Difference between revisions of "Feasibility Study Quarter"
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+ | #*[[Bar chart]]. A graphic display of schedule-related information. In the typical bar chart, activities or other project elements are listed down the left side of the chart, dates are shown across the top, and activity durations are shown as date-placed horizontal bars. Also called a Gantt chart. | ||
#*[[SWOT analysis]]. An analysis of the organization's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. | #*[[SWOT analysis]]. An analysis of the organization's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats. | ||
#*[[Strength]]. Any activity the organization does well or its unique resource. | #*[[Strength]]. Any activity the organization does well or its unique resource. |
Revision as of 04:51, 21 March 2018
Feasibility Study Quarter (hereinafter, the Quarter) is the first of four lectures of Operations Quadrivium (hereinafter, the Quadrivium):
- The Quarter is designed to introduce its learners to enterprise discovery, or, in other words, to concepts related to obtaining data needed to administer the enterprise effort; and
- The Quadrivium examines concepts of administering various types of enterprises known as enterprise administration as a whole.
The Quadrivium is the first of seven modules of Septem Artes Administrativi, which is a course designed to introduce its learners to general concepts in business administration, management, and organizational behavior.
Contents
Outline
The predecessor lecture is Idea Generation Quarter.
Concepts
- Feasibility study. In enterprise administration, an assessment of the practical potential of a proposed change. This assessment may consist of several evaluations. The difference between the attained value estimate, which is what the enterprise is going to obtain, and change budget estimate, which is what the enterprise is going to lose, is the primary target of the feasibility study if the proposed change is a project. If the change refers to the enterprise portfolio, another study, portfolio feasibility, is needed. A feasibility study is feasible itself when a business opportunity is its change stimulus. If its change stimulus is a business need, no feasibility study is needed; business analysis is conducted instead.
- Change. In enterprise administration, the act or instance of becoming different and/or doing business differently.
- Organizational change. Creation and/or creative alteration of how the organization conducts its overall business and/or what it offers to its stakeholders. The change can include its enterprise portfolio, organizational structure, people, work environment, technology, etc.
- Business strategy change. Creation and/or creative alternation of a business strategy. This change may include the product that is offered on the market, its scope or features, pricing, presentations, production personnel, and/or way of production usually in order to (a) offer new and/or additional benefits to the customer and/or (b) serve some organizational needs.
- Planned change. Change activities that are intentional and goal oriented.
- Unexpected change. Change activities that are unintentional and not necessarily goal oriented.
- Change budget estimate. The expected total cost of a set of enterprise efforts undertaken in order to implement a proposed change when the defined scope of work has been completed. In simple words, it is what the enterprise is going to lose as a result of the proposed change implementation. Because the budgets likely depend on the payroll and the payroll depends on work time, schedule feasibility needs to be evaluated before the budget. Because the work time likely depends on the project scope, effort feasibility needs to be evaluated before the work time. Because the project scope definitely depends on the product scope, deliverable feasibility needs to be evaluated first of all.
- Attained value estimate. The expected total value that the enterprise is going to obtain when a proposed change is implemented. Because this value shall have several components, several evaluations may be needed. The components may include economic, social, compliance, and configuration ones.
- Market analysis.
- Enterprise environmental complexity. The number of components in an enterprise's environment and the extent of the entity's knowledge about its components.
- Enterprise environmental uncertainty. The degree of change and complexity in an enterprise's environment.
- Market.
- Market research.
- Planned economy. An economic system in which economic decisions are planned by a central government.
- Free market economy. An economic system in which resources are primarily owned and controlled by the private sector.
- Competition.
- Competitor intelligence. Gathering information about competitors that allows managers to anticipate competitors' actions rather than merely react to them.
- First mover. An enterprise that's first to bring a product innovation to the market or to use a new process innovation.
- Restraining force. A force that hinders movement from the existing equilibrium (Kurt Lewin).
- Portfolio feasibility.
- Business strategy. The formulation of how an organization is going to compete in a particular business. This formulation may or may not include (a) what products, (c) resulted from what production, (d) at what price, (e) using what presentation, (f) on what market, (g) with what people, (h) with what level of organization's support this organization is going to offer, as well as (i) what financial results and/or competitors' actions would trigger what changes in those decisions. Rarely, a mature organization formulates just one business strategy; usually, there are several business strategies in the organization's enterprise portfolio since both/either different divisions may have their own business strategies and/or different business strategies are developed for different products, regions, and/or segments of customers.
- Organization. A consciously coordinated social unit, composed of two or more legal entities, that functions on a relatively continuous basis to achieve a common goal or set of goals.
- Enterprise portfolio. A collection of all businesses in which a particular organization is.
- Startup business (or, simply, startup). A business in its search of its business model or its ways of making money.
- Ongoing business. A business that executes its business model in order to make money.
Methods
- Project estimate techniques.
- Critical Path Method (CPM). A network analysis technique used to predict project duration by analyzing which sequence of activities (which path) has the least amount of scheduling flexibility (the least amount of float). Early dates are calculated by means of a forward pass, using a specified start date. Late dates are calculated by means of a backward pass, starting from a specified completion date (usually the forward pass' calculated project early finish date).
- Precedence diagramming method (PDM). A network diagramming technique in which activities are represented by boxes (or nodes). Activities are linked by precedence relationships to show the sequence in which the activities are to be performed.
- Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT). An event-oriented network analysis technique used to estimate program duration when there is uncertainty in the individual activity duration estimates. PERT applies the critical path method using durations that are computed by a weighted average of optimistic, pessimistic, and most likely duration estimates. PERT computes the standard deviation of the completion date from those of the path's activity durations. Also known as the Method of Moments Analysis.
- Proof of concept.
- Idea evaluation. The process of creative behavior involving the evaluation of potential solutions to problems to identify the best one.
Instruments
- Bar chart. A graphic display of schedule-related information. In the typical bar chart, activities or other project elements are listed down the left side of the chart, dates are shown across the top, and activity durations are shown as date-placed horizontal bars. Also called a Gantt chart.
- SWOT analysis. An analysis of the organization's strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats.
- Strength. Any activity the organization does well or its unique resource.
- Weakness. An activity the organization does not do well or a resource it needs but does not possess.
- Opportunity. A positive trend in the external environment.
- Threat. A negative trend in the external environment.
- BCG matrix. A strategy tool that guides resource allocation decisions on the basis of market share and growth rate of strategic business units.
- Strategic business unit. A single independent business of an organization that formulates its own competitive strategy.
- Porter's Five Forces.
Practices
The successor lecture is Business Modeling Quarter.