Project Management Tattoos That Don't Wash Off (Part 2)
Estimating
Risk Management
Schedule Management
Scheduling
Scope Management
Work Breakdown Structures (WBS)
This is part two of a discussion of so-called “project management tattoos.” I mused earlier about the possibility of getting one of the principles upon which the PM profession is based inked onto your body.
I realize, though, there is a cultural component to this conversation. Some surveys show that as many as four out of 10 adults in North America and Europe have at least one tattoo (my apologies if you have a hard time relating to this conversation culturally). Equally in that same demographic, many more people under 30 have tattoos than (ahem, how shall we say it?) the more “mature” folks (but these are asides to our topic).
Aren’t there rock-solid principles that apply to every project at all times? If you were thinking of getting a PM tattoo, isn’t there a template book from which you could choose? But wait…that’s why tattoos can be beguiling. Once you get one, it’s hard to remove. When you are bound to a principle that you assume applies to all situations, how do you unlearn it to rethink everything?
Many say that’s what the agile discipline is about: rethinking everything you ever knew about projects. The agile/waterfall discussion is more than we can handle in this short discussion about ink (American slang for “tattoos”; it’s curious how the term “inking a contract” is
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"A good composer does not imitate; he steals." - Igor Stravinsky |