Project Management

People, Planet, Profits & Projects

by ,

About this Blog

RSS

View Posts By:

Richard Maltzman
Dave Shirley

Recent Posts

A citrus fruit schools us on material science and project leadership (Part 2 of 2)

A citrus fruit schools us on material science and project leadership (Part 1 of 2)

Black Tape Over the Engine Light

Saving the Sahel (Part 1)

You Can't Get They-ah From Hee-yah

Categories

6th, 6th Edfition, 6th Edition PMBOK, 7th Edition, 7th Edition PMBOK, 8th Edition PMBOK, 8th Edition PMBOK Guide, Activism, actuarial, actuary, adapt, addition by subtraction, Africa, africa, agriculture, airforce, ajaita, Alaska, amazon, analogous, analytics, ancient, and more power, antarctica, anti-science, apple, apps, architecture, arctic, arrakis, Artificial Intelligence, asch paradigm, Assistant, asthma, astronomy, automobile, automotive, autonomous cars, b, bankhar, Banksy Crypto, basalt, baseball, bats, batter, beauty products, benefit, benefits, Benefits Realization, beyond epica, biases, bicycle, big data, big dfata, big dig, bike, biodiversity, biomedicine, birdhouse, blockchain, blood, blue blood, blue trees, bluefin, bluefin tuna, book review, boston, boston university, Boyce, Brazil, brazil, Breakdown Structures, BS, building, buildings, built environment, built environment, bumblebee, cake, capacitor, car, Carbon, carbon, carbon capture, carbon negative, carbon neutral, carbon pool, carbon sequestration, carbonate, careers, CEO, ChatGPT, chatGPT, chatgpt, chatgpt, chess, China, china, chopsticks, citrus, cli-fi, climate, climate change, climate resilience, climeworks, Clumsy, CO2, co2, CO2 Utilization, coalition, cobalt, coffee pods, cognition, cognitive, Collabortion, colombia, concrete, Conflict, construction 5.0, cool projects xyloscope, cooling, coral, corn, cost of good quality, cost of poor quality, cost of quality, crazy, criticism of project management, cryptocurrency, CSR, csr, data, data analytics, data privacy, datacenter, dataset, death spiral, Decision Making, decomposition, Defense and Climate, definition of a project, deforestation, dependencies, dependency, desert, DIKW, dikw, dimopoulos, disposal, dna, DOD, dogs, dolphins, dream, drilling, drink, dune, dune, dutch, early start, earth, eatlocal, eco-tourism, ecological, economic, economics, EKC, electric grid, electricity, electronics, elysis, embodied carbon, emerging technologies, empower, Energy, energy efficiency, environmental degradation, escalate, escalation, ESG, extreme weather, fallacy, FARC, farming, finance, fish, fish brains, fishing, fix, fixing the earth, flint water, Flint Water Supply, flood, flooding, Food supply chain, food waste, forest, forest for the trees, forestation, forrestgump, frank herbert, Fruitcake, fungus, fusion, Galvao, garage, gas, gasoline, geese, gender equality, gender partnerships, generational differences, Generative AI, gladwell, gold, Goodness, google, Government, GPT, great pacific garbage patch, green, green building, green buildings, green energy, green iguana, green project, green project management, greening, guest post, gyre, harkonnen, Harvesting Benefits, hawasina, hedgehogs, heursitics, historical data, hlb, holitsic, holland, horseshoe crab, human-caused climate change, hydrogen, hydrology, ice, iceland, ignition, iguana, imagery, impact, india, inequality, information, initiatives, injection, insurance, intelligence, interacting risk, internal combustion engine, invasive species, investment, isomer, issue escalation, issues, ITER, jobs, Jupiter, justification, kids, kill point, knowledge, koch brothers, Kuznets, laboratory, LAL, landscape mode, lapampa, launch, LCA, Leadership, Leadership, life cycle analyses, life cycle analysis, lifecycle, Linkedin, liquid, lizard, local, long term, long-term, long-term thinking, look up, loud, maintenance, maker, makermovement, malcolm gladwell, management, marathon, marine biology, market, mars, Martin Luther King, mean, megawatt, MeHg, melting, mercury, metal, Microgrid, microplastics, migration, military, millennial, mindset, minerals, mission, mitigate, MLK, mongolia, museum, museum of london, nature, nematodes, net gain, Net Project Success Score, net zero, netherlands, network, New book, New Jersey, New Practitioners, new york, NFT, nitrogen, noise, noreaster, norway, nova, NPSS, NREL, ocean, ocean cleanup, ocean life, oil rig, oil rigs, oklahoma, oman, only murders in the building, opportunity, overall risk, oxygen, packaging, pareto, PBS, permafrost, persistence, peru, Pharmaceutical, planet, planet.com, planning, plant, plasma, plastic, playground, pm, pm education, pmbok, pmbok guide, pmnetwork, PMXPO-2018, podcast, pollutants, pollution, poop, poor, portfolio, power, power skills, privacy, privacy concerns, professors, program, Program Management, project, project leader, project leadership, project management, project management 3.0, project on fire, project progress, Project Success, project success, projecticity, projectleadership, projectmanagement, projects, psychology, pulse of the profession, purple bacteria, purpose, quiet, rainforest, rationale, reef, refugees, renewable, renewables, Repair, repair, repeatable process, repeatable processes, repurpose, research, resource breakdown strucuture, Resource Management, reversing climate change, revisionist history, rich, rigs2reefs, ripe, risk, risk avoidance, Risk Management, risk mitigation, risk response, risk responses, river, robots, rocks, rules of thumb, rural, rural India, russia, Sarcasm/Irony, satellite, saudi, schedule, sci-fi, Science, science, science-fiction, scientific american, screaming monkeys, sea, sea life, Sea-Level Rise, sea-level rise, seagreens, seawall, seawater, seawater temperature, seaweed. beat;es. farming, secondary risk, selena gomez, sequestration, shipping, skyscraper, SLR, smart cities, smart city, smelting, social, social pressure, soil, solar, solar panels, solar perovkites, solar saheli, sonic, sponge cities, SRI, stage-gate, stagegate, stakeholder, stakeholder management, steward, stewardship, storage, strategy, stupid, success, suffer, sulphur, sunk cost, supercapacitor, supply chain, survey, Sustainability, sustainability, Sustainable Investing, Sustainable Tourism, sybiosis, symbiosis, system 03, TBL, temperature, terraform, terraforming, test, threat, threats, totem, touchscreen, tour, tower, Trains, transparency, transportation, trash, tree, tree species, trees, trillion, triple bottom line, triple constraint, truth to power, UMass, us army corps of engineers, USDA, vacuum, value, venus, vision, voice, voltage optimization, vw scandal, washing machine, waste, wastewater, water, we mean business, whales, Whirlpool, wind, wisdom, women, Women in Project Management, wood wide web, woonerf, Work Breakdown Structures (WBS), world breakdown structure, worms, xian, xylotron, Yale

