Project Management in the Oil and Gas Industry
Table 3.11 Overall project progress measuring guideline. Activity
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2.Project management in the oil and gas industry 2016
Table 3.11 Overall project progress measuring guideline.
Activity Percentage Detailed engineering 10% Procurement services 5% Delivery of equipment materials 25% Construction 25% Installation 25% Professional services 10% 108 Project Management in the Oil and Gas Industry • Estimate work packages. Each of these detailed tasks is assigned an estimated for the amount of labor and equip- ment needed and for the duration of the task, which will be explained in Chapter 5. • Calculate the initial schedule. After estimating the duration of each work package and figuring in the sequence of tasks, the team calculates the total duration of the project. This ini- tial schedule, while useful for planning, will probably need to be revised further down the line. • Assign and level resources. The team adjusts the schedule to account for resource constraints. Tasks are rescheduled in order to optimize the use of people and equipment used on the project, which will be discussed in Chapter 5. These steps provide all the required information to understand how a project will be executed. The steps are systematic, but they don’t neces- sarily come up with the “right answer.” It may take several iterations of these steps to find this answer, which is the optimal balance between cost, schedule, and quality. The planner plays a key role in controlling the project outcome and flagging potential bottlenecks and problems for the project manager. It is expected that the planner set up a weekly review meeting for each of his or her projects with the following deliverables: • Attendees should consist of the appropriate cost engineer, project manager and senior project engineer, and construc- tion supervisor. • Review plans, identify issues, and agree on action steps to overcome them. • Receive hand marked updates from the construction supervisor. • Review the actual percentage complete versus the planned percentage complete, percentage milestones met, and approximate costs (from the plan) to be passed to the cost engineer. The planner should be seen as proactive not reactive, predicting the future issues and proposing solutions. The planner’s main skill is in the art of communicating with the project management team, cost engineer, construction supervisor, and contractor. A good planner is a good communicator. The questionnaire that covers the Pitfalls in Time Schedule Planning 109 planning subject is as follow. For the answers, contact me and the website www.elreedyma.comli.com. Quiz 1. After you have been assigned to a project, according to the schedule, 50 percent of the project should be completed. You discover that the project is running far behind schedule. The project will probably take double the time originally estimated by the previous project manager. On the other hand, you discover that upper management has been informed that the project is on schedule. What will be the BEST action? • Try to restructure the schedule to meet the project deadline. • Turn the project back to the previous project manager. • Report your assessment to upper management. • Move forward with the schedule as planned by the previous project manager and report at the first missed milestone. 2. You are working on a large construction project that is progressing within the schedule. Resource usage has remained steady and your boss has just awarded you a prize for your performance. One of your team members returns from a meeting with the customer and tells you the customer said he is not happy with the project progress. What is the FIRST action you should take? • Tell your manager. • Complete a team building exercise and invite the customer’s representatives. • Change the schedule baseline. • Meet with the customer to uncover details. 3. You have just been assigned to take over a project that your management has told you is “out of control.” When you asked your management what the problems were they had no specifics, but said that the proj- ect was behind schedule, over budget, and the client was dissatisfied. Which of the following should be of the MOST concern to you? • The project is over budget and behind schedule. • There is very little documentation related to the project. • The client is very dissatisfied with the project’s progress. • Your management is looking for rapid and visible action on this project to rectify the problems. 110 Project Management in the Oil and Gas Industry 4. During a meeting with some of the project stakeholders, you as a proj- ect manager were asked to add work to the project scope of work. You had access to correspondence about the project before the charter was signed and remember that the project sponsor specifically denied fund- ing for the scope of work mentioned by these stakeholders. What is the best action to take? • Let the sponsor know of the stakeholders’ request. • Evaluate the impact of adding the scope of work. • Tell the stakeholders the scope cannot be added. • Add the work if there is time available in the project schedule. 5. You have been working for eight months on a twelve month project time. The project is ahead of schedule when one of the functional man- agers tells you the resources committed to the project are no longer available. After investigating, you discover the company has just started another project and is using the resources committed to your project. You believe the new project is not critical, but the project manager is the son of a board member. What is the best action in this situation? • Determine when resources will become available. • Ask upper management to formally prioritize the projects. • Use the reserve to hire contractors to complete the work. • Negotiate a new schedule with the other project manager. 6. Maintenance and on-going operations are very important to projects and should: • be included as activities to be performed during the project closure phase. • have a separate phase in the project life cycle because a large portion of life cycle costs is devoted to maintenance and operations. • not be viewed as part of a project--a project is temporary with a definite beginning and end. • be viewed as a separate project. 7. A project manager must publish a project schedule. Activities, start/end times, and resources are identified. What should the project manager do next? • Distribute the project schedule according to the communi- cations plan. • Confirm the availability of the resources. Pitfalls in Time Schedule Planning 111 • Refine the project plan to reflect more accurate costing information. • Publish a Gantt chart illustrating the timeline. 8. You are a project manager and your project schedule is tight and in danger of falling behind when structure and piping leads to disrupting status meetings by arguing with each other. What action should you take? • Separate the two until the project is back on track. • Speak with each team member and give each a verbal warning. • Discuss the problem with the manager of the two team members. • Meet with both team members and their function manager to determine the source of conflict. 9. A project manager needs to determine the resources needed for the project. Select the primary tool from the following: • Work breakdown structure • Schedule • Expert advice from functional managers • Expert advice from management 10. Your role is a project manager for a large project. One of your key resources has started to do his task behind schedule and work quality is beginning to suffer as well. You are confident that this person is well aware of the work schedule and required quality specifications. What action should you take? • Report the problem to HR for corrective action. • Reassign some work to other team members until perfor- mance starts to improve. • Meet with the employee in private and try to determine the factors impacting performance. • Escalate the situation to the employee’s functional manager and ask for assistance. 11. What leadership style should you employ during the first two weeks of project planning? • Coaching • Directing • Supporting • Facilitating 112 Project Management in the Oil and Gas Industry 12. Which of the following are represented by a bar chart rather than net- work diagrams? • Logical relationships • Critical paths • Resource trade-off • Progress or status 13. You are finalizing the monthly projects status report due now to your manager when you discover that several project lead disciplines are not reporting actual hours spent on project tasks. Consequently, this results is skewed in project plan statistics. What is the MOST appropriate action to be taken? • Discuss the impacts of these actions with team member(s). • Report team member actions to the functional manager. • Continue reporting information as presented to you. • Provide accurate and truthful representations in all project reports. 14. An engineering office is giving you so much trouble that your time available allocated to the project has gone from 20 percent to over 80 percent for this small piece of the overall project. Most of the available engineering office’s deliverables are late and inaccurate and you have little confidence in this company’s ability to complete the project. What should you do? • Terminate the engineering office for convenience and hire another seller. • Assign a group within your team to meet with the engineer- ing office and reassign project work so that the engineering office work is easier to accomplish. • Meet with the engineering office to discover the cause of the problem. • Provide some of your own staff to augment the engineering office’s staff. |
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