What If You’re Stuck With A Bad Leader?
| Yes, I know it’s November, but I wanted to get in one more point about ProjectManagement.com’s October theme, leadership. Almost all of the pixel ink I’ve seen on the topic addresses things like the characteristics of leaders, how they’re different from others, and/or how those who are typically not leaders, but would like to be, can become one. This is all fine, but what I’d like to focus on for this week’s blog is a situation virtually everyone who’s ever been part of a team has endured: that of having the person who has been named to a managerial leadership position having little or no true qualities of a leader, or even exhibiting characteristics of one who should never, ever be in such a position. What do you do if you’re stuck with a bad leader? Consider the following scenario. A fellow comes to work for a contractor straight from a stint as a very high-ranking executive in another very large organization. He actually flunks all three of Hatfield’s Rules of Managerial Leadership:
Nevertheless, this person is brought in as a Vice President, and every whim that emanates from his large corner office is carried out by the craven Company Men and Jungle Fighters[i] within the organization, no doubt in the vain hope that his counterproductive techniques will hurt them least. Nobody on the Project Team is willing to identify the precise reason this person came in to the organization at such a high level, but it would be consistent with this particular company to bring in such people in the hope that they could help win more contracts from the organization they had just left. It does not occur to anybody that the organization this guy just left would resent him as much as the Team learns to, and in short order. So, what ends up happening? Morale plummets, key deliverables are over budget and late, and any Gamesman or Craftsman[ii] who can leave the project. However, keen observers become aware of one more tell, another clue that this guy is a terrible manager: he really hates Earned Value Management Systems (EVMSs). Sure, I’m fully aware that a long-standing frustration of us PM-types is the indifference or even recalcitrance of higher-ups in our organizations to recognize and use EVMSs in their project and program work. But I’m not speaking of a garden-variety neutral or mildly irked attitude towards it – I’m talking about full-blown resentment that such things even existed. In our scenario, a certain level of Earned Value rigor is stipulated by the contract, and no level of temper tantrums from this VP can change that. As the cost/schedule performance reports show an ever-deteriorating level of performance, this fellow’s behavior actually worsens. Fortunately for the rest of the Project Team, his Project Controls Analyst is a woman with a spine of stainless steel. She simply can not be bullied into altering her analysis towards supporting a more optimistic narrative and, since something had to be done by the execs about the amount of talent fleeing the project, she can not be dismissed or transferred. Members of the Project Team (well, the braver ones, anyway) could complain to the higher-ups about this veep’s lack of technical qualification, or his treatment of the Team, or lack of vision the live-long day, and such assertions – no matter how true – would fall on skeptical (or even deaf) ears, being, as they were, somewhat subjective. But a Cost Performance Index over twenty points down at the cumulative level? Now that’s something that can’t be ignored. As the Project’s objectively-measured cost and schedule performance worsened, less and less authority would be imparted to this veep, as he draws higher and higher levels of scrutiny for even the mid-level decisions he would make. Eventually he has the title, and the salary, and little else. The whole company folds a few years later, hastened, in part, by their tendency to place bad managers into leadership positions. The moral of the story provides something of a road map for others caught in analogous scenarios. In the confines of my little story, those who managed the situation best did the following:
GTIM Nation knows I’ve written at length about the characteristics of managerial leaders, and one of these days I may pen a blog about the characteristics of really bad managerial leaders. When I do, I will definitely include one of the quirkier tells of such ones, that they almost always despise any form of a working Earned Value Management System. And I will leave it to GTIM Nation to determine how much of my scenario is fiction, and how much was lived reality.
