Level 3 - Managing Projects Flashcards

(43 cards)

1
Q

The role of a project manager

A

To manage the project team and drive the successful completion of the projects and its objectives.
Adopt client procedures and impose these on contractors, i.e certain payment notices or quality procedures

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Project Objectives

A

Quality as set out in the Employer’s Requirements
Time and Cost as per the contract

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Project Teams

A

Stakeholder Identification: Anybody who has an interest in the project.
R: Responsible.
A: Accountable. The decision makers
C: Consult. The go to person for an opinion
I: Inform

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Value Management Vs Value Engineering

A

Value Management: Proactive and conceptual. Its benefits are maximised at the beginning of a project but are experienced throughout construction. Done at earlier stage pre-planning.

Value Engineering: is reactive, specific and immediately practical. Benefits are mostly during construction in response to important change. Such as technological advances, supply chain problems, unforseen material cost increases.

Value = raito between output & input

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

How to implement a change control process

Why a robust one?

A

1) Identify the need for change
2) Design solution explored
3) Cost impact evaluation
4) Report to client
5) If rejected, design solution revisited
6) If accepted, pm action to instruct the change

Robust procedure required to ensure all contractual changes are reviewed and approved with client knowledge.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Risk Management Techniques

A

Avoidance
Acceptance
Reduction

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Avoidance?

A

Looking for ways to avoid risk from happening or recurring. Involves taking steps to remove a hazard, engage in alternative activity or otherwise end a specific exposure to the risk. Avoids any exposure to the risk whatsoever, expensive strategy.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Acceptance?

A

Unable to avoid, transfer or reduce the risk. Take the responsibility and absorb it. When the cost of other risk management options outweigh the costs of the risk itself.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Reduction?

A

Implement measures or management practices in place to reduce the chance of it happening.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

RIBA Stage 4

A

Technical Design
- Fully coordinated services, structure and architecture
- Fully detailed
- Specialist subcontractor design & spec

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

ISO 9001

A

A certified quality management system for organisations who want to prove their ability to provide products and services that meet the needs of their customer and other relevant stakeholder

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

What’s in a PEP?

A
  • Project overview
  • Project programme
  • Project organisation
  • Control procedures
  • Stakeholder management
  • Communication strategy
  • H&S strategy
  • Quality assurnance approach
  • Commissioning / handover strategy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

What is a project Audit?

A

An opportunity to review project challenges, risks and processes.
Reflect on whether the project is still meeting core objectives

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What is value engineering

A

Method to eliminate any unnecessary costs and/or increase the value of a specification or product
Could be related to design, specification or cost

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Benefits of value engineering

A

Improved performance
Identification of alternative designs or solutions
Reduced costs
Added value

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Risks associated with value engineering

A
  • Becomes detached from value management
  • Undertaken too late to be effective
  • Inadequate information causing incorrect assumptions
  • Insufficient participation by stakeholder
  • Insufficient time allocated for the process
    Unknown knock on effects to other elements of the design
  • Reduced ability to meet project brief
  • Reduced design performance
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

Value Management?

A

Overall concept of managing the balance between benefits and costs throughout the project.
Clearly defining a client’s strategic objectives
Considering optimum solutions
Deciding which provides the optimum lifetime value to the client
Includes value engineering as part of the process

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

When would you implement a change control process and what would you do?

A

Usually from RIBA 3 when the project brief is fixed.
1) Identify the need for change using a form
2) Design solution is explored
3) Cost impact evaluation
4) Report to client
5) If rejected, design solution revisted
6) If accepted, project management action to instruct the change.

19
Q

Why is a robust change procedure essential?

A

To ensure approved information is not changes with the expressed permission of the client.

20
Q

PID?

A

Project Initiation Document
Suite of documents that a PM needs to help the client develop the project at early stages.
- Brief
- Business Plan
- Issues Log
- Governance Strategy
- Control Procedure
- Procurement Strategy
- Financial Management
- BIM Protocols
- Quality Assurance
- Data Management
- H&S Protocols

21
Q

PID Into PEP

A

Project Initiation Document into a Project Execution Plan.
Once client approves the PIP it turns into the PEP, the transition gives the client opportunity to make decisions
More developed suite of documents as further information provided.
PM Reports on the progress of these.
PEP is a document describing how, when and who a specific target is achieved.

