Management Planning
- Management Planning
- the endeavor management task
of properly producing plans for managing an
endeavor or
center
As illustrated in the preceding figure, Communication Management is part of the following inheritance hierarchy:
- Type: Abstract
- Superclass: Endeavor Management Task
- Subclasses:
- Endeavor Management Planning
- Center Management Planning
The typical responsibilities of Management Planning are to:
- Ensure that accurate plans for management activity tasks
have been properly produced, evaluated, communicated, and maintained.
- Eliminate risks due to poor planning.
Management Planning typically may begin when the following preconditions hold:
- Either the:
- Endeavor has started or the
- Center exists.
- The management team is adequately:
- Staffed.
- Trained in management planning.
- The process team:
- Is adequately staffed.
- Are producing the process for the endeavor or center.
Management Planning is typically complete when the following postconditions hold:
- Either the:
- Endeavor has been completed or the
- Center has been retired.
- The management plan
is archived during the retirement phase.
Management Planning typically involves the following teams performing
the following steps in an iterative, incremental, parallel, timeboxed, and ongoing manner:
-
Management Team:
- Make plans for performing the other management tasks:
- Ensure compatability with the process
that is produced during the performance of the following process engineering tasks:
- Document these plans for performing the management tasks.
- Evaluate these plans for performing the management tasks.
- Communicate these plans for performing the management tasks.
- Maintain these plans for performing the management tasks.
Management Planning typically involves the following techniques:
- Close collaboration with stakeholders.
- Process guidelines.
- Standards, templates, and inspection checklists for the management plan.
Planning typically results in the production of the all or
part of the following work products:
- Those who fail to plan should plan to fail.
- Half of the value of plans are in the process one goes through to produce them.
- Planning can occur during any phase.
- Plans must be maintained because they will otherwise quickly go obsolete.
- Management planning should be done concurrently and
consistently with process engineering to ensure the
compatibility of the managerial and technical activities.