Have you rotated your project's tires?
From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
by Kiron Bondale
My musings on project management, project portfolio management and change management.
I'm a firm believer that a pragmatic approach to organizational change that addresses process & technology, but primarily, people will maximize chances for success.
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A semi-annual ritual for many who live in cold climates is swapping all season to winter tires on their cars and back again. This exercise also presents a good opportunity to catch up on any other outstanding preventative maintenance for our vehicles.
For those of us who live in places which observe daylight savings time, we are reminded to change the batteries in our smoke alarms whenever our clocks spring forward or fall back.
Here are a few questions to consider if its been a while since you've performed preventative maintenance on your projects.
What's the what? It can be too easy to have our heads down and keep executing the project, but what if there have been some shifts in the environment which have eroded the project's benefits? While this isn't a primary responsibility for most project managers, ignoring expected outcomes might be considered negligence.
How's the how? Assuming we are comfortable with the project's objectives, are the solution and delivery approaches still viable? If we chose an adaptive approach, is that still the best choice? Are there any early warning signs that solution design or architecture might be flawed and should be revisited? Is there any waste that's been introduced in our product or project processes which could be eliminated?
Risks revisited? If its been a few weeks since the contents of the risk register have been reviewed chances are some new risks could be identified and the assessment of older ones might need to be refreshed. It's also a good practice to periodically assess the effectiveness of risk responses and see if any key assumptions made to date can be confirmed.
Stakeholders surveyed? Similar to the risk register, if there are cobwebs on your stakeholder register you'd likely want to see if any new stakeholders have emerged and whether the attitude, interest and power of existing stakeholders remains the same. How effective have your stakeholder engagement strategies been to date and do they need to be adjusted?
Team thriving? When's the last time you did a pulse check on the health of your team? Was your last team building activity months ago? Even if no one has joined or left the team, you need to regularly monitor team morale and provide opportunities for individual and team development.
Lessons learned? Has any new knowledge been identified, curated and most important, disseminated and learned? Even on projects following a traditional delivery approach, the team should regularly reflect back on what has been learned to help them and others improve.
Ignoring such good practices won't usually cause immediate issues but paying down project management debt gets costlier the longer you wait!
Posted on: April 22, 2018 07:00 AM |
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Comments (20)
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Yes I agree with you, revisiting things and learning from mistakes is so important. Projects evolve all the time and we need to re-visit all areas.
A periodic health check across the board makes sense. It's easy to get complacent even on successful projects, perhaps moreso on successful projects. Thanks Kiron.
Thanks Kevin & Sante!
Kiron
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Great insights Kiron ... Love It !
Drew Craig
Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard
Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Really great points, Kiron. Like the analogy as well.
Henry Hattenrath
Project Consultant| Tectonic Engineering MSA LLC
New York, Ny, United States
Kiron - Good tips on periodic check-ups on projects. The check-ups are an essential facet of leadership skills by project managers, program managers and by managers in the project management office.
Kiron- I live in the only province in Canada which does not change time and not many change winter tires because day light saving doesn't work for us, however I see your valid points it is always good to re check revisit doing internal audit to check the health of all procedures. Actually looks like these are all part of Kaizen. Well stated
Alok Priyadarshi
Project Manager| Tata Consulting Engineers Limited
Jamshedpur, Jharkhand, India
Thanks a lot Kiron.
These are very good reminder for long duration project.
Anish Abraham
Privacy Program Manager| University of Washington
Auburn, Wa, United States
Good insights on performing preventive maintenance of projects, Kiron and thanks for sharing.
Thanks Alok, Drake & Anish!
Thanks for sharing Kiron!! Meaningful insights
Michael Delaney
Partner| Delaney Management LLC
West Chester, Pa, United States
Thanks Kiron, am a big fan of a health check
William Meller
IT Project, Program & Portfolio Manager| Polestar
Gothenburg, Sweden
Thanks for your interesting vision. Good article!
Great blog Kiron. Often enough we focus on delivery and oversee the need revisit what has been agreed in the earlier stages of the projects.
RAJESH K L
Project Manager, PMP| Bharat Electronics, Bengaluru, India
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Good one and interesting. Thanks for sharing
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