Date

Paved with Good Intentions

Categories: Decision Making

linkedin twitter facebook Request to reuse this  

The title of this blog post will be explained at the end of the post.

It’s a different sort of a post – one which asks YOU a question and looks for your feedback.  I’m really interested to know what you think.

I’m going to give you a scenario and it’s intentionally highly-simplified, because I don’t want you to labor (or argue) over the technical details of the construction project it represents – take the general information that is given at face value.  I would like you to rather think this through as a decision-making exercise, in which I’d like you to challenge your own thought process and to expand your “consideration” of inputs and context.

Let’s say you are the project manager of a major road-resurfacing project.  Let’s say it’s a 50-mile section of an interstate highway in the northeastern US – prone to heavy traffic (including trucks) and some temperature extremes (freezing, snow, heat, humidity).  Further, we’ll say that this is a Federal highway, so the stakeholders are the US Government which is sponsoring the project, and of course the (taxpayer) drivers who are driving on this surface.

Your project team is deliberating over the choice of paving material.  They can choose Material “S”, the standard paving material, or Material “LT”, a new paving material made from recycled tires and construction waste, which is more expensive, but has some characteristics which are very attractive.  Its cost, 3 times the standard, will mean that you must go to a senior executive for an increased budget.

Here are the details of these two materials:

As you can see, the LT material, while costing 3 times as much as Standard (Material “S”) will provide better traction for drivers (better “grip” of the road, especially during wet conditions).  It also provides better fuel efficiency.  For example, vehicles that would get 20 MPG (miles per gallon) would actually get 30 MPG on a stretch of highway paved with LT.  Also, because Material LT is flexible and resilient, it will require much less in terms of repair – fewer potholes, cracks, and other imperfections appearing over time.  There is an intangible here – it’s not just cost of repairs; fewer repairs also means less inconvenience for drivers.  You’ll have less frequent lane closures, and reduced risk of accidents involving construction crews.

So here are your questions:

The big one: should you go for the LT?

The subtending questions:

  • What drives your decision?
  • What did you consider?
  • What was your “planning horizon”? 
    • Are you thinking about handing off the project to the highway department and moving on to the next project, or are you thinking through to the ‘benefits realization’ portion of the highway?

Make your decision now, but also… please read on to have a little more ‘advice’.

Let’s look at the same information presented a little differently, and now I can reveal that LT stands for Long-Term (as in Long-Term thinking):

Framed this way, what are your thoughts?

Does this change your considerations?

Note that the benefits are economic (accelerated breakeaven point for the maintenance department, lower fuel costs for your drivers), ecological (reduced carbon emissions) and social (you are keeping your stakeholders alive).  This is the point.  By extending your planning horizon to beyond the handover to the highway department, extending it to “operation”, I assert that you are improving the quality of your project decision making.

So now, back to the title.  The expression “The road to hell is paved with good intentions” is meant to be (among other things), an admonishment that a good intention is meaningless unless followed through. 

So I think the “follow through” in this case is the consideration of the product of the project.  In this case the product of the project is – literally – paving.  Your projects will have other ‘follow-through’ items.  Are you considering the long term? Step back and think about what happens to the product – the outcome – of your project.  You may be paving the way for big improvements for your stakeholders.

What do you think?  No, really, what do you think?  I’m very interested to hear your feedback about the scenario and even more so about what went through your mind as you drove through this decision.

Thanks!

Posted by Richard Maltzman on: September 30, 2017 03:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (8)
ADVERTISEMENTS

"You cannot prevent the birds of sorrow from flying over your head, but you can prevent them from building nests in your hair."

- Chinese Proverb

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors