On CBSNews.com: iPanic? Headphones Hinder Pacemakers

Use milestones to check on the health of your project

Tags: Strategy, Project management, Tools & Techniques, SECURITY, Tom Mochal, health care, workplan, Project Management Newsletter

  • Save
  • Print
  • Recommend
  • 0

Takeaway: Milestones provide an opportunity to validate the current state of the project.

A milestone is a scheduling event that signifies the completion of a major deliverable or a set of related deliverables. A milestone, by definition, has zero duration and no effort. A milestone is a marker in your schedule. You don't place milestones in your schedule based on a calendar event. In other words, you don't schedule a milestone for the first Friday of every month.

Milestones are great for managers and the sponsor because they provide an opportunity to validate the current state of the project against the overall schedule. Since each milestone signifies that some set of underlying work has been completed, your sponsor should know immediately that your project is behind schedule if a milestone date is missed. The sponsor does not need to know the individual status of all the activities in the workplan. He just needs to keep track of the status of the milestones to know if a project is on schedule or not.

Tips in your inbox
TLooking for expert IT project management? Get the help you need from TechRepublic's free Project Management newsletter, delivered each Wednesday.
Automatically sign up today!

In addition to signifying the status of the project against the workplan, milestones also provide a great way to take a step back and validate the overall health of the project. In particular, the following types of activities can be scheduled for (or at) each major milestone.

  • Make sure that the sponsor has approved any external deliverables produced up to this point.
  • Check the workplan to make sure that you understand the activities required to complete the remainder of the project. You did this when the project started, but each milestone gives you a chance to re-validate that you still understand what is required to complete the project.
  • Double-check the effort, duration, and cost estimates for the remaining work. Based on prior work completed to date, you may have a much better feel for whether the remaining estimates are accurate. If they aren't, you'll need to modify the workplan. If it appears that your budget or deadline will not be met, raise an issue and resolve the problems now.
  • Issue a formal status update and make any other communications specified in the Communication Plan.
  • Evaluate the Risk Management Plan for previously identified risks to ensure the risks are being managed successfully. You should also perform another risk assessment to identify new risks.
  • Update all other project management logs and reports.

These activities should be done on a regular basis, but a milestone date is a good time to catch up, validate where you are, get clear on what's next, and get prepared to charge ahead.


  • Save
  • Print
  • Recommend
  • 0

Print/View all Posts Comments on this article

Don't Forget the Efforts/Costs dieter_w | 04/05/06
It's always good to set milestones... rashekar@... | 04/05/06
Communication Plan?? jim.peter@... | 04/05/06

What do you think?

Article Categories

Security
Security Solutions, IT Locksmith
Networking and Communications
E-mail Administration NetNote, Cisco Routers and Switches
CIO and IT Management
Project Management, CIO Issues, Strategies that Scale
Desktops, Laptops & OS
Windows 2000 Professional, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Access, Windows XP,
Data Management
Oracle, SQL Server
Servers
Windows NT, Linux NetNote, Windows Server 2003
Career Development
Geek Trivia
Software/Web Development
Web Development Zone, Visual Basic, .NET

Managed Hosting<

advertisement
Click Here