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Spreadsheets: The Most Expensive PPM Tool You Didn

Spreadsheets are everywhere. Microsoft estimates there are 450 million users of Excel world-wide. And it is no wonder – the spreadsheet is a very handy tool. People use them for many purposes: from simple lists and tables to advanced calculations and graphs.

They can be a great productivity-enhancing tool and offer many advantages including:

  • Ease of Use – Most people already know how to create spreadsheets or could learn very quickly 
  • Availability – Spreadsheet applications are on almost every laptop and PC, just a click away. as a result, they have become a standard form of communication between computer users. 
  • Flexibility – Spreadsheets allow even non-technical people to do things they never thought possible without learning a programming language 
  • Inexpensive Start-Up – Because spreadsheets are typically already installed on most laptops and PCs, and creating a spreadsheet can be very fast and easy, they have very low start-up costs.

For these reasons, spreadsheets are the project tracking and project portfolio management (PPM) tool of choice for many organizations – both large and small. They offer a very quick, adaptable and inexpensive way to create a project inventory list from scratch. Then it is very easy to grow the use of spreadsheets for PPM from there. We create spreadsheets of our project backlog, spreadsheets of our active projects, and spreadsheets of our finished projects. And, it doesn’t stop there. We also create additional spreadsheets for our resource lists with availability projections and spreadsheets of our project plans. Some even create project scope statements and other documents in spreadsheets.

So, what does it take to implement PPM on spreadsheets?

Implementing PPM on spreadsheets generally requires the creation of multiple spreadsheets. One reason for this is that the information needs for decision-making change as the project progresses through the life cycle. For example, while the project is still in the pipeline, it is important to understand project alignment characteristics, value, the requested due date and the estimated start date. However, after the project is initiated, of greater concern are the project’s health, progress and the likely finish date. Another reason for multiple spreadsheets is that certain functions in the decision process do not lend themselves to a project list format. For example, if a scoring model is used for value assessment, this is typically done in different spreadsheet from the project lists.

The flexibility and ease of use of spreadsheets also leads to the creation of multiple personalized spreadsheets within an organization, often called the “not invented here” spreadsheet. This is an all-too-common occurrence when people who are not satisfied with the standard spreadsheet create their own personalized version that looks “just” like what they want. The result is multiple spreadsheets with the same information and the opportunity for data inaccuracies.

The spreadsheet was not built with the idea of multi-user access. However, some of the objectives of PPM are to create visibility, communicate information and facilitate discussions. This requires the information within the PPM spreadsheets be shared, consolidated and sometimes reformatted for other purposes. As a result PPM spreadsheets are typically emailed throughout the organization. Often a great deal of manual work is required to consolidate or reformat the information. Alternatively, some organizations attempt to set up shared spreadsheets, resulting in check-in and check-out requirements, and user access controls that are difficult to establish and manage.

True project portfolio management also requires a governance model and controls with an integrated workflow. Having a defined process with decision points and requirements for movement from one stage to the next allows an organization to remain in control, be consistent and make improvements. Spreadsheets were never designed to be able to implement a workflow, though there is no question that a PPM workflow could be designed and created by a spreadsheet guru.

“My solution is really quite cheap”

Since spreadsheets are so pervasive and inexpensive to create, they are perceived as a free solution for PPM. One blogger, who created his own set of PPM spreadsheets, recently commented, “My solution is really quite cheap.” However, he goes on to say, “But there is, of course, a manual overhead.” It is this “overhead” that can turn the spreadsheet from a cheap tool into a very expensive PPM solution.

Performance management consultant and founder of Hired Brains, Inc., Neil Raden wrote: “The benefits of spreadsheets are undeniable; however the drawbacks can be significant.” According to Raden, people have a tendency to be more aware of upfront costs than of the ongoing maintenance costs of using spreadsheets. With regard to PPM, the problems usually start occurring when the spreadsheets grow from a personal productivity tool into a departmental solution used by multiple people. Raden goes on to state that, “the ongoing effort to support a complicated system, built with components that were never designed to operate in a collaborative manner, is very significant.”

