Project Management

How To Establish Your Credibility as a Project Manager in a New Environment

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By Yasmina Khelifi, PMI-ACP, PMI-PBA, PMP

Project management skills are transferable skills you can use in any domain or environment.

All of us have heard this, but I didn’t believe it until I realized the power of PM skills in two situations. The first one was in a software project I managed many years ago. More recently, I leveraged my project management practice in a new technical environment.

Based on my lessons learned, here are five main ingredients I’d like to share with you in terms of establishing your credibility in a new environment

1. Accept your limits
I don't have a developer background. When I was appointed, the team was skeptical. From the outset, I set the expectations: I said right away that I didn’t know much about software development. Talking openly about our limits is the cornerstone to forge trust among stakeholders.

2. Stay in your lane
The developers were experts. One of the sponsors tried to compete with them, asking tricky questions, challenging what they were saying. The developers interpreted it as a lack of trust—which it was, partly. He plummeted their engagement.

It's not about foregoing a general understanding of what experts are doing. It's about knowing where to put the bar. The time you will spend learning will translate to less time wasted down the line.

3. Connect and reflect
Take time to get to know the people you’ll work with—and remember what they told you. Taking a genuine interest in your team members will translate into stronger teamwork and better outcomes.

More importantly, think about creating spaces in your clogged calendar to self-reflect. What objectives would you like to achieve in the three coming months? It will help you to not go astray.

When you arrive in a new environment, you are also overwhelmed by names, faces, documents and information. I write down the information I get (including personal ones) to jog my memory when I need to.

4. Observe, ask and take notes
When I revamped the delivery process in the new technical environment, I interviewed experts to understand the current state. I listened, I misunderstood, I asked again —that's critical for understanding where the most important things lie.

In my former position, I trained newcomers. I was a reference on the team. In this new environment, I felt like a fresh graduate student with more ego. Thoughts of failure crawled in. It was not easy to accept. In hindsight, it was an incredible lesson in humility to push me to shift my mindset from “knowing it all” to learning.

5. Communicate
Before being project manager, I contributed to different projects. In one of them, I hardly saw the project manager—and I didn't understand how she managed it.

Drawing on this lesson learned, when I took over the project role on the software team, I explained how I worked, the way I communicated, what I knew (and didn’t know) and the frontiers of my role.

In both cases, I set up different communication threads:

  • A general email, like a newsletter every two weeks (a long email list with all stakeholders, including some top managers)
  • Dedicated project emails
  • Ad hoc conference calls (if needed)
  • Instant messaging groups

These also provided places where I could reward some team players for their contributions.

In the beginning, people didn't see the value of these communications; I was accused of sending too many emails. But in the long run, it has held. It fostered team spirit.

What are the ingredients of your recipe to thrive in a new environment? Share your comments below.


Posted by Yasmina Khelifi on: October 06, 2021 01:35 AM | Permalink

Comments (34)

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Mayte Mata Sivera PMO Leader | Speaker | Author Ut, United States
Good Points, thank you for sharing!

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Alona Fraser La Mesa, Ca, United States
Thank you, Yasmina! I totally agree: being authentic and vulnerable creates deeper connections and better business results

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Manuel Ancizu Program Manager Wind Energy| Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy Pamplona, Navarra, Spain
Thanks Yasmina, I also take notes about names and key things when entering a new environment; first see and listen, second ask, third draft scenarios, fourth act.
People are at the center and, as conductors in an orchestra, PM doesn’t need to be the subject-matter expert of everything but he/she needs to know how to engage each of the members of the orchestra and inspire them to play the best music individually and as a team.

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Alvin Makurumidze Director| G E Pvt Ltd Kwekwe, Midlands, Zimbabwe
Well said Manuel; if you can, please expound a bit on that “create scenarios” step.

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Manuel Ancizu Program Manager Wind Energy| Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy Pamplona, Navarra, Spain
Dear Alvin, answering your request, in the process "listen, ask, scenarios, act", the step of "drafting scenarios" means that I draft different ways of acting, what could happen if, possible ways to proceed... according to what I had seen, listened and the answers received to the questions.
Evaluating all that brings you very good insights to decide how to move forward. Hope it's useful.

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Volonda Harris Dallas, Tx, United States
These are great, thanks @ Cameron McGaughy, Lynda Bourne, Kevin Korterud, Conrado Morlan, Peter Tarhanidis, Christian Bisson, David Wakeman, Jen Skrabak, Mario Trentim, Wanda Curlee, Yasmina Khelifi, Sree Rao, Lenka Pincot, Soma Bhattacharya, Emily Luijbregts, cyndee miller, Jorge Martin Valdes Garciatorres, Marat Oyvetsky, Ramiro Rodrigues

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Hara Polapragada Staff Engineer| Applied Materials India Private Ltd Visakhapatnam, Ap, India
Dear Yasmina, Thanks for an informative article. It is really helpful for those trying new job environments.

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Chee Choong Tan IT Architect| IBM Malaysia Puchong, Selangor, Malaysia
Great article. Thanks for the practical experience sharing.

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Anil Saini Contracts Manager| Larsen & Toubro Ltd Jaipur, Rajasthan, India
Thanks Yasmina, you successfully brought out how earning trust and acceptance is vital in delivering any performance. Also, humility goes a long way when you are in a new environment which takes you as an alien outsider. Nicely presented.

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Stefan Tintera Team Lead Depot Management| Hamburger Hochbahn AG Hamburg, Deutschland, Germany
Great inspiration, Yasmina! To answer your question: my main ingredient is the phrase "I don't know", followed by one of "What is your view on this", "Who do you think can I ask", "Give me time estimated to find out", etc. - which pretty much seems to reflect your points 1 and 4.

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Stefan Tintera Team Lead Depot Management| Hamburger Hochbahn AG Hamburg, Deutschland, Germany
Great inspiration, Yasmina! To answer your question: my main ingredient is the phrase "I don't know", followed by one of "What is your view on this", "Who do you think can I ask", "Give me time estimated to find out", etc. - which pretty much seems to reflect your points 1 and 4.

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Vishakha Rai Founder| Omsruti India
Great points as always

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Freddy Andale Senior Project Manager| Bank of South Pacific - Financial Group Limited Port Moresby, National Capital District, Papua New Guinea
Excellent points Yasmina. Thankyou

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Stephen Robin Project Analyst Trainee| Ministry of Works and Transport Arima, Ari, Trinidad and Tobago
Strong points. The first point is a big one. Know your limitations and be proactive in letting people know.

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