Project Management

Starting Your Project Management Career

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Categories: Career Development


Off the starting blocks

Getting started in project management can be tough.  When starting out, there are many questions and challenges to face, and they are different based on your particular background and situation. 

 

People who struggle with this come from various backgrounds:

 

Project Newbies - You might be a recent graduate or switching careers.  If you have no experience whatsoever with working on or managing projects, it can seem almost impossible to get your foot in the door. 

 

Technical Gurus – You have been on project teams and been “in the trenches” getting things done.  Now it seems that managing these projects is your calling, but you have to go through a paradigm shift and learn new skills to make the transition.

 

People Managers – You have been managing people and are good at it.  Now you want to expand your horizons and switch from the day-to-day management of functional teams to the dynamic environment of delivering unique projects.

 

You might be trying to break into project management, or you may be an “Accidental Project Manager” who looked up one day and asked, “What have I gotten myself into?”  A project fell in your lap somehow.  How do you get good at managing it?

 

The questions I get most from these groups center around expanding knowledge, gaining experience, and planning your career path.  Answers change based on individual circumstances.  Your personality attributes and background play heavily into the path forward.

 

Hard and Soft Skills

 

Natural aptitudes vary from person to person, but you can acquire a level of competency for nearly all project management skills through education and experience.

 

Hard Skills refer to competency with the tools and techniques of formal project management.  If you are analytical by nature, hard skills are relatively easy for you to acquire and master.

 

Soft Skills or “people skills” include competency in communication and relationships with other people.  Outgoing “people persons” have a natural aptitude to be comfortable in this arena, but can also engage in many ineffective approaches when lacking in knowledge and experience.  Do not confuse personal attributes with soft skills.  I cannot influence personal attributes and aptitudes, but I can teach soft skills.

 

Building Knowledge

 

Regardless of which group you belong to, you will need to expand your knowledge base.

 

Technical Gurus will likely pick up the hard skills quickly, but many of the soft skills practices of managing people effectively and politics may be somewhat new.  People Managers will find soft skill nuances in project environments and many of the hard skills will be new territory.  Project Newbies may be familiar with some of the theories in project management, but are going to need a lot of real-world knowledge, experience, and coaching to land that first job and formulate their project manager career path.

 

Some great sources of real-world project management education include:

  • Blogs/Podcasts – Use sites like http://blogsearch.google.com to find them
  • Books – Focus on the basics first, follow the cutting edge later
  • Join PM OrganizationsLocal PMI Chapters are a great example
  • Training – Focus on gaining useful knowledge, certifications come later!

 

Finding a Mentor and Gaining Experience

 

A mentor is a huge boon to you if you can find one.  You can find mentors by networking locally or online, but be sure you approach them in the right way and offer benefit to them in exchange for their wisdom.  Your goal should be to offer valuable assistance to potential mentors, with the hope (but not expectation) they will reciprocate by sharing their lessons learned.

 

Do not just ask to “shadow” them.  What value are you offering them?  Ask if there are tasks (mundane as they may be) that you could do for them, to free their time up.  If you are a project team member, ask if you can help compile the status report or take meeting minutes during project meetings. 

 

Donate your time; this is in addition to your current responsibilities.  Whether volunteering for another organization or within your own company, this is a great way to gain experience.  Within your own organization you should let it be known you are interested in project management; not just through words but by your daily actions.

 

What You Need To Grow

 

Is the organization you work for now a good environment for your desired career path?

 

Does your company make money by delivering successful projects, and/or do they respect Project Management as a formal discipline worth investing in?  If so, you will likely see opportunities for entry-level positions in project management that provide specialization such as:

  • Project Controller
  • Project Coordinator
  • Project Assistant
  • Project Analyst
  • Project Scheduler
  • Junior Project Manager
  • Assistant Project Manager

 

Other organizations may have a progression of technical or management roles through which you can pass and eventually start managing your own projects.  Whatever your situation, put yourself into the best environment possible, and plan out your career path ahead of time so you have a roadmap with goals to follow.

