Project Management

Tales of Project Management

From the Project Management in Real Life Blog
by
Sharing my Project Management adventures and some tips. I like to keep my articles brief and to the point. Project Management is an Art, Science, and Discipline. Just keep it simple and have fun!

About this Blog

RSS

Recent Posts

Job Shadowing the Daily Work Routine

Mother Hen Leadership

Taming the Wild Wild West (Project Management) environment

The Hybrid-Plus called The LAW

Risk Register (Project Team Members)

Categories

Agile, Blog, Budget, Budget Creep, Budget Planning, Business Analysis, Career Development, Communications Management, Continuous Improvement, Contractor, Creative, Data Center, Deadlines, Disaster Avoidance, Disaster Recovery, Educator, Email, Football, Go-Live, Hawaii, Hybrid, Hybrid-Plus, Implementation, Kaizen, Kanban Board, Kickoff Meeting, KPI, LAW, Leadership, Lean, Lessons Learned, Meeting, Milestones, MS Project, New Release, Options, PMO, Presentation, Process Improvement, Productivity, Project, Project Coordinator, Project Management, Project Manager, Project Plan, Project Tracking, Projects, Proposal, Quarterback, Real Life, Requirements Management, Risk Assessment, Risk Management, Risk Management, Risk Register, Scope Creep, Scope Management, Slideshow, Software Development, Software Updates, Solutions, Stakeholder Management, Statement of Work, Status Report, Subject Matter Experts, Subprojects, Systems Administrator, Teams, Tips, Training, Transparency, Vendor, Waterfall, Whiteboard, Work Breakdown Structures (WBS), Zen

Date

linkedin twitter facebook Request to reuse this  


You are the Project Manager for two important projects that need your attention on a Saturday night what do you do? Have the right people on the project. 

I had a Radiology/Pharmacy system relocation go-live that involved moving the system across town to a new Data Center. The second project required some critical tasks to be performed for another project that cannot move forward until two critical tasks are completed.

The players that supported me was a Business Analyst, Data Center Operations Supervisor, and HP Field Engineer to shut down and pack up the hardware at 23:00 to let the moving company deliver the system to the new Data Center.

The system arrived in the new Data Center in good condition. The Data Center was already prepared for power, network connectivity, and telephone lines. Everything went well except an issue with a legacy application that had issues with a modem. I had to leave the team and work on my second project that I was the only player that could do two critical tasks to keep the project on track.

I had to drive back to the old Data Center to perform the two critical tasks. It's 03:00 and I go to work and everything went according to my plan and I finish at 04:30. 

Time to drive back to the new Data Center to help the team get the legacy application working. We get the application to work at 11:00 Sunday morning. 

The key to a successful project go-live is teamwork, it's so important to support each other. Having a good Risk Assessment review meeting to make sure you cover everything in your go-live plan is so important to catch anything that you might have missed on the plan.

Tip for your project go-live plans. When you develop your plan break the timeline tasks down in half hour increments when possible. By breaking down your tasks in half hour increments you can measure your progress better. You will see what areas are taking more time or less time to complete. You can determine if you need to back out the implementation or continue to move forward. In some cases you can't go back so it will help you give a status report to management.

 

(Note - this article was originally written by Drake Settsu and published on DrakeSettsu.BlogSpot.com in December 2013)


Posted on: May 31, 2018 09:28 AM | Permalink

Comments (13)

Please login or join to subscribe to this item
avatar
Eduin Fernando Valdes Alvarado Project Manager| F y F Fabricamos Futuro Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia
Thanks for sharing

avatar
Drake Settsu Project Manager / Blogger Hi, United States
Thanks Eduin!

avatar
Anish Abraham Privacy Program Manager| University of Washington Auburn, Wa, United States
Drake, I completely agree with you and thanks for sharing.
It's all about team work, mutual respect and support.

avatar
Drake Settsu Project Manager / Blogger Hi, United States
Thanks Anish!

avatar
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Nice one Drake.

avatar
Sante Delle-Vergini, PhD Senior Project Manager| Infosys Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Good one Drake.

avatar
Drake Settsu Project Manager / Blogger Hi, United States
Thanks Rami & Sante!

avatar
Drew Craig Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Thanks for sharing, Drake. May I suggest as part of your risk assessment identify resource needs for a specific skillset - " I was the only player that could do two critical tasks to keep the project on track." But definitely kudos to you and your team and great to see the LL/I&A!

avatar
Drake Settsu Project Manager / Blogger Hi, United States
Thanks Andrew!

Regarding the risk assessment, I did Identify myself as the required resource and risks involved. Management respected my abilities to deliver in the crunch. I said I will keep both projects on track.

avatar
Cibin Thomas Reston, Va, United States
Good one Drake!

avatar
Drake Settsu Project Manager / Blogger Hi, United States
Thanks Cibin!

avatar
Eduard Hernandez
Community Champion
Product Operations Program Manager Barcelona, Cataluña, Spain
Good tips. In addition to what is exposed in the text, in some of my projects I found useful to have a check-off list of all materials and resources that need to be in place before going live.

avatar
Drake Settsu Project Manager / Blogger Hi, United States
Thanks Eduard!

Please Login/Register to leave a comment.

ADVERTISEMENTS

"A statesman is an easy man, he tells his lies by rote. A journalist invents his lies and rams them down your throat. So stay at home and drink your beer and let the neighbors vote!"

- W.B. Yeats

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors