applying iterative project management techniques to business continuity

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Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity. How to execute your projects and program in manageable installments while delivering value throughout. Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• How to execute your projects and program in manageable installments while delivering value throughout.

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Do your business continuity projects seem to drag on forever?

• Are you constantly changing course in the middle of long projects?

• Are your projects perceived as taking too long to deliver value?

• Do you have trouble gaining buy in for your projects?

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Iterative versus Incremental– Iteration (Iterative) - a procedure in which

repetition of a sequence of operations yields results successively closer to a desired result (crawl, walk, run)

– Increment (Incremental) - one of a series of regular consecutive additions; a minute increase in quantity (new)

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Iterative versus Incremental– Iterations are often based on incremental changes

New version of:• BC plans which adds human continuity elements• BIA which adds definitions of functions / processes• Crisis communication plans which adds scenario based

media templates

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Iterative versus Incremental– Sometimes iterations don’t include incremental

changesNew version of:• Risk assessment where percent probability and dollars

replace Low, Medium, High• Business continuity plans with reciprocal arrangements

among departments / divisions / locations for human continuity (versus reprioritization of work within affected unit)

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• The perfection trap (waterfall projects)– Delivering value is dependent on the completion

of the project (value is likely to be time sensitive)– Underlying technology, needs, risks, business

processes, tools used, etc… are in a constant state of change, changing your target

– When perfection is the goal, the underlying change causes work to start over, delaying delivery of value

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Driving success using the concepts of:– Greatest need– Greatest risk – Delivering value early

• By focusing on “greatest” you automatically:– Provide natural prioritization– Focus scarce resources in order of priority

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Why “need” is important– Satisfying stakeholder needs delivers value to

those stakeholders, creating support for the program

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Stakeholder Needs Assessment– Identify your stakeholders (board, executive

management, middle management, departments / divisions, customers, etc…)

– Identify top 3 to 5 needs by stakeholder in priority order

– Determine benefit to stakeholder– Look for commonalities among stakeholder needs

and prioritize

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Why “risk” is important– Risk and Need are very similar concepts– Risk is about avoiding negative outcomes – Retiring risks reduces probability and / or severity

of adverse events

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Delivering value early through iterations– Shorter duration (earlier feedback on assumptions

and requirements)– Negotiated, specific deliverables – Greater chance of successful completion– More likely to hit an ever moving target– Each iteration is a building block for long term

success

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Linking need, risk and value to create buy in– Identify synergies between need, risk and value– Articulate the business value– Prioritize with stakeholders– Determine the minimum action needed to satisfy

need, reduce risk or derive value with stakeholders

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Where to start (selecting a project, organizing a project)– Get agreement from stakeholders on an iteration

which addresses your highest priority item(s)– Add low cost / low effort work ONLY to gain

synergies on high priority work or to fully allocate resources

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Iteration planning steps– Identify your greatest needs, risks and value at any

point in time. – Identify logical steps to support fulfilling your

needs, reducing your risks and creating value. – Identify and communicate which needs, risks and

values have been addressed.

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Why it doesn’t all have to be planned out in advance– A star to guide by (high level long term vision) will

keep you on course– Avoids revisions to the long term plan due to

underlying change (there is no detailed, long term plan)

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Why it doesn’t all have to be planned out in advance (continued)– Constantly re-prioritizing and working on highest

priority items– Laying building blocks for a successful program

Applying Iterative Project Management Techniques to Business Continuity

• Final thoughts– Programs early in their maturity have lots of needs

and risks– Fully mature programs may not need iterations to

address needs and risks (iterations serve to keep content current)

Jeff Puetz MBCP, ARM, AUDirector - Enterprise Risk ManagementBusiness Continuity ManagerWest Bend Mutual Insurance(262) 334-6451 (office)

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