The Challenge of Egypt – Traditional Project Management
- Explore Project Management best practices and how to effectively use them
- Increase Project performance and value
- Understand project roles and dependencies
- Get more out your Project Management training, translate theory into practice
- Improve Team Work and identify improvements to the way you manage and run projects
Do you recognize this?
Still 70% of projects fail. Figures may vary accross industries and based upon who and how the research is being performed. But however you look at it the figure is too high. Why? We trained our employees, employees passed the Prince2® or PMI certification. We implemented the Project Management framework but we still run out off budget, finish too late, Risks weren’t well managed, the final result isn’t what was required.
Why is this?
- Most of the training is focused on getting certified, which means, “Train to pass the exam”. We forget, or fail to put the effort in, to teach the students how to apply the theory in day-to-day work.
- We implemented the framework, but we did not embed the new behavior in the organization, or we did not define a shared picture on how we all see the way we run and behave in our projects.
- We did not implement learning cycles. We did not learn from each project closure. The lessons learned are NOT shared with the other colleagues, or used to improve the success of projects.
“After running the Challenge of Egypt™ we now have a clear picture of how we want our projects to be managed. We explore the key roles, the key processes and the Key behaviors. We used the action list in our day-to-day work.”
About the Challenge of Egypt™
Scenario We are in ancient Egypt. The Pharaoh asked the leader of the steering group to build a Pyramid to secure his journey to the afterworld. This being essential for his eternal existance. The steering group assigns a Project Leader and a project team to execute the project. The team has to deal with all kinds of events and set backs to keep the project within Scope, Quality, Budget and Time. This requires managing work packages, managing risks, managing tolerances and all those other best practice project management processes and procedures. But be prepared. The Pharaoh comes with other issues and has other ideas which may impact the project.
Objectives the simulation will be customized towards your own specific needs and learning objectives. But in general these are the main objectives:
- Learn how to apply Project Management best practices and learn the essence of Prince2®, PMI®, PMBOK®
- Learn how to ensure the business case is realized
- Learn how to stay customer focused and set the right priorities based on customer requirements
- Develop communication and team competences.
Duration of the simulation: | 1 day |
Number of participants: | 8 – 12 |
Basic expertise: | No basic understanding of project management and processes is needed |