“Don’t worry, it is just a little chunk of ice”

Just like with the iceberg metaphor where you only see the tip, there are many costs associated with spreadsheets that are not apparent initially. In the end, all those positive characteristics of spreadsheets also lead to hidden costs and risks. These costs are generated from the creation and use of multiple spreadsheets, the attempts to collaborate and share information from these spreadsheets, and the fact that spreadsheets were not designed for certain PPM functions. The resulting hidden costs include:

  1. Wasted Time

    Spreadsheet users waste hours of time trying to consolidate information from multiple spreadsheets and transferring selected information from one spreadsheet to another. Individual users also waste time trying to perfect their own view by resizing columns and rows, justifying text and many other beautification activities that really don’t add value.

    For the University of Oklahoma Information Technology organization, spreadsheets were the standard for project lists. Mitch Seal, a project manager for OU commented, “Everybody had their own personal version of the projects and information in custom spreadsheets. These spreadsheets were rarely maintained on a regular basis. This made consolidation of information very time consuming and, in some cases, impossible.”

    With multiple spreadsheets and duplications of data, much time is wasted in looking for and correcting inaccuracies in the data. Or worse, these inaccuracies never get corrected and create a risk to the organization.

    With differing skill levels from the users of these spreadsheets, often there is time wasted as the builder of the spreadsheet explains the intricacies of their work, so others can use it. And, given that the creators are constantly modifying their work, there is a constant need to explain the changes. 

  2. Inefficiencies

    Spreadsheet Inefficiencies occur in multiple areas. The preferred method of communicating information from spreadsheets is to email them to others. In some cases, this is completed instantaneously. However, in other instances, there is elapsed time between when the spreadsheet was emailed and when it was opened. This leads to delays in work and decisions. Basically, the information needed might not be available to a person when they need it.

    Emailing of spreadsheets also leads to the potential for multiple versions of the same spreadsheet being updated independently, and even more inefficiencies due to duplications of effort. Special reporting also causes another inefficiency when certain people only want to see a subset of the information in the main spreadsheets. This requires the generation of special views of the data that can be communicated to these people – and even more versions of the spreadsheet.

    On occasion massive PPM spreadsheets are created over time with no thought to the value of the additional data or the compounding problems in using the new creation, causing data overload. More data does not always lead to better decisions. Often it leads to paralysis or “minertia” – the focus on minutia that leads to inertia. Along the same lines, spreadsheets have so many neat features, that we often over-analyze the information, creating new filters and generating pivot tables of data to our hearts content, almost always an inefficient use of time.

  3. Risks

    There is no doubt that the use and communication of spreadsheets can lead to higher risks for data security. With the portability of spreadsheets, it is very difficult to control access to them, both internally and externally. It is very easy to send a spreadsheet to a destination outside an organization’s control, whether intentionally or accidentally. Having copies of the spreadsheets and data in multiple hands only compounds the potential risk. To a minor extent, there is also a potential risk of making a bad decision as a result of the data inaccuracies that often occur.

Is there a better way?

Spreadsheets are a valuable tool and a great place to start at the beginning of a PPM initiative. They are a great personal productivity tool because of their availability, ease-of-use and flexibility. And, they will always play a part in PPM for certain types of reporting and analysis. However, they are not “free” of cost and become a very expensive tool when trying to use them for a departmental PPM solution.

It does not take much of a productivity gain to justify the cost of some of the more affordable PPM solutions on the market. If your employees waste as little as one hour per day with PPM spreadsheets, the costs can be substantial.

Orbus, Inc. an industry leader in developing display and exhibit products based in Chicago, Illinois was faced with this situation. They managed their portfolio of projects and resources on a series of spreadsheets that were constantly being updated and emailed throughout the company. According to Steve Westcott, Product Development Manager for Orbus, “We wasted a lot of time waiting for spreadsheet updates, emailing them across time zones and consolidating data. Using a tool specifically designed for PPM we were able to increase our productivity by 25%.”

Mitch Seal of OU also implemented a PPM solution and commented that, “It allowed us to consolidate all our project information into one solution and has the added benefit of giving us the capability to control our process.”

