Managing Benefits™ study guide mind map

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Managing Benefits™ study guide mind map por Mind Map: Managing Benefits™ study guide mind map

1. This freeware, non-commercial mind map (aligned with the newest version of Managing Benefits™) was carefully hand crafted with passion and love for learning and constant improvement as well for promotion the Managing Benefits™ standard and as a learning tool for candidates wanting to gain Managing Benefits™ qualification. (please share, like and give feedback - your feedback and comments are my main motivation for further elaboration. THX!)

1.1. Questions / issues / errors? What do you think about my work? Your comments are highly appreciated. Please don't hesitate to contact me for :-) Mirosław Dąbrowski, Poland/Warsaw.

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1.1.6. miroslaw_dabrowski

2. Map is under development, current state is an early ALPHA

3. Watch: The Launch of Managing Benefits

4. Roles

4.1. Senior Responsible Owner (SRO)

4.2. Directors of Change

4.3. Strategic Planners

4.4. Policy Leads

4.5. Change appraisers and evaluators

4.5.1. e.g.

4.5.1.1. Business Case Writers

4.5.1.2. Business Case Appraisers

4.6. Change implementers / enablers

4.6.1. e.g.

4.6.1.1. Portfolio Programme

4.6.1.2. Project Managers

4.6.1.3. Business Change Managers

4.7. Change support staff

4.7.1. e.g.

4.7.1.1. Portfolio, Programme and Project Office Staff, including Benefits Managers

4.8. Benefits Owner

5. Benefits Management Principles (7)

5.1. 1. Alight benefits with strategy

5.1.1. Contribute towards one or more organizational or strategic objectives

5.1.2. Service Profit Chain

5.1.3. Service Value Chain

5.2. 2. Start with the end in mind

5.2.1. Benefits-led change rather than benefits being used to justify a pre-selected solution

5.2.2. Activity-centred initiatives (Benefits to justify)

5.2.3. Benefit-led initiatives (Benefits rationale)

5.3. 3. Utilize successful delivery methods

5.3.1. Tailored delivery methods, such as PRINCE2®, MSP®, DSDM®, PMBOK®

5.3.2. Staged release

5.3.3. Stakeholder engagement

5.3.4. Forward-looking

5.4. 4. Integrate benefits with performance management

5.4.1. Benefits being integrated into the organization's operational and HR performance management system

5.4.2. Align with HR Performance Management System

5.5. 5. Manage benefits from a portfolio perspective

5.5.1. Consistent approach applied to all initiatives within change portfolio, benefits-led investment appraisal and portfolio prioritization

5.5.2. Consistent alignment

5.5.3. Good practice applied

5.5.4. Double counting minimized

5.5.5. Lessons learned

5.5.6. Benefits realization Optimization

5.6. 6. Apply effective governance

5.6.1. Clear accountability and responsibility for the enabling and business changes upon which benefits realization is dependent

5.6.2. Clear

5.6.3. Aligned

5.6.4. Consistent

5.6.5. Active

5.7. 7. Develop a value culture

5.7.1. Take benefits and benefits management seriously, focus on creating sustaining value

5.7.2. Treat as program

5.7.3. Behavioural change

5.7.3.1. Coordination

5.7.3.2. Commitment

5.7.3.3. Competencies

6. Themes (9)

6.1. 1. Principles themselves are integral to effective benefits management

6.2. 2. Practices should therefore be tailored to the local circumstances

6.3. 3. The 5 practices in the Benefits Management Cycle are broadly sequential but are characterized by iterative feedback loops

7. KSF of Effective Benefits Management (6)

7.1. Active

7.1.1. the focus is less on passive tracking against forecast and more on an active search for benefits based on ongoing participative stakeholder engagement.

7.2. Evidence-based

7.2.1. the practice of benefits management should be based on evidence about what works e.g. use the technique of reference class forecasting.

7.3. Transparent

7.3.1. based on open and honest reporting e.g. use the technique – clear line of sight reporting.

7.4. Benefits-led

7.4.1. the activities undertaken should be driven by the benefits sought.

7.5. Forward-looking

7.5.1. the focus is on learning and insight rather than backward looking tracking against forecast.

7.6. Managed across the full business change

7.6.1. from start up to beyond the closure of an initiative.

