Booking options
£1,250
+ VAT£1,250
+ VATOn-Demand course
12 hours
All levels
Many projects are run by highly qualified, talented people with little or no training in project management. They carry out projects such as process improvement, marketing campaign development, new product development, event planning and production, as if they were "work". Project Management Fundamentals (PMF) was created to help those who need a solid foundation in project management to learn on the job without undue burden. is. This course provides practical skills, concepts and principles that you can take back to the workplace, and the insight you need to adapt them to your specific project environment.
PMF's course goal is to achieve quality performance by learning effective planning and control, so it emphasizes process-oriented and analytical, systems-oriented approaches. These frameworks promote the project-related problem-solving and decision-making skills needed in real-world projects. We also focus on the collaboration, clear person-to-person communication, interpersonal and interpersonal skills required for the project. These needs are recognized throughout PMF, but are highlighted in two areas:
Module 2 - People and Projects
Module 8 - Execution, Communication and Team Development
By the end of this course, you should be able to:
Explain the value of strong project management
Identify the characteristics of successful projects and project managers
Recognize how current agile/adaptive practices fit into project management
Learn project management processes such as initiation, planning, execution, monitoring and control, and closing
Leverage project management processes and tools based on case studies and real-world situations
Create initial project plan
Using standard project management terminology
Project management and its definition
PM value and key points
Competing Constraints and Project Success
Project life cycle
Overview of people and projects
Project manager
Project team
people and projects in the organization
Project launch
Formulation of project charter
Conducting stakeholder evaluations
Requirements definition
Define Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
Development of usable WBS
Utilization of WBS
Need for risk management
Overview of risk-aware planning
Identification of risks
Risk analysis
Risk response plan
Implementing countermeasures and monitoring risks
Environmental considerations that require adaptability
Quote definition
Quotation approach
How to estimate
cost estimate
Quotation Validation
Definition of the scheduling process and related terms
Defining sequences and dependencies
Determining the critical path
Examination of schedule risk and optimization of schedule
From baseline to execution
Project communication and stakeholder relationships high performance team
Definition of monitoring and control
See control through the lens of competing demands
Variance analysis and corrective action (earned value)
Adaptive environment considerations
Closing the project
Focus on project migration
Focus on post-project evaluation