Finding the right balance of documentation and methodology can be challenging on small projects. Here are some tips.
I have been managing small projects for some time now. Some of my project are really tiny, I'm talking about 8 hours of work max. Others can be 2 week or month-long projects. Some span several months, and then you get up into the 6 month and year plus undertakings.
As a rough guideline, here is what I use:
Level 1 (Projects longer than 6 months in duration)
Level 2 (Projects 1-6 months in duration)
-Weekly status reports to stakeholders
-Project Closure report at the end which summarizes the business benefits gained and effort spent. This is a good post-mortem look at ROI. Lessons learned are also attached to this.
Level 3 (Projects 1 to 4 weeks in duration)
-Simple project request form, where the requestor fills out their definition of requirements and business justification. Since these requests are fairly simple, I normally work out the details of the requirements over the phone with the customer, and just make updates in my project documentation log (which I keep for all projects big and small)
-Project Closure Report
Level 4 (Less than 1 week)
-For this I still have the simple project request form
I keep detailed activity logs for all levels of projects, even if it's a 2 hour job. My department has a sharepoint site set up that works really slick for this.
I find that using these guidelines, and the templates I've developed, really makes it easy for me to keep my ducks in a row and keep my stakeholders informed about what is going on, for any small to medium project I am managing. For more information, check out this great article by Simon Buehring which I found today and very closely matches my style for managing small projects.
This article was originally published at http://projectmanagementlearningcenter.com/.