Home
About
Consulting & Training
Papers & Presentations
Podcasts & Webinars
Blog
Contact

Course Overview

Agile Portfolio Management presents simple and practical techniques for the effective management of Portfolios of business initiatives.

These techniques are relevant for product development in any industry, including hardware and software product development.

Note: Starred (*) topics are only available in the two-day version of this class.

Learning Objectives

Attendees will learn best practices for developing Portfolios of business initiatives, defining selection criteria for initiatives, scheduling and resource planning for initiatives, monitoring and revising initiatives in development, and budgeting and capitalization.

Curriculum & Topics

Introduction to Portfolios and Governance

Overview of Agile Portfolio Management
Flow and Ceremonies
Roles and Responsibilities
Standard Meetings and Agendas
Estimation
Scope Definition and Decomposition

Organizational Strategy*

Mission
Vision
Strategic Objectives

Portfolio Charter*

Purpose
Alignment
Objectives

Initiatives and Business Cases

Initiatives and Business Cases Defined
Audiences
Format

Decision Factors

Discrete vs. Composite Factors
Categories
Defining and Estimating ROI

Return-Related Factors

Common Factors
Affinity Estimation Technique
Net Present Value

Investment-Related Factors

Common Factors
Estimation Techniques
Effort
Cost

Risk*

Definition of Risk
Impacts
Categories
Risk Management Strategies

Making Portfolio Decisions

Decision Techniques

Scheduling and Resource Planning

Flow of Planning
Classic Resource Planning
Challenges with Classic Resource Planning
Agile Resource Planning
Scheduling Initiative Work

Tracking and Managing Initiatives

Scope Decomposition: Portfolio to Program to Project
Tracking Progress
Monitoring, Revising, and Terminating Initiatives

Budgeting and Capitalization

Classic Budgeting
Issues with Classic Budgeting
Agile Budgeting
Drivers for Capitalization
Tax Implications of Capitalization
What can (and can’t) be Capitalized