8. The Benefits Management Model

8.1. consists of:

8.1.1. Principles

8.1.2. Practices

8.1.3. Themes

9. Benefits

9.1. Benefits should be the driver behind all change initiatives

9.2. Each benefits should be measured at least with one measure, preferably suite of measures (in order to create “rich picture” from multiple perspectives):

9.2.1. leading and lagging measures

9.2.2. proxy indicators

9.2.3. evidence events

9.2.4. case studies

9.2.5. surveys

9.2.6. stories

9.2.7. Value index

9.3. Benefits contribute towards organizational/strategic objectives (benefits are identifiable and quantifiable in terms that link to the drivers of the organizational/strategic objectives)

9.4. Benefits are measurable and observable

9.5. Benefits are tangible (easy to measure) or intangible (not so easy to measure)

9.6. Benefits are identifiable and quantifiable

9.7. Benefits should have baselines

9.8. Benefits should have priorities

9.9. Benefits are an advantage to stakeholders (internal en external to the organization)

9.9.1. Benefits can be same for each stakeholder (which is different in case of values)

9.10. Benefits are derived from change initiatives (formally constituted projects and programmes)

9.11. Benefits can be automatic (same service for lower costs) or (mostly) manual (deliberate management action)

9.12. Benefits types:

9.12.1. Emergent benefits

9.12.2. Unplanned benefits

9.12.3. Intermediate benefits

9.12.4. End benefits

9.13. Mostly chain of intermediate benefits is linked to the end benefits, but in many cases intermediate benefits don’t automatically lead to the end benefits

10. Benefits Management

10.1. Benefits management should be coordinated with, and wherever possible integrated into, the wider organization’s context

10.2. Benefits management seeks to optimize rather than maximize benefits realization

10.2.1. Maximization does not respects constraints, optimization is about doing the best that can be achieved within constraint

10.3. Benefits management is a process that runs across the full business change lifecycle

10.4. Do not treat benefits management as a separate discipline

10.5. Objectives:

10.5.1. Forecast benefits are complete

10.5.2. Forecast benefits are realized in practice

10.5.3. Forecast benefits represents VfM

10.5.4. Benefits are realized as early as possible and sustained as long as possible

10.5.5. Emergent or unplanned benefits are captured and leveraged

10.5.6. Realization of forecast benefits is maximized

10.5.7. Dis-benefits are minimized

10.6. Managing Benefits Guide can be seen as a manifesto towards change:

10.6.1. FROM (as is / current status):

10.6.1.1. „Conspiracy of optimism” in forecasting.

10.6.1.2. Passive tracking against forecasting.

10.6.1.3. Backward looking accountability.

10.6.2. TO (to be / desired state):

10.6.2.1. Realism in planning

10.6.2.2. Enthusiasm in delivery

10.7. Why do we need Benefits Management profession? (examples of unsuccessful outcomes)

10.7.1. Beer & Nohria (2000)

10.7.2. HM Treasury (2002)

10.7.2.1. "There is a demonstrated, systematic, tendency for project appraisers to be overly optimistic."

10.7.2.2. "This is a worldwide phenomenon that affects goth the private and public sectors ... appraisers tend to overstate benefits, and underestimate timigs and costs."

10.7.2.3. see Optimis Bias

10.7.2.3.1. https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/191507/Optimism_bias.pdf

10.7.3. Gauld & Goldfinch (2006)

10.7.4. eGovernment Economics Project (2006)

10.7.5. Altschuler & Luberoff (2003)

10.7.6. Seldon & Colvin (2003)

10.7.7. Cameron & Green (2009)

10.7.8. Schaffer & Thomson (1992)

10.7.9. Ballhaus (2005)

10.7.10. Lovallo Kahneman (2003)

10.7.10.1. "Delusional optimism: we overemphasize projects' potential benefits and underestimate likely costs, spinning success scenarios while ignoring the possibility of mistakes."

10.7.11. NAO (2011)

10.7.12. Bent Flyvbjerg et al (2003, 2005)

10.7.12.1. "It is found with overwhelming statistical significance that the cost estimates used to decide whether such projects should be built are highly and systematically misleading."

