Project Management

Review: The Effective Project Manager by Michael Stratton

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Whether project manager or not, everyone can appreciate the need to hone our skills to become more effective and productive. Often, we get so used to doing things "our way" we don't realize that there may be a better - or more effective - way. I'm definitley guilty of this. 

I recently had the opportunity to read project professional Michael Stratton's new release, The Effective Project Manager.  Mr. Stratton provided me with a free digital copy for this review.

I must say I thoroughly enjoyed reading the book - I loved the conversational tone and down-to-earth approach. It's a quick read, which is especially nice. I put the book down knowing that I konw have a few more tools in my toolbox to start producing the kind of work that really matters - and in the most efficient, effective way possible.

After reading the book, I had a few burning questions for Michael:

Q:  How did you get involved in project management?

A:  I reported to a gifted and talented manager who was brilliant at keeping her employees engaged with work that interested them. I was working as an IT business analyst and she recognized the potential and opportunity for me to work in a project management role. Why? Because she saw me doing it naturally and without effort. She asked me to begin leading efforts as both an IT business analyst as well as a project manager. Ever since then I have brought an analyst mind to project management and in the right organization it can be a very powerful toolset. Thanks to her, I was able to write about the importance of this specific skill in my book.

Q:  What inspired you to write the book? Why did you write it?

A:  At its core, I wrote The Effective Project Manager to bring awareness to the business world that project management professionals are critical to project success. An effective project manager can not only move the work that needs to be moved but also fill a role of deliverable creator and executive advisor.

Secondarily, I wrote the book after I truly felt sustained inner peace of being both productive and effective both at home and in my professional endeavors. I was finally able to wade through all the extraneous organizational and process “stuff” and come out clean with a strong vision of what project management means to me. After 15 years of following other people’s project processes, I found the perfect little process that works for me and my project teams every time. I am a visual person - and arguably not a typical Gantt head. I find that I can be twice as productive and truly effective through my daily use of mind maps, Evernote and online visualization tools such as Lucidchart. These are not typical project management tools and I want to share these tools to other project management professionals so that the profession as a whole can realize the same benefits I have realized. 

Q:  What is one thing you wished you'd known when you first started out in project management?

A:  I wish I had read Secrets of Power Negotiating by Roger Dawson way before I actually read it. I regularly refer to this book. Project management is bursting with give and take and you need to be able to understand both sides of the negotiating table and recognize your next move at all times. Negotiation is about people and understanding motivations. Project Management is also about people and understanding motivations. These two art forms are a perfect match!  

Q:  It's Friday at 4 pm and your boss just told you that you've been assigned to work on a project - on a different continent! You leave 9 am tomorrow. What are the next five (5) things that you do?

A:  

  1. Negotiate a week of vacation or a one-time stipend in return for the utterly late notice on this assignment (thank you Roger!).
  2. Request a full project debrief that includes travel itinerary, success criteria of the project, personality profiles of the team I will be working with, research running routes and sushi restaurants in the city where I will be working. Save all of this information in Evernote.
  3. Call my mom (it’s the right thing to do).
  4. Beg my barber for an emergency haircut.
  5. Review the music and books on my iPad to ensure I have plenty of reading material for the trip. Must include: Sonny & The Sunsets, The Dirty Heads, Beirut, Port O’Brien, Blind Pilot, Iron & Wine, Talking Heads, Wilco, Grouplove, The Smashing Pumpkins, The Decemberists, Death Cab for Cutie, Cypress Hill, Cake, Beastie Boys, Sharon Jones & The Dap Kings, Parliament, Bootsy Collins, Ohio Players, The Bar-Kays, and Rage Against The Machine. For reading: My Dad is Fat, Jim Gaffigan, Platform, Michael Hyatt, The E-Myth Revisited, Michael E. Gerber, The Four Hour Workweek, Tim Ferriss

Michaels' book is available for purchase on Amazon.com and on effectivepmbook.com and retails for $9.99.

the_effective_project_managerOr, you can try your luck and enter to win our giveaway! One lucky winner will receive a digital copy of Michael's book, The Effective Project Manager. To enter, please fill out the form in the widget below and read the Terms and Conditions. Sorry, open to U.S. legal residents only (it's a legal thing).

