ranking portfolio initiatives, bernard marshall, june 2012
TRANSCRIPT
Ranking Portfolio Initiatives
The challenge of defining workable prioritisation criteria
APM PfM SIG 14/06/12 Bernard Marshall
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Building a change portfolio
• Defining prioritisation criteria – Distilling criteria from strategic documentation
– Challenges and practicalities
• Building the rankings list
• Building a coherent portfolio
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Preparing for the future
Running the
Business
Improving the
Business Defining new
strategyBuilding infra-
structure
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Initiative Process and Pipeline
Re-direct
Terminate
Channel
Terminate
Nurture
Resource
SeedSet Direction
Experiments ProjectsIdeas Solutions
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NewCo Initiatives (sample)
New Brand Identity
Product Development Process
NewCo Environment Definition (“Culture” and Employee Assimilation
New Business Unit
New International Office Locations and Moves
Pack-Out and Distribution Transition
NewCo.com Reorganization
January, 2013 April JuneMay July AugustFebruary March
Infrastructure Development
Employee Self-Services
Customer-Relationship Management System
Virtual Supply-Chain
Web-enabled Information Warehouse
Vision/Strategy/Planning
Organizational Design
NewCo@NewCo
ACQUISITION(S)
New channels to market
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Criteria – Strategic and Business Rationale
You should ask these questions about each initiative / programme / project.
• Why do we have to deliver this initiative and why now?
• How does it fit with other initiatives already planned or underway?
• Who are the main stakeholders and partner organisations?
• Do we understand the scope, what success will look like, and is it supported explicitly by both users and stakeholders?
• What is the critical path and how will we know we are on track?
• What is our track record for managing similar initiatives?
• Have we identified the main risks and do we have explicit plans to manage them?
• Are we confident about our leadership, skills and capabilities to achieve success?
• Is the budget affordable for the overall initiative and the work to be done through to the next stage?
• What are the plans for evaluating the outcome of the initiative / programme / project?
• How does this initiative contribute to your authority’s business strategy?
• Is the high level business case complete – that is, is it affordable, achievable, with a wide enough range of options explored and likely to achieve value for money?
• Have we taken account of the wider policy context, including other critical policy initiatives such as FoI, the Efficiency Agenda, etc., where relevant?
• Have the critical success factors and benefits been agreed with key stakeholders?
• Has a feasibility study been completed satisfactorily, with a preferred way forward?
• Do we have internal / external authority and stakeholder support for the initiative?
• Have we identified the major risks and do we have outline risk management plans?
• Are the scope, scale and requirements realistic, clear and unambiguous?
• Can we confirm our planning assumptions, including timescales and the impact of any other enabling or interfacing initiatives?
and
• Is there a clearly defined and agreed governance structure with nominated key roles and responsibilities?
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Sample Ranking Criteria
• Regulatory Compliance
• Policy Imperatives
• Risk mitigation or avoidance
• Return on investment
• Cost avoidance
• Competitive differentiation
• Market share
• Revenue
• Innovation
• Flexibility/agility
• Nearness to delivery
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Simple Categories
• Compliance projects
• Strategic Projects
• Operational projects
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Weighted Indexing
• Establish the relative value of the investment
• Compare across multiple unrelated criteria
• Provide Aunt Sally but ensure that leadership gets to define the final criteria and weightings
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Bread and Butter Pearl
White Elephant Oyster
Feasibility
Value
Credibility
Fit
Readiness to deliver
Relative costs
Quality of Approach
Strategic relevance
Financial reward
Speed to market
Synergies and complementarity
One of the many matrices to help illustrate your work
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The Challenges
• Need for neutrality – process needs to be seem as extremely impartial
• Define the criteria as part of the strategy work – not the planning work
• Only a model to help simplify
• Start with an naïve objective caricature and then let the key decision makers justify why they are moving away from the model
• Look out for inflation
• Quality of the information available
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From entry criteria to planning criteria
• Multiple assessment criteria, quantitative and qualitative data and tools to collect it
• Not just a linear process – portfolio needs to be reviewed for balance and >Σparts
• Sequencing
– How and when to run the project in the context of the wider portfolio
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Thank you for your attention!
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Initiative Portfolios
• Speed– Integration
• identifies dependencies and manage sequencing
• minimizes competing priorities
• maintains focus
– Knowledge Management
• creates internal competency for managing change
• lessons learned collected in central repository
• Reduced Cost and Confusion– prioritizes and allocates resources appropriately
– reduces rework and redundancies
– enables employee understanding and acceptance
Integrating initiatives into logical portfolios
delivers benefits of:
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Balancing the Portfolio – cost/benefit
Benefits
• Regulatory
• Commercial
• Financial
• Operational
• People
Costs
• Money
• Resources
• Risk
• Attention
• Commitment
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Alignment to Organisation Strategy
1. Customer Service Excellence
7. Operational Excellence Delivery
3. Business Excellence Delivery
6. Driver Licensing Modernisation
8. Vehicle Taxation and Enforcement / Compliance
5. Vehicle Registration Modernisation
2. Data Provision and Information Support
4. Electronic Vehicle Licensing
Customer Relationships
– Strategic Imperative
Operational Excellence –
Strategic Imperative
Enabling Culture –
Strategic Imperative
Knowledge Management
– Strategic Imperative
Products & Services
Innovation –
Strategic Imperative
PR
OG
RA
MM
ES
Stra
tegic
Impera
tives
Po
licy In
fluen
ce –
Stra
teg
ic Im
pera
tive
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Mapping Initiatives to Priorities
Once Step 1 has been completed and all of the council’s key objectives have been agreed and all relevant projects and
initiatives selected, they can all be plotted onto a plan as outlined in this example.
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Collecting Project Date (illustration)Project code, Name of project, Short description, Project manager, Contact details, Sponsor, Directorate, Project Type (MSP), Start
date, Finish date, Duration (months), Not started, Complete, % complete (time),
1st Priority Theme, 2nd Priority Theme, 3rd Priority Theme
Statutory, Political, Strategy, Improvement, Maintenance - "Cat Index" (weighting), No of Objectives contributed to
Dependencies , Links to other projects, File name
Total budget: approved – real, Budget for analysis, Spend to date: approved – real, Committed spend: approved – real, Spend to
complete: approved – real, Approver, Approved, Approval level, Budget owner/Service Mgr, Key stakeholders, Customer
Number of staff involved - Direct >75%, >25%, >5%, Total direct, Number of staff involved - Indirect >75%, >25%, >5%, Total indirect,
Estimated FTE months – Direct, Indirect, FTE sum
Is customer satisfaction being measured as part of the project? No Comments
Is the project part of a programme? No Comments Which one?
Has Managing Successful Projects methodology been applied? No Comments
Is there a documented Project Initiation Document? No Comments
Deliverables, Next key milestone, Expected Benefits Date
Does the project enable continuous improvement? No, Comments
Will the project contribute to evidence based decision making? No, Comments
Will the project contribute to how performance is measured? No, Comments
Will the project positively impact BVPIs? No, Comments, Which ones?
Will the project increase staff skills? No, Comments How quickly will this impact occur (months)?
How much will the project save (£)? FTEs, Time, Process Efficiency project, Estimated saving, % of cost, Effectiveness project,
N/A, Notes Direct, Enabler, Approved, Real
Is the saving a one off or on-going saving? How long (years)?
Statutory requirement: Is your project necessitated by law/regulation? Direct- Indirect, Which one? Notes
Political commitment: Is your project required to deliver on a political commitment? Direct - Indirect Which one? Notes
Strategic priorities: Is your project delivering on a strategic commitment form the corporate plan? Direct – Indirect Which one? Notes
Performance: Is your project in response to an external performance improvement target? Direct
Is your project in response to an external performance improvement target? Direct, Which one? Notes
Maintenance - Is the project in response to a maintenance need? Direct – Indirect, Which one? Notes
Is your project in response to some other imperative? Direct - Indirect Which one? Notes
Link to Key Council Partner? Links to other projects, Number of customers impacted (#)? Communities, Adults, Children,
Business, Ease of redeployment, Can be wound down quickly? Priority index, Portfolio home, Projects for review
Analysis Tools
Portfolio Rationalisation
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Identify the full range of projects that to
develop the strategic capabilities
necessary to deliver strategic change
Purpose:
• Generate projects from the
capabilities
• Prioritize, sequence and plan the
transformation
• Identify the key methods and
techniques required for each project.
• Identify key dependencies
• Confirm what to STOP doing
How to Create:
This tool helps a manager be clearer about the reason for each project and the business goals
being served. It is easier to harness the different contributions required to reach goals, to
integrate contributions, and to prioritize projects.
Portfolio Matrix Identifier
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Using the scorecard to drive the organisation’s change programme
Corporate Scorecard measures
Results
Customer
Processes
People
Measure 1Measure 2Measure 3Measure 4
Measure 1Measure 2Measure 3Measure 4
Measure 1Measure 2Measure 3Measure 4
Measure 1Measure 2Measure 3Measure 4
?
?