10.7.13. Research in Australia by Capability Management (2006)

10.7.14. A study Moorhouse Consulting (2009)

10.8. Cognitive bias when overpredicting benefits

11. Techniques

11.1. 'In-flight' benefit reviews

11.2. Benefits Measurement Taxonomy

11.3. Benefits contracts

11.4. Benefits discovery workshops

11.5. Benefits mapping

11.6. Benefits quantification workshops

11.7. Booking the benefits

11.8. Champion-challenger model

11.9. Clear line of sight

11.10. Conversion ratios

11.11. Cost-benefit analysis

11.12. Cost-effectiveness analysis

11.13. Customer insight

11.14. Decision conferencing

11.15. Delphi techniques

11.16. Driver-based analysis

11.17. Health-check assessment

11.18. Investment logic mapping

11.19. Journey mapping

11.20. Management by exception

11.21. Multi-criteria analysis

11.22. One version of the truth

11.23. Optimism bias adjustments

11.24. P3M3

11.25. PESTLE analysis

11.26. Pair-wise comparisions

11.27. Pareto rule

11.28. Post-investment review

11.29. Pre-mortems

11.30. Real options analysis

11.31. Reference class forecasting

11.32. Rich picture

11.33. SWOT analysis

11.34. Scout and beacon approach

11.35. Sensitivity and scenario analysis

11.36. Stage / phase gate reviews and 'staged' release of funding

11.37. Stakeholder segmentation and analysis

11.38. Start gate

11.39. Stochastic forecasting (including Monte Carlo simulation and three-point estimating)

11.40. The 'dog that didn't bark' test

11.41. Willingness to pay and Willingness to accept

12. The Benefits Management Cycle

12.1. The Benefits Management Cycle consists of 5 practices

12.2. Practices (5)

12.2.1. Identify & Quantify

12.2.1.1. Goals

12.2.1.1.1. To lay the basis for informed options analysis, investment appraisal, and portfolio prioritization; and the management of benefits realization in due course.

12.2.1.2. Key techniques

12.2.1.2.1. Benefits discovery workshops

12.2.1.2.2. Benefits mapping

12.2.1.2.3. Benefits quantification workshops

12.2.1.2.4. Customer insight

12.2.1.2.5. Delphi techniques

12.2.1.2.6. Driver-based analysis

12.2.1.2.7. Investment logic mapping

12.2.1.2.8. Optimism bias adjustments

12.2.1.2.9. PESTLE analysis

12.2.1.2.10. Reference class forecasting

12.2.1.2.11. SWOT

12.2.1.2.12. Stochastic forecasting (including Monte Carlo simulation and three-point estimating)

12.2.2. Value & Appraise

12.2.2.1. Goals

12.2.2.1.1. To ensure resources are allocated to those change initiatives that individually and collectively represent best value for money.

12.2.2.2. Key techniques

12.2.2.2.1. Conversion ratios

12.2.2.2.2. Cost-benefit analysis

12.2.2.2.3. Cost-effectiveness analysis

12.2.2.2.4. Multi-criteria analysis

12.2.2.2.5. Real options analysis

12.2.2.2.6. Sensitivity and scenario analysis

12.2.2.2.7. Willingness to pay and Willingness to accept

12.2.3. Plan

12.2.3.1. Goal

12.2.3.1.1. Ensuring accountability and transparency for:

12.2.3.2. Key techniques

12.2.3.2.1. Benefits Measurement Taxonomy

12.2.3.2.2. Pair-wise comparisions

12.2.3.2.3. Pareto rule

12.2.3.2.4. Scout and beacon approach

12.2.3.2.5. Stakeholder segmentation and analysis

12.2.3.2.6. The 'dog that didn't bark' test

12.2.4. Realize

12.2.4.1. Goals

12.2.4.1.1. To optimize benefits realization by actively:

12.2.4.2. Key techniques

12.2.4.2.1. Benefits contracts

12.2.4.2.2. Booking the benefits

12.2.4.2.3. Management by exception

12.2.4.2.4. One version of the truth

12.2.4.2.5. Rich picture

12.2.5. Review

12.2.5.1. Goals

12.2.5.1.1. The benefits to be realized are achievable and continue to represent value for money.

12.2.5.1.2. Appropriate arrangements have been made for benefits monitoring, management and evaluation

12.2.5.1.3. Benefits realization is being effectively managed

12.2.5.1.4. Lessons are learned for both the current initiative and as a basis for more effective benefits management practices generally.

12.2.5.2. Key techniques

12.2.5.2.1. 'In-flight' benefit reviews

12.2.5.2.2. Post-implementation review

12.2.5.2.3. Post-investment review

12.2.5.2.4. Pre-mortems

12.2.5.2.5. Stage/phase gate reviews and 'staged' release of funding

12.2.5.2.6. Start gate

12.2.6. Practices are broadly sequential but are characterized by iterative feedback cycle.

12.2.7. Key techniques used across the benefits management cycle

12.2.7.1. Health-check assessment

12.2.7.2. Journey mapping

12.2.7.3. Clear line of sight

12.2.7.4. Decision conferencing

12.2.7.5. P3M3

12.2.7.6. Champion-challenger model

13. Interactive Glossary

13.1. Interactive Managing Benefits™ Glossary