 

Oh, and when you get there, be a mentor for someone else!

 

photo by n.kuzma


Posted on: October 30, 2010 08:16 PM | Permalink

Comments (15)

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rjhernandez125
Excellent article,believe me I know about the difficulties of breaking into this field. I have a Masters Degree in project management and graduated with honors.I have taken Microsoft Advanced Project Management classes and still"no real world experiance,no job",thats what I keep hearing.

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Josh Nankivel Engineering Project Manager| Apple Sioux Falls, Sd, United States
Thanks for the comment!

I coach people who have lots of education like yourself and not much real-world experience all the time. I think I can help. Several students in my training course struggle with this. The PM Career Coaching course in particular focuses on these items about gaining experience and mapping out a career path and finding organizations you can grow with.

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Taralyn Frasqueri-Molina Senior Project Manager| Independent Contractor Pasadena, Ca, United States
I think paying it forward and mentoring someone else is extremely important. It really is difficult to break in, but when you do, reaching out to help others should be at the top of your list.

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Leam Hall PM Apprentice| Smartronix/DoD Pulaski, Va, United States
While I would have liked more information in the article, I agree with the basic points. I''''m a "Technical Weenie" working on my PM transition. Hard skills, facts, and details are preferred. :)


For those lacking real world experience, check out SourceForge or CollabNet. Volunteer some time on a project that interests you. Learn a few technical skills so that you can talk the talk, and really work the documentation. Most developers aren''''t strong in docs, communicating the value of their work, orgetting customer feedback in useful forms. Your PM skills could make a lot of difference for them.

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Josh Nankivel Engineering Project Manager| Apple Sioux Falls, Sd, United States
Thanks for the comment Leam! I've always found it difficult to go into the kind of detail I need in a blog post or even a book in some cases. I created some training to combat this problem.


If you would like to get an idea about that, here is a YouTube video I made about the Project Management Career Coaching Course.


A very excellent suggestion about SourceForge and CollabNet Leam. Another idea is if you are on a project team, volunteer to take on some of the documentation, planning, and statusing activities from the project manager or system engineer. (Or whomever based on your particular environment).


-Josh

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cynthia aniston Pennsylvania, Pa, United States
A practical experience comes very handy while looking for a job. The nature of Project management in any field is such that no formal education/training really fits in to the requirements. So it becomes all the more important to get some hands on experience/guidance on live projects. That goes a long way in gaining practical experience. It helps in associating whatever is learnt with the practical problem areas and enhances the ability to resolve them. Online help is easily available for ms project training. Never forget to help others.

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Leam Hall PM Apprentice| Smartronix/DoD Pulaski, Va, United States
Cynthia,

Even more to the point are studies that show a person with experience and skill can perform the same task 5-25 times faster than a person who is not skilled or experienced. Building a portfolio lets you grow and communicate that growth to potential employers. I once had a manager who said he wanted to hire poeple who did our job (tech stuff) at home, for fun. Those are the ones that are so passionate about things that they''ll continue to learn and grow. They are also a lot more proficient and productive than those who only do their work when there's a direct paycheck involved.

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Josh Nankivel Engineering Project Manager| Apple Sioux Falls, Sd, United States
@Cynthia - great point, one of the things that differentiates project management from other careers is that there (unfortunately) aren't a lot of internships out there for project management. When you are getting a degree in computer science you can usually find an internship developing software somewhere and gain valuable experience that way. Most organizations don't do internships with project management, even though they should. The education is definitely valuable, and real-world experience is even more so.


@Leam - another great point! I feel the same way as your manager, I have turned down many certified candidates for tech positions and selected someone who didn't look good on paper, but were passionate about the type of work I'm hiring for. The same goes for project managers; I want someone who studies it because they love it. Someone who is active online and perhaps even writes a blog on a site like Gantthead.com on the topic. I advise everyone do so, and invite potential employers to get to know you through your writings! Invite them to see how passionate you are about the topic.


