Project Management

Rocks in the River

From the PMI Global Insights Blog
by ,
Whether it’s in-person or virtual, PMI events give you the right skills to complete amazing projects. In this blog, whether it be our Virtual Experience Series, PMI Training (formerly Seminars World) or PMI® Global Summit, experienced event presenters past, present and future from the entire PMI event family share their knowledge on a wide range of issues important to project managers.

About this Blog

RSS

View Posts By:

Cameron McGaughy
James Turchick

Past Contributors:

Kimberly Whitby
Johanna Rusly
April Birchmeier
Nikki Evans
Dalibor Ninkovic
Dr. Deepa Bhide
Morten Sorensen
Tao Chun Liu
Jonathan Spiteri
Chris DiBella
Nic Jain
Tyler Norman
Nicholas Sonnenberg
Tam Abaku
Klaus Nielsen, MBA, PMI-ACP, PMP
Karen Chovan
Jack Duggal
Catalin Dogaru
Priya Patra
Josh Parrott
Scott Lesnick-CSP
Antonio Nieto
Dimitrios Zaires
Ahmed Zouhair
Carmine Paragano
Te Wu
Scott Bain
Katie Mcconochie
Fabiola Maisonnier
Erik Agudelo
Paul A Capello
Kiron Bondale
Jamie Champagne
Esra Tepeli
Renaldi Gondosubroto
Joseph Musiitwa
Mel Ross
Laura Lazzerini
Yonela Mfeya
Kim Essendrup
Geetha Gopal
David Summers
Carol Martinez
Lisa DiTullio
Tai Cochran
Fabio Rigamonti
Archana Shetty
Geneviève Bouchard
Teresa Lawrence, PhD, PMP, CSM
Randall Englund
Kristy Tan Neckowicz
Moritz Sprenger
Mike Frenette
O. Chima Okereke
David Maynard
Nancie Celini
Brantlee Underhill
Claudia Alcelay
Sandra MacGillivray
Vibha Tripathi
Sharmila Das
Michelle Brown
Gina Abudi
Greg Githens
Joy Beatty
Sarah Mersereau
Lawrence Cooper
Donna Gregorio
Seth Greenwald
Bruce Gay
Michele Mattera
Wael Ramadan
Fiona Lin
Somnath Ghosh
Yasmina Khelifi
Erik Rueter
Joe Shi
Michel Thiry
Erika Kiely
Heather van Wyk
Jennifer Donahue
Barbara Trautlein
Julie Ho
Steve Salisbury
Jill Diffendal
Yves Cavarec
Rose James
Drew Craig
Vinay Babu Tarala
Stephanie Jaeger
Diana Robertson
Zahid Khan
Benjamin C. Anyacho
Nadia Vincent
Carlos Javier Pampliega García
Norma Lynch
Heather McLarnon, CSPO
Lissette Indhira Pimentel Sosa
Emily Luijbregts
Susan Coleman
Aneliya Chervenova
Michelle Stronach
Sydni Neptune
Louise Fournier
Quincy Wright
Peace Opuruiche Echeonwu
Nesrin Christine Aykac
Ming Yeung
Laura Samsó
Lily Woi
Jill Almaguer
Mayte Mata Sivera
Prof. Éamonn Kelly
Marcos Arias
Karthik Ramamurthy
Michelle Venezia
Yoram Solomon
Cheryl Lee
Kelly George
Dan Furlong
Kristin Jones
Jeannette Cabanis-Brewin
Olivia Montgomery
Carlene Szostak
Hilary Kinney
Annmarie Curley
Dave Davis

Recent Posts

Presentation Recap: Sustainability in Project Management

Presentation Recap: Measuring and Managing Enterprise Portfolio Health

Elevating Leadership Through Community: Reflections from the PMI Global Summit 2025

Why the PMI Global Summit Series Africa Is a Classroom of Urgency

Presentation Recap: Women in Project Management - Breaking the Glass Ceiling

Categories

Agile, Agility, alignment, Ask the Expert, Benefits Realization, Best Practices, Bonding, Business Analysis, Calculating Project Value, Capital Projects, Career Development, Change Management, Cloud Computing, Collaboration, collaboration, Communications Management, Complexity, Congress 2016 Ask an Expert, Construction, Curiosity, Digital Transformation, digital transformation, Documentation, Earned Value Management, Education, EMEA, EMEA Congress Reflections, Engagement, engagement, Ethics, Events, Extra Info, Facilitation, forecasting, future, Generational PM, Global Congress 2016, Global Congress 2016 - North America, Global Summit, Global Summit 2023, Global Summit Series, Good News, Government, Healthcare, Human Aspects of PM, Human Resources, Identity, Information Technology, Innovation, Kickoff, Leadership, Lessons Learned, Mentoring, Metrics, Networking, New Practitioners, Nontraditional Project Management, organisations, Organizational Risk, PM & the Economy, PM Think About It, PMI, PMI Congress, PMI Congress NA 2016, PMI EMEA Congress 2018, PMI Global Conference, PMI Global Conference 2017, PMI Global Conference 2019, PMI Global Congress - 2016, PMI Global Congress 2012 - North America, PMI Global Congress 2013 - EMEA, PMI Global Congress 2014 - North America, Pmi global congress 2014 - North America, PMI Global Congress 2015, PMI Global Congress 2015 - Ask the Expert, PMI Global Congress 2016 - EMEA, PMI Hours for Impact, PMI PMO Symposium 2013, PMI Pulse of the Profession, PMI Training, PMI Virtual Experience Series, PMIEMEA17, PMIEMEA19, PMO, PMO, PMXPO, Portfolio Management, Procurement Management, Professional Development, Program Management, Project Delivery, Project Failure, project kickoff, Project Planning, Project Requirements, Reflections on the PM Life, Risk Management, Risk Management, ROI, Roundtable, Scheduling, SeminarsWorld, Social Impact, Social Responsibility, SoftSkills, Stakeholder Management, Strategy, Sustainability, Teams, Techniques, test, The Moon, Tools, Training, Translations, Videos, Virtual Experience Series, Virtual Teams, Volunteering, war

