Introduction
Supply Management is the process of managing relationships, information, and materials flow across organizational boundaries to deliver enhanced customer service and economic value. Supply managers aim towards synchronizing and amalgamating these flows through the implementation of a specific ordering of work activities across time and place, with a beginning, an end, clearly identified inputs and outputs, as well as a structure for action.
Project Management is also a structured process of managing workflow in a specific order across time and place. The close similarities between these two processes provide a firm foundation to expand the supply manager’s worldview to adopt project management principles and techniques. This course focuses on integrating project management principles into the supply management process. In this course, you will learn how project management concepts could be applied to enhance supply management. You will also gain an understanding of the tools and techniques used to initiate, execute, manage, and control a project. Possible initiatives for the improvement of supply management through the application of project management concepts will be emphasized.
Conference Objectives of Project Management for Supply Chain Professionals
Following the completion of this conference, delegates will learn how to:
- Organize, plan, launch, track, and close a project
- Create a clear project objective and work breakdown structure
- Master project planning, execution, and control skills
- Identify the skills necessary to lead or serve on a project team
- Utilize project management-related techniques
- Create an accurate project timeline
- Incorporate uncertainties in project time and cost plans
- Use various project scheduling techniques
- Plan a project balancing the constraints of scope, time, cost, and quality
- Complete project cost estimation and financial evaluations
- Build and maintain effective and efficient project procedures and processes
- Identify improvement opportunities to better manage supply chains
- Demonstrate proficiency in developing project plans and making sound decisions
Conference Process of Project Management for Supply Chain Professionals
The conference is a mixture of speaker input, several mini-case studies, and facilitated discussions. Participants will gain detailed knowledge of project management concepts and techniques by active participation in group discussions.
Conference Benefits of Project Management for Supply Chain Professionals
Delegates attending this course will gain:
- An understanding of the striking similarities between supply management and project management; and learning new skills to apply project management principles as effective tools which if successfully implemented will enhance the delegate’s professional capacity to manage supply chains.
- Improved personal knowledge of developing and managing project plans, and identifying, controlling, and responding to project risks.
- An enhanced personal decision-making capability.
Course Results of Project Management for Supply Chain Professionals
Individuals and organizations will be better educated about perceiving and managing their supply systems as unique projects. Individuals will learn how to identify potential opportunities for supply chain improvements and will have the ability to demonstrate clear, quantifiable short and long-term results thus ensuring better supply chain performance. Organizations, in turn, will have better control of their supply chains through the utilization of project management best practices.
Core Competencies of Project Management for Supply Chain Professionals
Day 1: Delegates attending this course will enhance their competencies in the following areas:
- Project Management
- Project Planning and Monitoring
- Project Scheduling and Budgeting
- Risk Management Planning
- Team Building
- Relationship Management
- Principled Negotiations
- Trend Analysis and Forecasting
- Project Reporting
Day 2: The Conference Content
Setting up the Scene
- Project management terminology and life-cycle project phases
- Overview of the Project Management Process
- Key areas of Project Management Body of Knowledge
- Supply management and project management: similarities and differences
- Types of integration
- Impact of early decisions on project success
- Classical project phases
- Project scope – parameters & constraints
- The concept of Value-for-Money project delivery
- The project supply chain
Day 3: The Project Environment – Objective Parameters
- Opportunities and Problems
- Identifying, analyzing, and managing project stakeholders
- Project Charter Development
- Beyond SMART Objectives
- Introduction to project planning
- Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
- Task characteristics and duration assessment
- Planning and scheduling methods, including critical path scheduling
- The importance of schedule updating
- Incorporating planning in planning and scheduling
- Principles of project estimating
- Understanding resource estimating in projects
- Cost estimation techniques
- Implementing cost control
- Contingency and escalation
Day 4: The Project Environment – Subjective Parameters
- Project quality and reliability issues
- Project information management
- Project communication management
- Project risk management
- Risk vs. uncertainty
- Risk mitigation strategies
- Contingency planning
- Performance measures and indicators
- Project process maturity
- Root cause analysis
Effective Project Relationships Management
- Suppliers/contractors selection
- Project manager skills
- Building and sustaining professional relationships
- Trust and trust building
- Principled negotiations
- Leadership skills
- Dealing with professional disagreements
Day 5: Project Execution and Closure
- Change control processes
- Identifying measurements of project success
- Project monitoring
- Integrating project scope, time, and cost
- Leading and lagging indicators
- Project plan update
- Project reporting: to whom and to what level?
- Closing and evaluation of the project
- Project success factors
- Application of lessons learned
About Istanbul
Few places compare to the vibrant, cosmopolitan city of Istanbul, whose enormous size straddles both Europe and Asia, forming a bridge between western and eastern cultures. Resting upon the natural harbor of the Golden Horn, the skyline of the once-Constantinople is pierced with minarets and ancient monuments that embody centuries of history. While it is brimming with historical landmarks and colorful markets, modern Istanbul is also well represented through its contemporary art scene, European-style café culture, world-class dining venues.
Things to do and places to visit in Istanbul
Istanbul is teeming with attractions and landmarks from historic sights and unique cuisine to lively markets and unmistakable culture. It is a thriving city, with a myriad of things to do that skillfully manage to blend every aspect of both the contemporary and the historical world.
On a city break in Istanbul be sure to:
- Visit a hammam, a traditional Turkish bath, whose origins date back to Roman times.
- Marvel at the Hagia Sophia, Süleymaniye Mosque and Blue Mosque, Istanbul's most spectacular monuments that dominate the skyline.
- Explore the Topkapi Palace Museum, one of Istanbul's most visited museums, home to over 80,000 artifacts.
- Walk through the Basilica Cistern, an underground marvel built in the 4th century.
- Be dazzled by the Grand Bazaar, one of the world's oldest and largest covered markets.
- Go shopping for exotic products and Turkish delights in the Spice Bazaar.
- Cross the bridge connecting Europe and Asia against the backdrop of the Bosphorus, or take a Bosphorus cruise.
- Taste the diversity and flavor of Turkish cuisine.
- Admire panoramas of the city from the Galata Tower.
- Walk through Taksim Square, the city's dynamic square that never sleeps.