Project Management

How are you planning for psychological safety within your team?

From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
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I've delivered a number of presentations this year on the importance of building psychological safety within project teams and the role which project managers play. During these presentations I'm frequently asked the question "How do I go about creating it?". While there are existing models such as Timothy R. Clark's progressive four stage model, a simple three step approach which I support is to Plan It, Live It and Champion It. I will cover these steps within my upcoming articles.

Planning for safety starts even before the project formally kicks off. Once you have been assigned as the project manager, meet with the key stakeholders who will have frequent interactions with your team members and get their commitment to developing and sustaining a safe environment. It is quite likely that some of them may not be familiar with psychological safety and this will present you with an opportunity to educate them on its importance. At a minimum, this should include the customer, the project sponsor and the functional managers who will be supplying the team members for your project.

When you meet with your project sponsor to establish mutual expectations you have another opportunity to confirm that they will commit to acting as a champion by supporting you if you are encountering challenges with ridiculing or criticizing behavior of a senior stakeholder.

When team members are assigned to the project, it is a good practice for you to help them define the starting set of working agreements for how they will interact with one another. Highlight the importance of safety within this session and get their commitment towards building it within the team. Help them to discover specific actions, rituals or practices which will support safety and to identify behaviors which will hurt it. When new team members join midstream, review the topic of safety with them as part of their onboarding.

Psychological safety planning should also be part of your preparation for any event where key decisions will be made. One way to make it safe for your team members to voice concerns or dissenting opinions is by asking for a volunteer to act as devil's advocate during the event. Communicate to everyone participating in the event that the role of this volunteer is to reduce delivery risk by raising concerns and that they are not just being difficult.

Kick-off meetings provide another opportunity to communicate the importance of safety. If the kick-off meeting is at the start of a new phase, share examples of those actions or behaviors which contributed to safety over the previous phase as well as those which hurt it.

Without planning for team psychological safety, “A goal without a plan is just a wish.” ― Antoine de Saint-Exupéry


Posted on: November 22, 2020 07:00 AM | Permalink

Comments (12)

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Luis Branco CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
Interesting the idea of ​​bringing the theme of psychological safety to reflection
I really like the concept of intellectual friction versus social friction

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Luis! As leaders, we need to get comfortable with not just tolerating, but actively encouraging intellectual friction to get the best out of our teams whereas we need to reduce the sting of social friction which will impede such progress.

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Luis Branco CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Caro Kiron
I believe that building a psychological safety environment is a path and not a destination.
How can this be achieved when the majority of team members are outsourced?
How to achieve this when the value delivery times are short and strict?

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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Good piece Kiron. I know this has been a challenge for organizations these days with the high level of uncertainty.

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Luis -

Great question - should we treat outsourced team members different when it comes to safety that internal ones? Creating safe environments should help to reduce schedule risk as team members will be more likely to try creative solutions to overcome hurdles than they might if they feel un-safe.

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Jean-Claude Greco Sierre, Valais, Switzerland
Thanks for sharing

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Thanks Rami & Jean-Claude!

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Brantlee Underhill
PMI Team Member
Chief Community Officer| PMI Pa, United States
Yes, AND....be present, be fully present with the team. Ask individuals how they are doing, for real. Look at them, and what their body language says. Don't waste the opportunity by taking notes or looking at your phone or multi-tasking screens. Chances are, we are not able to co-locate our work, and being present with our team members is entirely necessary to make them feel safe, understood and supported.

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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Absolutely Brantlee - I'm covering those under the "Live it" step in my model. Active listening, soliciting feedback and focusing on who is speaking are all critical ways of understanding if something is "off" and are also basic steps to showing respect towards another human being.

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Brantlee Underhill
PMI Team Member
Chief Community Officer| PMI Pa, United States
Can't wait to read more, Kiron! Thanks for sharing!

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Eduin Fernando Valdes Alvarado Project Manager| F y F Fabricamos Futuro Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia
Thanks for sharing

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Mushtaq Abdulrahimzai SWIS| Surrey Schools District 36 Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Thanks for sharing

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