Targets include:
- products
- timescales
- costs
- quality
- benefits

22
Q

Risk management?

A

The identification, assessment and prioritisation of risks followed by coordinated and economical application of resources to minimise, monitor and control the probability impact of the risk.

23
Q

Where can risk occur?

A

Time, cost, quality, legal, H&S, Environmental

24
Q

What is value engineering?

A

Techniques relating to achieving value. The earliest used the better.

25
What is value?
What is worth to the client in financial, operational and functional.
26
Value Management?
Improving and sustaining a desirable balance between the wants and needs of stakeholders and the resources to do so.
27
What's a project audit?
Opportunity to review parts of the project. The systematic activity of examining and analysing a project to identify issues, concerns, risks, challenges, Once completed the project manager can advise.
28
What are audits compared against?
Usually an assessment against success of performance criteria. KPIS used as a benchmark. KPS should be SMART. Specific, measurable, achievable, recorded and timely.
29
Similarities of VE & VM
1. Information gathering 2. Creative thinking 3. Analysis 4. Devlopment 5. Presentation
30
VM Vs VE
Value Management: Proactive. Develops guiding principles for planning and design. Developing proposals to enhance value at Value Engineering: Reactive
31
Structure of project teams
Client (Development manager, sales & marketing, housing teams, customer care.) Contractor (Site manager, development manager, QS, Technical & design)
32
Employer' s Agent responsibilities
Employed on behalf of the employer to represent throughout the process pre & post contract. Appointed to represent & adminster the contract. Named within the contract. Trust of authority.
33
When is the Employer's Agent appointed?
Pre-contract - Concept Design, Tender & Contract stage
34
Contract Administrator
Role under traditional contracts. Specificallifentified within the contract. Impartial.
35
Lvl 2 - Document control pre & post contract.
Pre: collating contract documents. Understanding the requirements under the contract and using schedules to track information recievded from consultants. Hatcham Gardens - collating tender documents 1. Landscape architect: drawings 2. QS: Pricing document 3. Client / EA ERs
36
Post Contract handover document control
Using the information in the Employer's Requirements to make a master tracker. Monitor, update, issue and advise on requirements and where to get information.
37
KSB: Prior to RIBA Stage 6 handover tracker
Established a tracking system to monitor how many units have been snagged / de-snagged / completed. Updating and monitoring against the programme to understand if additional resource was required.
38
Hatcham Gardens: Value Engineering workshop at RIBA Stage 3
Spatial design We looked at elements of the works which could be value engineered. - Hard landscaping, soft landscaping - Play equipment - Furnishing ( Benches) Understnading client requirements but identified areas which could have alterntative specifivations. Options appraisal for elemtns of work with lifecycle costs, maintenacne costs, installation costs. Recording any changes.
39
Ashmere Level 3 How did you faciliate a lessons learnt workshop?
Following the defects I organised a meeting with all key personel from the project team. Client team, customer care, relevant contractors. Circulated an agenda on areas of improvement and for people to add to ahead of discussions. - Specification: common areas which were raised as defects, we look at alternative options to implement Phase 2 to prevent execssive time consuming to rectify. (MDF path panels, ceiling board joints.) - Defects communication breakdown, where there were multiple customer care officers, we issued a centralised documents making it clear who was responsinble for which actions. Asking for regular communication and reporting. - Missing information: we looked at improving the contractor's report to set up a good practice for Phase 2. Information had dwindled, e.g limited progress updates ( vague summaries), less waster reporting, dates for building control inspections.
40
Ashmere Railing Change
Open street scene as per planning. The client request an enclosed patio area at ground floor for privacy and security. We looked at options - Railings screwed into patios - Retaining wall & railings, more substantial - Lifecycle costing, initial costs and time associated with maintenance. - NMA applications, time and extent of works disruption.
41
Frederick Road Risk Register
Social: security and vandalism, neighbourly matters Environmental: waste and pollution Legal: Pre-occupation planning obligations Techncial: Any design chages, agreement of Impact: time or cost Mitigation: actions on how to prevent.
42
What is the role of the Project Manger Client Side?
Overarching rols to manage the project team and drive successful completion
43
Is Lessons learnt just about mistake and improvements?
- It's about insights, success, challenges, mistakes and recommendations