of the crag created a deep valley that was later filled by the Nor Loch. These plugs and valleys coupled with a hollow on the rock's south side, formed a natural strongpoint to build the Edinburgh Castle.  Arthur's Seat is the remains of a volcano dating from the Carboniferous period, which was eroded by a glacier moving west to east during the ice age. This process formed the distinctive Salisbury Crags. The residential areas of Marchmont and Bruntsfield are built along the city centre from where the glacier receded.

More