There continues to be a lot of chatter and skepticism about the use of social media in general and on projects in particular. Articles abound with viewpoints pro and con. › Continue reading…
Archive for 'Executing'
So often in advanced project management circles we talk about rigorous, complex tools, processes and methods which allow us to tackle the most difficult projects. We acquire and train ourselves with the latest version of tools such as Project server or Primavera. We become the champions of developing a myriad of rich artifacts from charters, scope statements, and work breakdown structures to schedules, budgets, communication plans, and risk registers. We are prepared to employ sophisticated project management methods like qualitative and quantitative risk assessment and earned value. So then what happens if suddenly some or all of those things don’t apply? › Continue reading…
In my last article on risk, I discussed qualitative and quantitative analysis which allows a team to assess probability, impact, and monetary value of the risks identified. This allows a project team to develop priorities for those risks that require further planning and threat mitigation or opportunity realization strategies. In this article we’ll discuss how to develop risk response strategies › Continue reading…
Here is my list of the big project management stories of 2010 and what lessons they offer for project managers. At a glance, I think risk planning and perseverance are the take-aways. › Continue reading…
I just established a war room for the beginning of a new project. In its simplest terms, a war room is a workspace dedicated to a collocated project team, enabling team members to work together to quickly create a solution to a business problem or address a business opportunity.
Over the years, I have been responsible for many war rooms and I have been collocated in war rooms run by other project managers. I love a good war room. When done well, I think a war room contributes to better work, shorter cycles and a really positive team experience. When done poorly, a war room is just another meeting space.
This got me thinking about my own personal “war room best practices”, which I will share here. I would love to hear your best practices on this topic, if you have any you’d like to share. › Continue reading…
Undoubtedly, the masters would agree hands down that the recommended approach for any project team practicing agile methods would be co-location. The benefit of this arrangement is all the casual conversation that team members naturally tend to engage in, or are forced to overhear from their co-workers, which in turn promotes collaboration on the project – or so the theory goes. Unfortunately with the fabric of today’s multi regional, global, or outsourced organizations, co-located teams are not always an option. › Continue reading…
In my last article I discussed characteristics and roles of the agile scrum methodology as compared to waterfall. In this continuation article, I committed to examine the artifacts, meetings and processes involved and also discuss what they compare to in a waterfall context. By design agile and the scrum methodology deliberately minimize processes, artifacts and meetings › Continue reading…
For those of my PMP friends and colleagues who are firmly immersed in the waterfall way of doing things but who are hearing more and more about agile and scrum and wondering what all the fuss is about, I thought it might be a good idea to write a series of articles comparing and contrasting the two approaches. I’d like to start by stating that I am very much a fan of agile and scrum and believe that the traditional PMI methodology, when practiced in a sensible manner and the agile scrum approach have more in common than you would think. At the end of the day the purpose of both is the same – to get work done well. › Continue reading…
I am on vacation in Taos, New Mexico this week with my husband and 15-year-old nephew, Evan, who spends every summer with us. We are staying in a very nice condominium and having lots of adventures: a llama trek, river rafting trip, horseback ride, visits to the Taos Pueblo and various art galleries, restaurants, historic markers and other areas of interest. Like any good project manager, I spent a considerable amount of time planning for this trip. I did a lot of research on places to stay and restaurants to visit. I researched different vendors to determine who to book our activities with, and I reserved in advance. I also have a “standard packing list” of additional items that I bring whenever we stay in a condo: a good cutting knife, two good cooking pans, coffee, tea, extra kitchen towels, etc. My planning efforts paid off enough that › Continue reading…
Since we are on the topic of troubled projects, I started thinking about what has now been branded the Deepwater Horizon Response Project. This situation has similarities to many project calamities one might encounter in the course of dealing with internal or external customer organizations. A customer organization messes up, BIG TIME, and you have to step in and turn it around.
In this case, the project manager is retired U.S. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, who is in charge of the federal government’s response to the oil spill resulting from the April 20th explosion at one of British Petroleum’s (BP) offshore oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico. › Continue reading…