[i] See Maccoby, Michael, The Gamesman, The New Corporate Leaders, Bantam Books, 1976. [ii] Ibid. |
Optimal Technical Approaches Almost Never Come In Cans, And Real Leaders Know It
| I may be setting a record for the highest number of characters in a GTIM blog title, but I needed every single one of them to synopsize this week’s take on this month’s ProjectManagement.com topic, Leadership. An oft-overlooked aspect of managerial leadership is a subset of my three key aspects of it, to wit:
The oft-overlooked aspect I alluded to is a subset of the first bullet, identifying the optimal solution to the problem being pursued by the Project Team. Even a moment’s consideration of the situation must yield the obvious fact that, if one of the canned strategies that’s been around seemingly forever was clearly the ideal approach to take, why on earth would it need a PM to execute it? Doesn’t work that needs no innovative or creative approaches or solutions become rote? And this is where I become frustrated with symposium paper-presenters. Not all of them, of course, but the ones who are not so much presenting new or innovative ideas as much as acting as well-mannered and polite scolds to those they perceive aren’t implementing Earned Value or Critical Path Methodologies to their satisfaction. These are not thought leaders, nor leaders at all. They’re more precisely defined as passionate followers, throwing their energies behind notions that have been around for decades. We all know the need to set up a Work Breakdown Structure; we’ve been told ad infinitum of the need to clearly and completely define the scope, and to honor the “triple constraint,” and to acknowledge that one of the baselines can’t change without impacting the other two, and to guard against informally changing the scope, and, and, and… Enough already! This isn’t news to anyone who’s ever even studied for the PMP®. To help illustrate my point, let’s turn, once again, to the Game Theorists’ favorite tool, the payoff grid.
Practically speaking, the Type of Leader/Assigned Role profiles for scenarios 1B and 2A will be significantly easier to identify than scenarios 1A and 2B. Interestingly, scenario 1A represents a threat to being able to optimize Asset Management, while scenario 2B is a danger to Project Management. If a genuine leader has not been recognized for their abilities in such a role, the worst that can happen is that the organization isn’t using its assets to their potential. However, if a PM happens to belong to scenario 2B, and the project can’t perform adequately with only conventional techniques, then such a project is virtually doomed to overrun, come in late, or both. “But wait, Michael!” I can hear GTIM Nation say, “What about your oft-cited derivative of the Pareto Principle, that the 80th percentile best PMs with access to only 20% of the information needed to obviate a given decision will be consistently out-performed by the 20th percentile worst managers who have 80% of the information so needed? Wouldn’t the existence of an adequate Earned Value Management System, combined with a decent Critical Path schedule and a functioning Change Control System, keep the scenario 2B manager from wrecking the project?” Well, yes and no. The people I’ve observed who are entrenched in scenario 2B will tend to reject the idea that poor cost and schedule performance indicators could possibly be indictments of their technical approach to their projects’ scope, preferring instead to blame various members of the Project Team for not implementing the canned management schemes thoroughly enough to attain success. This kind of blame-shifting from the fake leaders in the PM role easily turns into a project performance tail spin, particularly if unrecognized true leaders happen to be in the ranks of the Project Team, and can see the actual source of the project’s difficulties, but are not in a position to properly address them. “BUT WAIT MICHAEL!” I can hear the more readily agitatable members of GTIM Nation exclaim. “What if the performance measurement information actually influences the PM to re-evaluate their technical approach?” Well, if this is the case, then such a manager would have begun the transition from fake to genuine, leaving my analysis (mostly) intact.