Summary

The proliferation of spreadsheets for PPM is an indication that users have unfulfilled needs. With this, there may be resistance to a single PPM solution and the abandonment of the more familiar spreadsheet. Spreadsheets are quick and easy. Although it is difficult for any PPM solution to meet this standard, it is critical that the solution be non-complex and easy-to-learn. It is also helpful to provide familiar spreadsheet-like views and not try to over-automate the process. This will just add unneeded complexity. Organizations have implemented a sophisticated PPM tool only to see their users fall back to the more familiar spreadsheets for these reasons. If you want your PPM solution to actually be used by your organization, keep it non-complex and used as an aid for the decision-making that will increase the value delivered by your department to the organization.

 


Steve Chamberlin is the CEO and Managing Partner of 3 Olive Solutions, LLC (www.3olivesolutions.com), a provider of Portfolio Intelligence™, an affordable SaaS PPM solution for organizations ready to make the transition from spreadsheets to an integrated, process-oriented solution. He can be reached at 847 993-1078.

References

Raden, Neil, “Shedding Light on Shadow IT: Is Excel Running Your Business?”, DSSResources.COM, 02/26/2005

Darryl Lyons’ Blog, http://dangermoose.blogspot.com/2006/01/project-management-using-spreadsheets.html, accessed on 03/07/2007

Microsoft and Excel are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation

Portfolio Intelligence is a registered service mark of Three Olive Solutions, LLC

 

Is the Gantt Chart Dead or Just Another Victim of Tool Disease?

I am a proponent of using lean and agile project management concepts, whenever the context calls for them, be it on part of a project or the whole of it. I don’t care if the project is a construction project, a software development project or the implementation of a PMO. The original agile philosophy, that I espouse, is the following: “To every project its own methodology”.

I consider what’s in the PMBOK as including major concepts about project management, universal processes for me, particularly the IPECC processes (what has been opened must be closed, being the gist of it). As for methodology, I have an agile mindset: “Context dictates”. That’s the paradigm I live in.

However, even agile management promoters eventually forget about what agility means and end up becoming tyrants, blinded by almost religious fanaticism, just like some traditional project management gurus. Some of those agile gurus even push for the adoption of a Universal Agile Methodology, for which you must be certified, (APMP certification?), to be considered genuine, the antithesis of what agility is all about. Concepts, methodologies and tools become a single, huge, monolithic dictate that must be closely followed to assure your salvation. Sounds familiar? Has agile/lean project management caught Tool Disease? Has it fallen to this plague that makes people stop thinking about their project context (or just stop thinking, plain and simple)? Must we use lean and agile as a big recipe to manage all projects, with compulsory tools that you cannot stray away from without being doomed? Sounds familiar again?

It happens to me quite often nowadays. When I teach project management “universal processes”, then talk about lean and agile, and then talk about specific tools, and then mention Gantt charts and CPM in passing, I’ll be strongly challenged by an angry agile adept. Basically, what I am told is that lean and agile PMs do not use Gantt charts and even forbid such “dangerous” tools. This is what was told to them by so-called saviours coming to this world with a new recipe and its brand new set of tools. This belief in the eminent demise of the Gantt chart is also reinforced by surveys like the one done by Scott Ambler (http://www.ambysoft.com/surveys/agileMarch2007.html), in which close to 70% of the 781 respondents consider detailed Gantt charts as having no value, or close to no value, in helping them manage their projects.

So here we go again with new fads for the unthinking mind. Forget about context, forget about Gantt charts, just forget about common sense. To those who believe that Gantt charts are a dead case, I suggest they read The Demise of the Gantt Chart in Agile Software Projects by Tate Stuntz on the context of agile software projects and on why Gantt charts are not a good idea in this context. To those who have to manage crazy projects like the “commissioning, start-up and production ramp-up of a two billion dollar aluminium production plant”, I ask: “Is it so different from the one I had to work on once…a feat we were only able to achieve with the help of a 10, 000 tasks CPM network and the associated, very useful, Gantt chart?”

So I say: “Think twice before not doing your homework in the name of lean or agile principles; you will find chaos and a big loss in your agility to see things coming and take proper action.” Never forget that “Context dictates”. Stay away from recipes, do not catch Tool Disease (or look fast for a cure) and do not forfeit your responsibility to be a thinking project manager using common sense and a functioning brain.

And you, what do you say ?