Over the past decade or so we have been constantly
bombarded with news about private and public projects that have either
delivered scope at well over the expected budget or had to reduce scope
to even come near to the original budget. Current thinking within
project management methodologies only discuss the financial aspects of
a project at a high level, leaving the "student" without any real way
of working to greater understand the impact of their decisions on the
financial results of the programme. In turn, the business case
development is usually given minimal time and is a rushed job in the
end. Investing in the correct people and time up front to review
feasibility and secondly the business case is a must to ensure the
total on target delivery of a project.
In the financial climate
we are in, where budgets and costs are being cut, the time is now to
ensure that whatever funding a company has available, that they invest
it wisely - to do that you need to ensure that the project in the end -
budget, costs and benefits are comprehensively reviewed.
With
this in mind - using the Pathfinder Project Management Methodology as a
basis, below are the 10 key steps to successful project financial
management
(1) On new projects - invest time creating accurate
feasibility studies and business cases, if this is a rushed job - in
the end the results will deliver overspends.
(2) Review your
project portfolio - are you carrying out the correct projects, are they
nice to haves, are they being done for internal political gain - ensure
each business case is robust and adds value to the future of the firm -
spend time using previous experienced individuals to review and
re-review the business case.
(3) Concentrate reviews just as hard
on the benefits as the cost. In 80% of projects, once they are in,
nobody wants to go back and review if they delivered as promised. So
ensure from the start of the project you continuously check that as
well as costs being on budget, that changes to your project have not
altered your benefits.
(4) Cost cutting is not always the answer
- allocate resource to "added value" projects - in today's world
cutting heads is a an easy short term fix, do not throw out the baby
with the bath water and leave the firm with projects in-flight with no
experience to deliver them. Instead review your project spend and as in
(2) concentrate on adding value.
(5) Workforce development -
up-skill their financial management knowledge, develop staff in
leadership, health and safety, motivation etc - so when you put a
non-finance manager in charge of a large project, is it not about time
they were given the financial know-how. Don't leave financial
management to chance - develop your workforce.
(6) Break down the
project into financially manageable sections. Too many projects work on
the basis of a "pot of cash" - spend it as per the budget and if luck
is with them, great! Instead take the "pot" and break it down into
manageable sections - mapped to your project structure, that way you
can see where budgets are by "workstream" and what ones are
over/underspending.
(7) "one point of contact accounting" - too
many managers will lead to budget overspend - following on from (6)
above - The overall programme manager is responsible for the budget in
total, at the same time each head of the projects parts should then be
responsible for managing their part of the budget. This leads to one
finance manager dealing with one project manager, ensuring a consistent
relationship.
(8) Deliver focused and meaningful financial
reporting to enable accurate decision-making. More is less - agree on
what reporting is required from the project at the start and
continuously improve until it is what the project needs to manage the
programme of work. Because an accountant can deliver 20 pages of
analysis a month to each project manager it does not mean that it's
correct - save the trees - minimise the reporting and improve the
decision making.
(9) Communication - have a strong relationship
between your project and finance manager. Finance cannot be back
office, they need to be part of the project team and be seen to be so,
and therefore open and honest communication channels lead to no
surprises.
(10) Finance should be made aware of all potential
risks / issues and a probable cost - if a problem has or may arise warn
finance early, finance will be limited to what they can do to assist
"after the event".
Colin
McNally is F.C.M.A with over 13 years experience in Blue Chip
companies. He has now founded CJM Project Financial Management Ltd, and
copyrighted the Pathfinder Project Management Methodology. Pathfinder
is a methodology which advances the current thinking on project
financial management. You can read more at http://www.project-financial-management.co.uk