Giveaway starts on Monday, March 16th, 2015 at 12:00 am EDT and ends on  Saturday, March 21st, 2015 at 12:00 am EDT. Winner will be notified by email and announced (by first name, last initial only) in the widget below. Winner has 7 days to claim their prize before a new winner will be selected.  Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Posted by Rebecca Braglio on: March 13, 2015 02:15 PM | Permalink

Comments (97)

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Brian Jeffrey Project Manager, CSM| Saint Leo University Dade City, Fl, United States
If you could only pick one__ skill, which skill would make a project manager most effective? An effective communicator. I believe this is the most important skill but obviously it wouldn't be enough.

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Tamisha Lee Westmoreland, Jamaica
Excited about reading this book...Amazon.com here I come!

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Sheree Kimani Riverview, Fl, United States
An important trait for project management would be communication. If you cannot communicate effectively then your ability manage a project is severely decreased.

Anonymous
Missed the webinar and waiting for the on-demand availability

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Jonathan Gehrke Program Manager| Cirrus Aircraft Duluth, Mn, United States
Look forward to reading this one.

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B. K. Gamble Kerrville, Tx, United States
This sounds like an interesting book!

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Catherine Schonberger Project Manager| Amoblix Parkville, Mo, United States
Excellent. Always looking to improve my skills.

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Michael Waldron Project Manager| Delta Point, LLC Dayton, Oh, United States
Communications skills: concise, direct and effective communications utilizing all types of communications media is what I think is most important to make a project manager effective.

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Sanj Sethi Consultant Adviser to a Startup Ecosystem in Atlanta| Sethio Brampton, Ontario, Canada
definitely a good guide to be more effective /productive

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Ganeshkumar Kathiresan IT Supervisor| Minnesota Teachers Retirement Association Woodbury, Mn, United States
PM >> Communication, Coordination and Control (Scope)

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Gordon Suggs Assistant Director of Application Services| Xavier University Cincinnati, Oh, United States
The one crucial skill is dealing with others - people skills.

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Kelly Sallander Ny, United States
The most effective PM skill by far is communication. It is the means by which the whole project is understood and conveyed. Great work can become utterly useless if the needs and expectations were not properly communicated. An entire project can turn on it's head - good or bad - depending on the communication skills of the team members and stakeholders.

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Darryl Woods Ga, United States
I am interested in the Project Management field and would Iike to start a resource library and Michael Stratton's book sounds like a great start.

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Michael Stratton Senior Manager, Business Systems and Project Management| Contentful, Inc Golden, Co, United States
Deb Hetrick, you are right on!

Good negotiation skills make for effective project management. No drama (which wastes time) and go for a win-win!

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Dan Zilai Sr. Program Management Consultant| ZILAI Consulting Schererville, In, United States
OK - I'll say it: ETHICS.

Sometimes you just get dodgie characters who want to blow right past the process, and sometimes (regulations) - things that are way out in Right Field.

PMPs by definition have a responsibility to always be held to a higher standard and ensure business practices (on their project and related) are held in the most ethical focus.

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LeAnn Brown Corporate Business Analyst| Alfa Mutual Insurance Company Tallassee, Al, United States
The project management skill that I am the most focused on improving right now is time management. When you think you have it pretty well figured out along comes the agile project method. Agile has definitely given me a new regard for time management.

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Paola Bignone Senior Scientist - Project Manager| Just Inc Las Vegas, Nv, United States
I want to improve my communication skills

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Kirsten Hansen Project Manager| Fungi Perfecti Olympia, Wa, United States
Only 4 question/answers but I can really connect with what Mr. Stratton has to say with each one. I've put Dawson's Secrets of Power Negotiating and Stratton's book on my reading list. I might add a few artists from his great music list as well. :)

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WEI QUN LIN Glen Waverley, Victoria, Australia
Good resource to escalate my Project Management skill.

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