Minimising The Impact of Miscommunication
Categories:
communication
Categories: communication
| Staying on message limits the impact of your message being changed as people share it with their colleagues – and this goes for positive marketing messages as well, not just crisis management communications. Having said that, ultimately you can’t stop people talking to others about your project, and from a marketing perspective when the message is positive, you absolutely want them to be talking about it. These days everyone has an audience. They always have had, as colleagues have convened at the water cooler or around the kettle in the office kitchen. Today they have the tools to share information more quickly with their networks through social media, internal social networks and they’ll add their opinion there as well. Remember that it’s people who stop projects, not crises. So being prepared in your communications planning for problems gives you a better chance of controlling gossip and unhelpful communications and thus limit the overall impact on your project. This diagram is very linear but it’s important to recognise that the more you can hear what’s being said by the people hearing your message, the easier it will be for you to either correct the story or respond to their concerns. Create Feedback LoopsFeedback loops are an essential part of your marketing communication because you need to know what is working. If isn’t working, ditch that method of communication and try something else. A simple way to start gathering feedback today is to tell people how to give you feedback, for example in the last line in a newsletter article – provide your email address and a call to action to send you their comments. When you do receive and act on feedback close the loop by telling them what you have done with it. On projects there’s also a formal feedback loop in the form of the post implementation review at the end of a project. You do get more immediate feedback than that with communication activities, especially if you are talking to someone face-to-face, but I believe it’s worth building formal feedback loops into your marketing activities. This gives you the chance to track how you are doing and correct your course if necessary. Here’s an example of a project I’ve done this on. Feedback Improves SatisfactionWe tracked customer satisfaction results monthly. I gave each stakeholder group the opportunity to rate the project team across four measures: management of top issues, communication, planning and delivery. The stakeholder group that gave the project the worst scores was actually the IT department, and that’s the graph you see here. A bit embarrassing because that is the team I work in. The issue was spending so much time communicating to stakeholders outside the project team and my department that my immediate colleagues were getting a rough ride. There were too many last minute requests from my project team, or assumptions made that didn’t allow the rest of the IT department to do their jobs efficiently. Once I put in place monthly stakeholder satisfaction scores and understood what was going wrong it was a slow but achievable job to turn around the perception of the project and build engagement. We managed that by using each monthly conversation with department heads to explain how we were addressing their concerns and asking what else we could do to improve the experience of being on the project. We proactively marketed what we were doing differently so they felt listened to. By taking the feedback into account and acting on it, I was able to manage expectations and improve the both satisfaction and project management practice. It was an exercise in marketing the project and the achievements and there’s a lot more about how it worked in my book, Customer-Centric Project Management if you’re particularly interested in that. From this project we learned two things. First, you have to be able to adapt what you are doing. And second, satisfied, engaged stakeholders are a huge asset when things go wrong on projects. Putting in the effort helps you build great relationships and that’s a massive advantage when you need to take difficult decisions. For more information on project marketing and the tools you can use to communicate about your project, watch my PMXPO talk on the topic. You can get it here (and claim a PDU at the same time). |
Cost Management Documents (And Which Ones You Really Need)
Categories:
cost management
Categories: cost management
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5 Expert Tips For Managing Virtual Teams
Categories:
virtual teams
Categories: virtual teams
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4 Key Terms for Earned Value
Categories:
earned value
Categories: earned value
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Whole books have been written about Earned Value, so I won’t be able to go into much detail here. However, it’s worth having a little refresher on the key terminology, and if you haven’t come across Earned Value before, hopefully this is a gentle introduction to some of the language you’ll hear often. To recap, Earned Value is a way of assessing project progress and lets you compare performance across projects. It can help spot trends in performance. It combines scope, schedule and cost and looks at project progress holistically with all of those elements included. Earned ValueEarned Value (EV) is the value of the work performed. It’s the word ‘value’ here that caught me out for a long time. However, once you understand the terminology, the rest of EV becomes much easier. Project Management for Dummies (yes, that’s on my shelf and I refer to it often!) defines EV like this: The earned value of a piece of work is defined to be equal to the amount you planned to spend to perform it. In other words, it’s the original budget for a task. I think the terminology avoids using the word ‘budget’ because this means something very specific in EV and ‘the amount you planned to spend’ could also include resource time that is not costed in the same way as buying a cement mixer or other resource. Planned ValuePlanned Value (PV) is the amount of budget that you’ve planned to use up at a particular point in the project. The Dictionary of Project Management Terms (another of my go to reference books) explains it like this: Sum of approved cost estimates (including any overhead allocation) for activities or portions of activities scheduled to be performed during a given period. Also called: budgeted cost of work scheduled. Ah, ‘budgeted cost of work scheduled’. That makes a lot more sense, doesn’t it? |
5 Common Project Budget Problems (and How to Fix Them)
Categories:
budget
Categories: budget
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Here are 5 common project budget problems and how to fix them. If you’ve got other suggestions for dealing with these situations, please let everyone know in the comments below! 1. Contract Expenditure is OverrunningYou’ll notice this hopefully before it causes a big overspend on your project. Your company has entered into an agreement with a supplier and now the bills are starting to rack up. This could happen if your agreement is on a time and materials basis, or a fixed price plus extra costs for changes to scope. How to fix it: Find out why the costs are overrunning. Is it because your team is putting through too many change requests, which is hitting a contract clause that lets the supplier charge more? Or is something else at play? Whatever the cause, pin it down and work from there. Involve the supplier as well, so that they know that you can’t afford, or choose not to afford, to put up with those costs going forward. You may end up renegotiating the whole thing, but better to do that early than to put up with overspends for too long. 2. Resource Expenditure is OverrunningWhen you have to pay for internal or external resources, the costs can soon mount up. It’s not difficult to find yourself with spiralling resource costs, even if they are just wooden dollars being moved between departments. The most likely causes are poor estimating and too many change requests. How to fix it: It’s often hard to drill down into the detail of where a resource is spending time, especially if you don’t have a timesheet application. If you don’t record time, then start doing that first! It will really help you improve your estimates over the longer term. Short term, you need to sit down with your team and reforecast the whole project. If you then can’t afford to do all the work that you’ve planned out, you need a frank conversation with your project sponsor about what can be taken out of scope for this phase. 3. Managing Risks is Costing MoreIn fact, the common problem here is when you didn’t budget anything for project risk management. Then a risk pops up and you’d like to do something about it and can’t because there’s no money allocated for risk mitigation or to exploit a positive risk. How to fix it: It’s too late to go back and ask for a risk budget now… or is it? You might find your sponsor open to that kind of conversation, and it certainly doesn’t hurt to ask. If you don’t have additional money available then you have to adjust your activities accordingly. Perhaps your project board could accept a higher level of risk for that element, or they would be prepared to compromise on something else. Put together a proposal that explains the risks, the costs and the benefits along with some options so that they have choices. 4. You Can’t Access Management ReservesAh, the mythical management reserve. This hits project managers who have sponsors that are poor at following through on their promises. The sponsor says that there is some kind of ‘contingency’ or ‘management reserve’ that can be spent at their discretion if required, say, in the event of an unplanned project disaster. Said disaster happens and suddenly they don’t have authority to access those funds, or another project has used them, or you need to write a business case to access them… How to fix it: You will struggle to fix this one in advance but your best bet is to make sure that you have full confidence that any pot of money that is being held outside your official project budget does actually exist and is there for you. Of course, the best thing to do will be to manage the project so you don’t need to tap into additional reserves. 5. You Can’t Track ExpenditureThis happens when other people are spending your project budget and not letting you know where it is going. The first you hear about resources being acquired or a deal being signed is when the invoice gets passed to you from Finance with a big question mark written on it. When this happens you can’t accurately keep track of what is being spent, and whether it is being spent on the right things. How to fix it: Sort out the process for spending money. Make it clear to the project team (even those people who are more senior than you) that purchase orders have to go through you for tracking, even if you don’t have the authority to actually sign them. Let the Finance team know as well so that they can be copying you in on requests and making sure that the process is adhered to. They have no interest in receiving invoices that can’t be paid or getting the company into debt with inappropriate suppliers so they will be on your side! |








Dave Gordon

