BBA222 Project Management Case Study – 1
Task: ● The following assignment is an individual task. ● Students are required to answer all questions.
Contextual information: In this business case, it is necessary to
Structure: Work must be submitted in PDF format and structured as follows:
● Page 1: Cover page ● Page 2: Table of contents ● Page 3: Question 1 ● Page 4: Question 2 ● Page 5: Question 3 ● Page 6: Question 4 ● Page 7: Question 5 ● Page 8: Bibliography (if necessary) ● Page 9: Appendices (if necessary)
Formalities: ● Wordcount: 2000 – 2500 ● Cover, Table of Contents, References and Appendix are excluded from the
total word count. ● Font: Arial 12.5 pts. ● Text alignment: Justified. ● The in-text References and the Bibliography have to be in Harvard’s
citation style.
Submission: Week 3 – Sunday, February 13th, 2022
Weight: This task is worth 30% of your total grade for this subject.
It assesses the following learning outcomes: ● Outcome 1: Ability to effectively describe the need for project
management in an organisation. ● Outcome 2: Understand the role of the project manager in an
organisation.
Case Study: Project Management at Fleur’s Flowers
Fleur’s Flowers was started four years ago by siblings Matt and Sarah Harris. The idea was to create an online flower store that delivered fresh flowers and floral decorations nationally along with occasional ‘pop-up’ stores. In the new business, Sarah focused on supplier sourcing and plant care while Matt focused on sales and marketing. Their business was successful and profitable in the first two years, largely due to contracts for floral event decorations. In their third year, they got very busy thanks to a viral video of a local wedding they supplied. Prospective global clients started reaching out to the company to do similar work for their events. They hired several part-time employees to help them with their floral business. But by the end of the third year of operation, Fleur’s Flowers started experiencing critical problems. They were: unable to leverage all the new employees effectively, unable to deliver arrangements to their customers on schedule and unable to provide quality blooms — time and money were being spent fixing defects in their products and training new employees. Unable to control costs — their business was not profitable in the third year. Fleur’s Flowers saw a significant rise in issues, a lot of unpleasant “surprises” were cropping up; business was down as new resources were hired, also some of the projects were poorly estimated. The international clients were unhappy as their decorations either arrived late or wilted. In some cases, the decorations were a week or two late. Since the events were time-sensitive the order needed to arrive on time and in great condition. One of the new part-time employees hired by Matt and Sarah, Chelsea, had taken a project management course at college. Chelsea was excited about the discipline of project management and had intentionally selected a job with Fleur’s Flowers as she saw an opportunity to use project management in a creative discipline. One day, Chelsea approached Matt and expressed her interest in helping the company with its logistical problems as she explained that she had taken a project management course. Matt was open to hearing what Chelsea had to say about the problems the company was facing and invited her for a lunch meeting. Over lunch he questioned why their small business which had operated and implemented projects so successfully over the first two years was being challenged significantly now. He specifically listed the problems they were facing and asked for input to solve them. Chelsea asked for more time to research all the issues but noted that Fleur’s Flowers, while being innovative, completed projects without a roadmap or a project plan and lacked a disciplined approach to project management. She noted that Matt and Sarah did not use any project software for scheduling and they did not use tools or techniques to estimate, budget or communicate with stakeholders. Finally, they had no processes in place to manage project risks and quality. Impressed with this and other conversations, Matt asked Chelsea if she would consider joining them as a project associate or project manager on a full-time basis to help them introduce
project management practises and help them tide over their current crisis. Chelsea accepted the offer! She has several key skills—she is an excellent communicator with very good interpersonal skills and is detail-oriented. Within the first three months in her new role as PM, she introduced formal project management processes, created a PM manual and trained the employees to get the work done well. Within nine months Chelsea had fully turned things around. Due to proactive risk analysis and risk response planning, surprises and issues were reduced. Communication with stakeholders was enhanced. Matt and Sarah noted that the company was delivering projects on schedule, the quality processes worked—and customers were happy with the arrangements.
Comment on the following aspects of the case study: 1. Why did Fleur’s Flowers struggle? 2. What were the specific PM solutions that were introduced by Chelsea that
worked? Why? 3. Why is there a need for project management in organisations? 4. Which of the 4 of 10 knowledge areas would best work? Why? 5. Fleur’s Flowers is a technology-integrated business, but Chelsea is not
technically knowledgeable, will she continue to be a successful project manager?
Exceptional 90-100 Good 80-89 Fair 70-79 Marginal fail 60-69 Knowledge & Understandin
g (20%)
Student demonstrates excellent understanding of key concepts and uses vocabulary in an entirely appropriate manner.
Student demonstrates good understanding of the task and mentions some relevant concepts and demonstrates use of the relevant vocabulary.
Student understands the task and provides minimum theory and/or some use of vocabulary.
Student understands the task and attempts to answer the question but does not mention key concepts or uses minimum amount of relevant vocabulary.
Application (30%)
Student applies fully relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class.
Student applies mostly relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class.
Student applies some relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class. Misunderstanding may be evident.
Student applies little relevant knowledge from the topics delivered in class. Misunderstands are evident.
Critical Thinking
(30%)
Student critically assesses in excellent ways, drawing outstanding conclusions from relevant authors.
Student critically assesses in good ways, drawing conclusions from relevant authors and references.
Student provides some insights but stays on the surface of the topic. References may not be relevant.
Student makes little or none critical thinking insights, does not quote appropriate authors, and does not provide valid sources.
Communicati on (20%)
Student communicates their ideas extremely clearly and concisely, respecting word count, grammar and spellcheck
Student communicates their ideas clearly and concisely, respecting word count, grammar and spellcheck
Student communicates their ideas with some clarity and concision. It may be slightly over or under the wordcount limit. Some misspelling errors may be evident.
Student communicates their ideas in a somewhat unclear and unconcise way. Does
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Case Study of BBA222 Project Management – 1
The following assignment is an independent task, and students must answer all questions.
Contextual information: It is vital to include contextual information in this business case.
Work must be provided in PDF format and must be formatted as follows:
Page 1: Cover Page 2: Table of Contents Page 3: Question 1 Page 4: Question 2 Page 5: Question 3 Question 4 on page 6 Question 5 on page 7 Page 8: Bibliography (optional) Page 9: Appendices (if necessary)
Formalities: 2000 – 2500 words The cover, table of contents, references, and appendix are not included.
total number of words Font: Arial 12.5 points. Text alignment: Justified. In-text References and Bibliography must be in Harvard’s format.
citation format
Submission deadline: Sunday, February 3rd, Week 3