
We are pleased to introduce you this month to Dave Maynard, MBA, PMP®. Dave is a native New Yorker who after graduation from engineering school from the State University of New York, traveled to Houston to work for NASA at the Johnson Spacecraft Center.
He gradually gained responsibilities and participated in the Shuttle avionics architecture design, the “glass cockpit” development and in crew training. Incrementally David’s level of responsibility increased, and he became a Senior Engineer, Project Engineer, a Project Manager and Program Manager. David then moved to the Space Operations and Planning Complex (SOPC) where he again participating in overall technical design efforts.
After leaving NASA, Dave was asked to become the General Manager of Systems Management Inc. (SMI) in Orlando whose mission was to turn-around troubled projects, programs or operations.
Dave now teaches at Indiana University and Purdue University in Indiana, is active the PMI-Northeast Indiana Chapter, who recently announced the David Arthur Maynard Scholorship Program, and volunteers for PMI in various capacities.
How did you get involved in project management?
Like many others, I started as an “accidental” project manager. I was an engineer working as part of a large team solving a complex math problem. The resolution of that problem took several years with a very discipline-diverse group of people from across the globe participating. As the team’s efforts were nearing a conclusion, my manager asked me to “oversee” a new project. The project’s purpose was the design and installation of an integrated set of five large computers that would be used to simulate the Shuttle’s flight computers. The purpose of this system was to help with further Shuttle system architecture development and crew training. It was excitingly difficult; hardware, software, displays and controls, schedules, cost, risk and more. From then on, I was a Project Manager. While I’m still a nerd, I’ve never done engineering work again.
Who or what inspires you to be the best project manager you can be?
It’s clear that a group of humans trying to accomplish a specific objective represents the most complex system that can be created. There are an infinite number of variables that affect a project team. Personalities, skills, location, understandings and a great many more factors. There’s also a tangible atmosphere when a team is working together well. It’s often described as synergy; when the team’s combined effectiveness is greater than the sum of each member’s separate efforts. It’s a measure that the “most-complex system” working. You can actually feel it in the air! It makes the hair on my arms stand up and sends chills up my spine. It’s a wonderful thing to be a part of and is a source of inspiration for me to continually, learn, adapt, change, re-think, re-focus and study to possibly help to achieve a synergistic team.
What is one thing you wished you'd known when you first started out in project management?
It’s critical for the Project Manager to establish the team’s vision of what the end-result will be. People want to know they are working towards a valuable goal, and it’s the Project Manager’s duty to continually reference the project’s mission. The PM must be clear about the answers to: “Why are we doing this?” Or “Why is what we are doing valuable?” The Project Manager must be the team champion of the project’s mission, continually referring to it, judging against it and never losing sight of it.
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?
- Understand who is assigned to the project and what their skills are
The project team is who will get this project accomplished. There is nothing more important than understanding who they are and what they know. Everything else pales in comparison to this simple action.
- Examine information about the stakeholders, customers and their needs
Knowledge of who the end-users are and what they desire will be invaluable when I hit the ground tomorrow. Creating a project result that misses the stakeholder’s desire is a recipe for encountering “interesting times.”
- Study everything available about the stated and implied requirements of the project -- including functional, performance, physical and design.
This is so I could understand what in detail the product of the project is. Note to self: many times the stated or documented requirements are incomplete, inconsistent or just plain wrong.
- Study every scrap of project information (status)
Since this project is already on-going, there must be status reports that were created and perhaps presented. I’d get a copy of all of them to read, digest and think about.
- Try to understand the method used to collect project data that was used to produce the status
This project is on a different continent! There will be cultural differences, perhaps language barriers, certainly some fundamental things will be at odds with the way I’ve been working. These differences will affect the way in which project data is collected and even represented in the status reports. How? Why?
You’ve come to the realization that an important project you are currently managing is going to be a massive failure. Somehow, every red flag has been missed or ignored and it’s far too late in the game to turn things around. Maybe you inherited the mess, maybe you’re the cause of the failure, or maybe it’s just the way things turned out and there’s nothing you could have done to prevent it. What 3 types of things will you do, mentally, physically, or even spiritually, to cope until the project is over?
Been there, done that! I was part of a group whose job it was to turn around troubled projects, programs and operations. If it’s “far too late” to turn things around, it’s indeed a very sad state. Actually, if it’s truly too late to recover, the project should be terminated and closed. Managing this project through termination will take a physical and mental toll on nearly everyone associated with it. During the years I did turn-arounds, we invented key phrases that describe different situations including this one.
We used to call this the “full wax job.” You, the PM will need to be totally equipped. You’ll want every advantage you can get in order to survive the upcoming ordeal. You need to step up and get the “full wax job” for yourself.
1) Body: Take care of yourself - stay healthy. For me this means taking time away from the project to exercise and eat well. There are a great many ways to damage your heath while you’re in this troubled situation. Stress is not the least of them!
2) Humor: Enjoy and point out to others the humor in every little thing that occurs. Joke with the team, enjoy the stakeholders. This is difficult to do under troubled circumstances, but is extremely important. Humor helps get over the hurdles. And the hurdles will be there anyway.
3) Dress up. Yes, I know this sounds odd. But start dressing more formally. Suits, shoes, watch -- even a super nice pen in your pocket. This is your business armor. Without it, jabs and stabs will hurt. It’s a great mental mechanism to get through tough meetings.
Please introduce yourself to Dave below in the comments and add him to your network. To connect with him outside of the community, you can find him here on LinkedIn.
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