Date

linkedin twitter facebook Request to reuse this  


How do you add flexibility and iteration into a rigid system? A defined management structure?  How do you manage stakeholder risks?  And how do you avoid the downfalls of assumptions?

I sat in three different sessions yesterday, each on different topics, and somehow all three came together quite obviously for me.  Maybe it will make sense for you as well.

So I will start with a great analogy I heard in the first session that rang true for me, as it relates to exactly how we might go about shifting to adaptability.  The session, delivered by Joy Beatty of Seilevel, was about the challenges of introducing Agile into Large Enterprises.  A bit of a mix around Agile methods and change management issues.

"Find your rocks in the river, and let the water flow around them."

The rocks, of course, are those non-negotiable aspects. Those required checkpoints, the gates, or those points where dependencies come into play when particular requirements need to be met.

The water? The process of how to get there, how to continue to move forward with processes that might require a bit more flexibility.

When we are thinking about adding adaptability and iteration into our PM structures, we need to understand how that may impact our stakeholders, and the dependencies that can kill agility.  We need to map out our processes, and explore how those tie in to other processes within our organization. 

  • Which other teams might need information from us (or the system being altered), and what information that is, when,
  • What impacts our changes might have on others' activities or capabilities, and
  • What cannot be changed at all for those groups - sometimes full systematic change cannot be done all in one go, and we need to be aware of that.

From there, we mark those rocks in our system - lock them in, and ensure that the boat will not be rocked (excuse the pun).  Everything else that can be managed around those...let them flow.  Keep people informed of plans, progress, changes, etc., but let it flow. 

But be careful.  Make sure that map you've developed is whole, holistic.  Have you found all of your stakeholders? 

I listened next to a talk about stakeholder engagement, delivered by Rick Furino of Microsoft.  He spoke of all the categories of stakeholders to consider, their differing priorities and perspectives and why those exist, and how to better engage them.  And he did it in a way as to draw the audience in - a perfect demonstration of engagement processes at play!

Be sure you've worked through the many categories of stakeholders, and asked enough questions to flesh them out.  Ensure you understand what their needs and priorities are, how influential they may be, and how that might impact your project.   

Because guess what - there are likely silent stakeholders you might have missed.  Or you assumed they didn't matter, that you weren't upsetting anything for them.

Those are the ones that will come out of the woodwork after you have made a change that you assumed would not matter, would not impact anyone.

The last session of the day was delivered by Beth Spriggs.  Beth had the audience fully engaged throughout the entire session, asking questions, making statements or posting pictures up, and asking for our assumptions.

Helping us to understand just how many differing perspectives there might be in just one room. 

And then she would change the context for the same discussion, and ask us to reflect on our assumptions just made.  To demonstrate just how easy assumptions might change or can be wrong. 

She suggested several things we can do to reduce the risks of assumptions, and I would suggest that these strategies can be applied also to looking for and assessing other risks as well.

1. Always 'zoom out' - context is everything, particularly when dealing with conflict!

2. Explore your own assumptions - what are you taking for granted, put it in writing.

3. Share your assumptions and ask for feedback.

4. Ask for different perspectives, ask lots of questions. 

5. Ask others for their questions.  Q-storm...

6. Ask people what other people are saying - not to assume there isn't trust or things not being said, but to see how others' view others' stories - it may shed light on more potential risks.

7. Perform a 'checking assumptions exercise' - live collaboration where a list of assumptions are reviewed by all - if everyone is aware of one, it isn't necessarily a risk...but if only one person is aware of it, put it on the risk register to ensure it is addressed!

So, if you want to achieve success in introducing changes, whether they are agile-focused or something else, make sure you have a clear understanding of your stakeholders, their issues or concerns, the potential barriers to success, and any assumptions you or your team may have!

Attending the PMI Global congress in San Diego?  Come meet me with the “Ask an Expert” booth in the Solutions Center (exhibit hall).  There are several experts here to answer your questions on a variety of topics - I'm the one focused on risks and opportunities that can be investigated in planning, particularly for industrial projects like mining - that, and sustainability integration too!  I hope to see you!  

 


Posted by Karen Chovan on: September 26, 2016 02:56 PM | Permalink

Comments (0)

Please login or join to subscribe to this item


Please Login/Register to leave a comment.

ADVERTISEMENTS

"If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have an idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will have two ideas."

- George Bernard Shaw

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors