Can ChatGPT Assist with Meaningful Project Management Blog Posts?
From the Project Signposts Blog
by Michael Edward Putnam
A few of my business contacts have recently experimented with OpenAI’s ChatGPT tool to see if it can produce meaningful content in their area of expertise that sounds like their writing and may provide an effective head start to their written documents. I decided to do the same thing and so I engaged ChatGPT to help me with my latest Project Signposts blog post. I simply entered a basic outline of my points I wanted to make in the blog post and then let the AI tool take it from there. With just a few follow-up questions in the chat box followed by a few tweaks to the output, we were able to co-produce the blog post below. My learnings were:
- The ChatGPT writing was concise, the meaning clear, and the English grammar was on point. I’d give it an above average rating.
- To me the writing style felt a little stiff and regimented. It did not match my writing style, but ChatGPT effectively communicated my topic.
- I see how this can be a good tool to kick-start your writing but am also concerned that non-cited sources could be easily introduced without the real “author” even knowing, therefore making plagiarism a real risk. For instance, the idea, “today’s complex and dynamic business environment” was not in my outline.
- My advice: Use ChatGPT with caution.
Why Effective Change Often Fails in Projects and Can We Make Step Change Improvements?
Effective change management is essential in project management, but traditional approaches often fall short in today's complex and dynamic business environment. In this post, we'll explore why this is the case and provide strategies for making step change improvements in effectiveness.
Approaches of the past fall short: Traditional change management approaches may not be effective in today's business environment due to a siloed approach, lack of change support, and parallel efforts between project managers and HR.
Ineffective change management can lead to a number of negative outcomes, such as failure to address culture readiness, lack of engagement from frontline employees, and absence of accountability. These consequences can be detrimental to the success of any project and must be addressed with effective change management strategies. To achieve success, we need to move away from these old ways of thinking and embrace a more holistic and integrated approach.
What will give us that step change improvement?
Visible support from senior leadership is crucial to driving successful change management. Leaders must understand resistance to change, engage those closest to the work, and establish change management resources to achieve success.
Engaging frontline employees and gaining their buy-in and support is essential to the success of any change initiative. Understanding cross-functional aspects and establishing organizational readiness for change is also crucial to achieving buy-in and engagement from employees.
It is critical to make sure employees and the organization are fully ready for the changes the project will bring. Change readiness requires updating policies, procedures, and processes, establishing clear accountabilities, and communicating changes frequently. Changes must be aligned to drive the desired behaviors and ensure the success of any project.
A unified approach is vital. Integrating project management and change management activities is essential to achieving success in any project. This can be achieved by making change management an integral part of the project plan and ensuring that both disciplines are fully aligned, in constant communication and working together towards a common goal.
Effective change management is crucial to achieving success in project management. By moving away from traditional approaches, embracing visible support from senior leadership, engaging frontline employees, and ensuring change readiness and integration, we can make step change improvements in effectiveness and achieve success in any project.
-ChatGPT with editing from Mike Putnam
Posted on: March 23, 2023 03:31 PM |
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Comments (14)
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Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates
New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
This is a great post, Mike. I share the same concern as you with regards to "non-cited sources" - I think it might become an issue unless ChatGPT starts listing the recourses from which it got the info. Wouldn't that be great? Maybe the next version?
Thanks for your comment, Rami and I think you have an excellent idea for their next version. It definitely would provide more trust in the tool.
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Michael
Very interesting the theme that brought to our reflection and for debate
I believe that the ChaGPT also adjusts the texts according to our orientation. That's why I thought it was an excellent idea: "ChatGPT with editing from Mike Putnam"
A well articulated article.
Hi Mike, Great Points !! I think Chat GPT can be helpful in a few of the areas of project management.
Kunal Mishra
Senior Technical Project Manager| Toronto Hydro Inc
Ontario, Canada
Well written though I would like to foresee granularity aspect of Change Management procedure cited in particular with key differentiation between traditional, rationalistic versus ChatGPT driven approaches, compared and extrapolated to see what and how much we can derive for practical purposes.
Latha Thamma reddi
Sr Product and Portfolio Management (Automation Innovation)| DXC Technology
Mckinney, Tx, United States
Did anyone try to get the references along with getting some meaning context of the topic one is trying to write? I think not at large but to some extent ChatGPT provides the reference article details. You may try.
However, I agree, chatGPT only gives the write up based on the database within its limitations, whereas Humans has creative mindset any topic as an expert, we can generate new write up. In my view, this is best of any presentation.
Following my post, I did give ChatGPT a few specific Project Management questions to answer. I also asked it to include its sources. I was a able to cite well known PM experts and reference the PMBOK 6th addition. It also mentioned that it's current database on the version I was using is limited to 2021 as it's latest information source.
AMIRA ZARGA
Senior Project Manager| VEO WORLD WIDE
Jemmal, 52, Tunisia
Yes, ChatGPT can certainly assist with writing meaningful project management blog posts! As an AI language model, it has access to a vast array of information on project management, including best practices, tools and techniques, and case studies.
Dov Lebowitz-Nowak
Innovation Educational Technologist & Helpdesk Manager| Saint Ann's School
Ny, United States
I enjoyed this article -- thank you!
In response to some of the other comments:
One must be wary of any citations given by ChatGPT as it often invents not only the actual reference given but the source itself!
I have asked the bot to cite sources for quotes or ideas it has provided and it quite confidently (and convincingly) offers them but upon looking up those citations, I have found more than half of the time, that even though the quotation provided is indeed an accurate representation of the general arguments made by a source, no such quote actually exists, and sometimes the publication itself is entirely fabricated by the bot to be able to generate a citation.
It's worth remembering that ChatGPT does not actually "know" information, nor is it able to search any repositories of information and produce facts -- it's not even connected to the internet. It cannot evaluate the veracity of the things that it tells you. Really, it is just a very large statistical model that is working to string together words in the most predictable (and human conversational sounding) way.
Latha Thamma reddi
Sr Product and Portfolio Management (Automation Innovation)| DXC Technology
Mckinney, Tx, United States
Yes, ChatGPT can certainly assist with writing meaningful project management blog posts! As an AI language model, it has access to a vast array of information on project management, including best practices, tools and techniques, and case studies.
Geof Baker
Co-Founder, Investor, CEO| Inteligems Labs
Nv, United States
One thing chatgpt now requires of us is how to best prompt chatGPT to curate our responses for accuracy and specificity. Its been interesting to run ChatGPT responses by BARD and Microsoft Bing. BARD uses contemporary web information but the responses can be too generalized sometimes to be helpful. Bing provides the citations, but seems to be off 20-30% of the time. When I prompt ChatGPT for research on an issue, I always ask for citations. The model claims stopped at 2021, and this where BARD or Bing can be useful for finding more contemporary citations.
Its like an entirely new language on writing prompts. There's certainly an art to it. Its not search anymore. ChatGPT seems like the first GO TO instead of google search.
There's lots of great info explaining how to write masterful prompts. I'm finding I can start asking more interesting questions to return more insightful responses from chatgpt.
The collaboration between ChatGPT and your editing has resulted in a well-written blog post. However, it's important to be cautious about potential plagiarism risks with non-cited sources. Overall, a valuable tool to kick-start writing, but using it responsibly is key. Great insights!
Michael Browning
Director, Cybersecurity| Vanderbilt University
Nashville, United States
Great insight - thank you for sharing!
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