P3M Engine Helps Program Managers
One of the ways to make order out of chaos is to organize. The brain recognizes patterns and can work on something familiar much more effectively than something unfamiliar. P3M Engine does some things to provide familiarity. P3M Engine organizes work according to PMBOK (Project Management Body of Knowledge) and it provides context for everything.
A program manager can readily identify the five PMBOK process groups and leverage them like a checklist to ensure a program is well managed.
· Initiating - Essential information is collected and communicated to ensure approval and successful communications.
· PMP (Program Management Plan) – The governing structure and operating processes are established. P3M Engine provides a great PMP, by default. It can be modified as needed.
· Executing – Everything that must be managed to execute effectively is included in P3M Engine. No need to go elsewhere.
· Monitoring and Controlling – Status reporting is very robust. Over 30 charts across all PMBOK knowledge areas are included to monitor operational effectiveness.
· Closing – There is even a way to provide feedback, collect lessons learned, and ensure stakeholder acceptance.
P3M Engine provides the right context for a program manager. Context is important. Context provides familiarity. It also provides an anchor from which to work.
In P3M Engine, everything is displayed for you with context. A program manager can define their program as a portfolio of projects and then view them together on one screen, as a program. From the context of that program, each project within the program can be viewed. Click on it to see a detail screen.
From the project detail screen, you can see singular information about the project, such as start date, end date, budget, sponsor, and manager (at the top). You can also see related lists of information (at the bottom), including:
·Status Reports
·Reviews
·Change Requests
·Risks
·Issues
·Action Items
·Decisions
·Deliverables
·Milestones
·Dependencies
·Resource Allocations
·Costs
·Communications Plan
All of this can be seen from the program details screen as well as the project details screen. So, you can view individual project information and you can view program information. So, for any given project or any given program, you can see all the status reports, all the reviews, all the change requests, etc.
From the detail screens for each of these, you will see the same familiar pattern – details at the top and related lists at the bottom. It is all delivered with context. For every communications plan, you will see a list of communications needs. For every communications need, you will see a list of communications events. For every communications event, you can see a list of documents, identified risks, identified issues, action items, and decisions.
If every performer, on every project keeps information in P3M Engine, then the program manager can see everything at their convenience instead of being constrained by the availability of project performers to get information.
For more information see http://www.p3mengine.com.










