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enterprise project management (EPM)

By Stephen J. Bigelow

What is enterprise project management?

Enterprise project management (EPM) represents the professional practices, processes and tools involved in managing multiple projects taking place simultaneously across the enterprise.

Where traditional project management typically involves one specific project with narrowly defined goals, EPM embraces all individual projects. It provides uniform strategies and processes intended to enhance project management efficiency, while ensuring that all projects collectively meet business goals.

EPM is fundamentally a means of organizing and tracking multiple complex projects. Traditional projects are often approached as silos with unique teams and resources. This can lead to duplication of effort, repeated mistakes (due to lack of communication among project managers), inconsistent decision-making and overlooked opportunities.

EPM attempts to provide an umbrella of consistent project management to avoid the potential pitfalls of individual project management while keeping projects focused on overall business strategies.

What do enterprise project managers do?

The role of an enterprise project manager is to manage the entire scope of a project. A common analogy is that if each project manager is the captain of a ship, the enterprise project manager would be the admiral of the fleet. The range of enterprise project manager responsibilities varies between organizations and activities can be broad, frequently including the following:

An enterprise project manager is typically part of a high-level strategic team or organizational department, which is sometimes called an enterprise project management office (EPMO). The EPMO reports to C-suite leadership such as a COO, CIO or CEO.

Elements of enterprise project management

Enterprise project management involves a wide range of responsibilities for the enterprise project manager and EPMO. While actual activities can vary between organizations, there are six fundamental elements involved in EPM. As a minimum, an EPMO will do the following:

Enterprise project management methodologies

Generally, an EPM methodology is a project management methodology that is adopted and applied to all projects across the enterprise. There are many popular project management methodologies which may be adopted enterprise-wide including the following:

Some of the most popular contenders include agile versus waterfall, and critical path versus critical chain. However, all these methodologies can present tradeoffs that the business must evaluate before standardizing. The real choice of methodology for enterprise-wide use should involve careful consideration, including the following:

Some organizations may opt for two or more methodologies when a single common methodology cannot adequately address all the organization's projects.

Benefits of enterprise project management

Enterprise project management provides a centralized means of project guidance, oversight and standardization since every project is managed consistently using similar processes and criteria. Ideally, this brings benefits to the enterprise, including the following:

Challenges of enterprise project management

Despite the benefits, EPM has several potential challenges that business leaders should consider such as the following:

How to implement enterprise project management

There is no single way to implement EPM across an organization. Consequently, business leaders should first evaluate whether EPM is necessary and appropriate for the organization. For example, consider the following questions:

Any of these situations may signal an enterprise ready for EPM. Still, the business must be ready for the centralized authority, management, collaboration and reporting needed for EPM. Stakeholders and managers must buy into the idea and be willing to align business and project goals -- otherwise an EPMO initiative can fail.

A common approach to EPM implementation follows several general steps including the following:

Enterprise project management vs. traditional project management

Enterprise project management and traditional project management serve similar goals but differ in scope and responsibilities.

Traditional project management focuses on the effective completion of a single project or initiative. The project manager plans, manages and implements the project with attention given to the goals of the project itself -- build a bridge, create software to perform a given set of functions, and so on. Project managers perform a more tactical role and report to the enterprise project manager.

Enterprise project management provides oversight for the organization's entire project portfolio. While this involves attention to project planning, management and implementation, EPM also provides a broader strategic view of business goals. EPM not only facilitates and supports traditional project management, it standardizes planning for better efficiency and shapes projects to better align with the business. Enterprise project managers perform a strategic role and report to a C-level executive.

16 Feb 2023

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