Quang Regan - Project Management - Achieving Your Desired Results
What is Project Management?
There are two types of projects - cynical ones and genuine
ones!
The cynic in me has seen projects that are nothing more than
ways of deploying surplus staff - creating cult De sac 'projects' where they
can do no damage - a direct result of cowardly performance management. I have
also seen projects created for the glory of their creator - business as usual
events that are magnified to create an impression of dynamism and as a way of
empire building. Watch out for these and run a mile!
Cynicism aside, generally project management is used for
managing a specific change which is outside the normal day to day activities
with a fixed timetable. This is the approach defined in most methodologies.
There is usually a specific budget to manage and a specific objective to
deliver.
What It Is Not:
Despite all the sophisticated tools and techniques
available, it is definitely not a black art. It is common sense and uses all
good management techniques simply applied to one specific piece of work.
However some potentially helpful tools have given rise to an industry.
Prince2 for example is a powerful project management
methodology - it is not a guarantee of success and must be used appropriately
for the size and complexity of the change being managed. A detailed Project
Implementation Document does not guarantee success if it takes longer to create
than the change itself. I have seen project documentation used to give the illusion
of progress when the activity on the ground is almost non-existent.
A detailed and comprehensive project plan can become an end
in itself and create the semblance of moving forward at the expense of real
progress. Creating and editing the plan is not the same as managing the project
itself, but it can provide hours of amusement for the naive project manager
using it as a comfort blanket.
Some of the project management software packages provide a
degree of sophistication that in a straightforward project can detract from the
key deliverable or else push you into a degree of spurious detail.
The project office, or program office if it has two desks,
can also create the reassuring sense of controlled change. But in many projects
I have seen stakeholders spending more time filling out the colored RAG
progress reports than they have doing their action points. Anarchy really sets
in when they lie on these reports because they are just too complicated - can I
be bovver? The PM spends more time chasing the usual suspects for updates
rather than evaluating and communicating the true impact on any milestones.
What It Should Be:
The answer has to be 'appropriate' project management is all
its aspects - appropriate and responsive to the scale of the change. The recent
developments of 'agile' techniques are a reflection of this. Not all projects
need to be defined and allocated to the nth degree and you do not always need a
specific project manager. Often in reality the project owner is the line
manager and the work is spread across the teams and people may assume
responsibility for different pieces of work at different times. You do not
always need specialized software. A spreadsheet can be enough or one of my
favorites is a simple hand drawn bubble chart.
However, much of the best of project management comes down
to behaviors and leadership. Managing stakeholders, their hopes, fears and
politics is vital to success. Motivating the project team and investing in team
time especially at the project launch will pay huge dividends. Having an
environment where it is easy to update on progress, where communication is
constantly buzzing and most importantly where it is safe to be open about
project issues, removes so many obstacles.
As with most things in business it all comes down to
relationships. This is true whether you call it Project management, Program
management, Change management or whatever. What you need on top of this to
provide structure and resources will depend upon the scale and nature of the
transformation you are seeking.
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