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Out of the full range of potential projects,
agree which projects to prioritize
Purpose:
• Map the potential projects along the three dimensions:
• time to respond• ease of implementation• impact on business
• Use color coding to identify which projects to stop (red), park (yellow) and prioritize (green)
• What else can drive priorities?• externally imposed deadlines• the client's preferences• internal politics• critical paths• resource burdens• project staff• balancing with day to day business• assimilation capacity• benefit delivery profiles• greatest impact• continuous flow of benefits• risk management strategies
How to Create:
This tool helps in prioritizing projects.
Imp
ac
t o
n B
us
ine
ss
Time to respond ShortLong
Low
High
Ease of
implementation
HighLow
Project Prioritization Matrix
Analyze the relative strengths of a
company's array of products and
determine appropriate strategies for
each
• Use available internal and external sources to collect data on indicators of market attractiveness and competitive position such as market share, % revenue growth, and revenue in absolute dollars for each of the company's product lines.
• For each product, graph growth rate vs. relative market share; scale the data points to reflect product revenue in absolute dollars.
• Divide each axis into three sections –low, medium, and high – to form nine subdivisions on the graph.
Purpose:
How to Create:
This analysis illustrates product performance and suggests product strategies; for example: high competitive position coupled with high market attractiveness suggests investing to grow at the maximum digestible rate.
PRODUCT PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS
DataEncryption
MARKET ATTRACTIVENESS
HIGHMEDIUMLOW
COMPETITIVEPOSITION
WEAK
MEDIUM
STRONG
T1 Mux
Hubs
Routers
Fiber
T1 Access
NetworkManagement
DSU
Leased LineModems
LowSpeedDialModems
STD Mux
HighSpeedDialModems
Remote/Branch Access
Traditional Services> $500,000
< - $500,000
$10 M in FY 1994Budgeted Revenue
Operating Profit Bubble
Disinvest
Invest
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To optimize strategy by developing a
sense of the realistic state of the market
and company affairs
FIT VS. ATTRACTIVENESS MODEL
• Baked Goods
• Bulbs
• Cheese
• Fruit
• Kitchenware
• Meat/Seafood
• Stationery • Decorative
Accessories
• Indoor Plants
• Nuts
• Seeds
• Trees/Shrubs
• Gourmet Food • Bed/Bath
• Pool/Patio/Gardening
• Crafts
• Personal
Care/Grooming
• Specialty Apparel
• Camping Equipment
• Children’s Apparel
• Drug/Vitamins/Health
Food
• Hardware/Tools
• Athletic Equipment
• Fishing Equipment
• Hunting Equipment
• Sporting Good
Apparel
Category
Fit With
Company
High
Medium
Low
Low Medium High
Category
Attractiveness
CATEGORY EVALUATION - SPECIALTY/SPIN-OFF
Categories included in existing
or planned specialty books
Recommended additional
specialty book venture
EXAMPLE
• Identify product, category or market
overall attractiveness as being low,
medium, or high. Plot along x-axis
• Identify product, category, or market
fit with company objectives as being
low, medium, or high. Plot along y-
axis
• Evaluate newly created matrix; aim to
reveal products, categories, or
markets that fall under high overall
attractiveness and high fit with
company objectives
Purpose:
How to Create:
May oversimplify market situation. Requires judgments which are subjective in nature
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Project Responsibility Assignments
Identify the right sequence of projects
and programs for the business
Purpose:
• We have identified a "default change
sequence" from our own extensive
experience and academic research
into further case studies
• This provides a starting set of
assumptions for the best sequence
for major change programs
• These must then be matched and
tailored to the specific needs of each
organisation.
How to Create:
Project Sequencer provides a basis upon which to discuss sequencing and priority of activities
(projects and programs).
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Understand potential
opportunities and constraints
facing the client in taking
advantage of business
opportunities
Purpose:
• The Burke-Litwin questionnaire
should be applied.
How to Create:
challenges and opportunities of potential projects.
Customer Relationship
Management
Customer Information
Management
Alliance and
Partnership
Management
Corporate Brand
Management
Innovation
Management
Management of
Facilitating Technology
Innocence Excellence
Use customer information to understand and acquire customers
Become customer centric by using information to manage the complete relationship, meeting
needs and providing value added services through alliances
Market and company defined in
terms of products
Lip service paid to customer
lifetime value
The organisational focus is on the customer, not the product
Ensure that production respond to
customers, not vice versa
Alliances are looked upon with
scepticism.
Alliances are means e.g. of getting access to channels
Alliances are entered with self understanding and goal clarity
Alliances are seen as a way of pooling resources in a wider context
Use customer i Become custo
Has a managed style to innovation
Convergence Gap Analysis