-Josh

RGeake
Nice article Josh, I think you've captured a lot of the key points and exciting that people might want more detail - that proves that they are interested and open to further instruction. I was reading it from "the other side" as I am hoping to improve my mentoring abilities - and this was a good reminder of pretty well how I got through that break...wihout necessarily hanging on coat tails, or stepping over colleagues to climb. There is a lot that can be done to help yourself, and that will mark you out from the rest.

Confidence is especially important alongside asking questions and being familiar with the environment in which you find yourself - great point about questioning this aspect, an infertile soil will not produce good growth, outright contamination is deadly.

So from the other side, thank you for reminding me that this is what my mentee should be doing and asking for.

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Josh Nankivel Engineering Project Manager| Apple Sioux Falls, Sd, United States
@RGeake - Thank you, it is also important to know how to be a good mentor too. I've been interviewed about that before on the PM Podcast, perhaps I should write a piece about it too. Thanks!
Josh
pmStudent e-Learning

RGeake
Nice article Josh, I think you've captured a lot of the key points and exciting that people might want more detail - that proves that they are interested and open to further instruction. I was reading it from "the other side" as I am hoping to improve my mentoring abilities - and this was a good reminder of pretty well how I got through that break...wihout necessarily hanging on coat tails, or stepping over colleagues to climb. There is a lot that can be done to help yourself, and that will mark you out from the rest.

Confidence is especially important alongside asking questions and being familiar with the environment in which you find yourself - great point about questioning this aspect, an infertile soil will not produce good growth, outright contamination is deadly.

So from the other side, thank you for reminding me that this is what my mentee should be doing and asking for.

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Leam Hall PM Apprentice| Smartronix/DoD Pulaski, Va, United States
And to really set expectations on both ends. I'd certainly love to have a mentor, but I realize how little I've communicated where I am and the particular challenges I see. So it becomes hard for a mentor to identify their skills with my needs and for us to connect. Lot of "I" in that paragraph; which makes me think it needs re-thinking. Then again, where does one look for a mentor?

RGeake
oops, not sure what happened there... thansk Josh, becoming the mentors' mentor solid strategy. Get writing and I'll check it out.


RGeake
@Leam - there has to be a lot of "I" - they can be introverted and extroverted



I want to progress, I want to help, I want to deliver better projects, I want to deliver projects better, I want more recognition, I recognise that I can give more value, I think you can help me, I think I can help you, I think my XXXXX skill needs to be improved, can you help me...



asking someone to be a mentor is a great compliment in the first instance, but I''''m not suggesting you walk up to the nearest PM in the building...who do you admire and why? If that person isnt in your organisation, where might you find them? If you are on a project team and a client or supplier has someone you trust and admire, you may be able to ask them... there is a lot of leverage that can be gained from cross-company mentoring. In my early career (as Project Support and Project Engineer) I made very sure that I had strong relationships with PMs in all of the organisations that I worked with. Those friendships continue today and if I am ever stuck for ideas I know that there is still someone that can be asked for advice and guidance...and every now and then, they return that compliment.


I''''m sure that there''''s a whole community of PMs online somewhere that would be willing to help out. You could have your very own tailor-made team of mentors working with you on specific aspects. Get the best of the best.





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Leam Hall PM Apprentice| Smartronix/DoD Pulaski, Va, United States
I just submitted my CAPM application and it got me thinking. My background is technical but I''ve been working on projects and with PMs for years. I''ve even led projects on my own but more by the "seat of my pants". The other day person reviewing my reseume pointed out that there was next to nothing shown as project management.


So the next few months I''m going to be building my personal portfolio, adjusting how I''m presented, and addressing areas I''m weak on. That will probably be my first mentor need, how to show what I do know and how to make sure I learn what I don''t yet know but need to for my level.

Leam

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