En dag i livet för Sr. Manager, Sales Development Yessenia Zavala
Läs mer om Yessenias roll inom säljutveckling på Planview och hennes viktiga engagemang i Pride ERG.
Leading the conversation on digital connected work
Läs mer om Yessenias roll inom säljutveckling på Planview och hennes viktiga engagemang i Pride ERG.
Upptäck värdet av delad strategisk planering mellan företagsarkitekter och portföljförvaltare, och hur dessa nyckelgrupper kan kopplas samman.
We've mentioned waterfall charts in several blog posts, notably posts that focus on scenario and variance analysis. Because we have a number of different ways to generate waterfall views within Enrich Analytics, creating a video that describes 'all the waterfalls' has been on our to-do list for some...
In our latest video, we showcase how easy it is to compare projects and portfolios with Enrich Viewport and the Enrich Analytics Platform. The video covers: When scenario analysis should be used How to compare projects head-to-head How to compare portfolios head-to-head Using a waterfall diagram to...
Variance analysis is a common tool in financial analysis, helping teams compare the cost forecasts and schedules to actual values. In portfolio management, variance analysis is used not only for cost and schedule comparison, but also to track changes in project and portfolio forecasts of value over...
If I asked you to fill in this blank: Portfolio management uses many ________ charts. You'd probably shout bubble! without hesitation. Indeed, frontier charts, pipeline charts, and risk vs. reward charts all effectively employ scatter and bubble charts to describe your portfolio.
When I started Enrich over two decades ago, my dream was to build a company that helped R&D teams manage uncertainty in new product development. Almost 24 years later, dozens of life science and R&D firms worldwide use our SaaS-based strategic portfolio management tools to leverage the colle...
Portfolio management conferences in 2019
Webinar on Portfolio Management - R&D Innovation
This is the fifth and final post in our series on doing more portfolio management with less project data. You’ll find the whole series here. Data needed at each level of portfolio management. The only required data are the three items in the orange Beginner box.