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Leading Towards A PM Culture
| An awful lot has been written (with “awful” being the operant word here) about the PM’s role in “changing culture,” usually of the organization that the Project Team belongs to, in such a way as to expedite the use of PM tools and techniques within said organization, leading to an increase in the frequency with which projects are brought in on-time, on-budget. What seriously irks me about such assertions lies with the fact that the word “culture” is usually so poorly defined within these arguments that their assertions can basically be boiled down to “the members of the Project Team didn’t do as I said, or found some way to disappoint me, leading to the failure to …” install a Project Management Office, or advance PM capabilities within the organization, or bring the project in on-time, or any other disaster that happens to unfold. So, let’s turn to Dictionary.com for a usable definition of the term “culture.” Although several of the definitions (3 through 6) offered could apply, I’m thinking #7 is closest to fulfilling our purposes: noun
Now let’s zoom in on the three subject nouns in number 7:
If your eval of the bulleted questions returned even one (a) answer, you are most probably in the same confounded conundrum that has beset the vast majority of PMs since the start of Project Management as a distinct discipline. For virtually every business in its growth or maintenance of market share phase, (b) is clearly the best answer. One would not know this from the curriculum of almost every business college in the world, though. They have been dominated by the Asset Managers’ view of corporate commerce techniques since the time of Machiavelli (a coincidence?), and show few signs of losing their epistemological grip on academia, if not the industrialized world. All of which brings us back to the notion of culture change. In those organizations lucky enough to have a strong PM culture, I’d be willing to bet that it did not come about because the execs in the Finance and Accounting Department had a sudden epiphany, and gladly handed the technical agenda for producing project-related management information streams over to the PMI®-types. Nor am I inclined to believe that it came about due to an infiltration of PMs re-writing a bunch of procedures, and getting some executive to sign off on them. No, my money is on a handful of courageous and insightful PMs actually (if not surreptitiously) embracing PM culture, and using its manifestations to bring in projects on-time, on-budget, including functional EVM and CPM systems, leading to the establishment of a solid customer base. Unfortunately, this last approach also happens to be the longest. So, yeah, the PMO can “change culture,” just not directly. The kind of change that challenges and eventually overcomes literal centuries of Asset Management rules and techniques probably never comes about from a frontal assault-style approach. It has to be done one project at a time, then one program at a time, before it can move on to portfolios, organizations, and entire industries. And that’s how PMs’ actions can lead to culture change. [i] Retrieved from https://www.dictionary.com/browse/culture on October 18, 2020, 20:04 MDT. |
Don’t Become the Non-Leader
| In last week’s blog I listed the three key characteristics of a managerial leader, and then wrote about how the risk managers’ (no initial caps) agenda actually undermines that function. This week I would like to take that a step further, and discuss how to avoid attaining a leadership position by means other than through merit. I’ll begin by addressing the three easiest red-flags, derived from last week’s blog. To wit, if:
…you may have arrived at the leader role for reasons other than merit. The next set of clues are a bit more subtle, but can be just as telling. Consider what tends to happen when a garden variety new manager is brought in to an existing organization. The newbies typically have an expectation that the organization’s current performance is the baseline, and things will only get better now that they are there. Working from this assumption, take a look at what probably presents as the biggest threat, that their new technical agenda will be thwarted or frustrated by uncooperative extant personnel. For this reason, whenever a new manager comes into an organization, the tendency may be to attract, find, and reward loyalty, not talent. Why should talent be an issue? The organization was clearly performing at an acceptable level prior to the newbie arriving, and the newcomer represents an influx of talent, right? So, upmost in at least some rookies’ minds is to move through the Tuckman’s Stages of Group Development dynamic, specifically
…in such a way as to minimize the Storming phase. The newcomer may desire a return to organizational stability, with a subsequent cruise on into Performing space. Here’s the problem with this entirely predictable, but strategically unsound approach: with the exception of replacement scenarios, the whole reason a new manager was introduced in the first place was usually because the target organization’s performance was disappointing, or even unacceptable. If the characteristic being sought out and rewarded is loyalty, then odds are that things are about to get worse. GTIM Nation knows of my respect for the brilliant Michael Maccoby, and his book The Gamesman, The New Corporate Leaders (Simon and Schuster, 1976). By attracting and rewarding loyalty rather than talent, the Maccoby archetypes that will succeed are the Company Men and the Jungle Fighters (who will feign loyalty), all at the expense of the most talented archetypes, the Craftsmen and Gamesmen. Put simply, this is an extremely hazardous transition strategy. With Company Men and Jungle Fighters placed in positions of authority over the Craftsmen and Gamesmen, the odds of arriving at the optimal technical approach – the very first characteristic of the managerial leader – have plummeted. Indeed, members of the latter two archetypes will tend to flee such organizations, likely to be replaced by more “loyal” team members, i.e., Company Men and Jungle Fighters. From an organizational behavior and performance point of view, this can easily become an unmanageable morass. I mentioned last week that, in addition to the three essential characteristics for managerial leadership, an additional element – courage—was also key to success, and here’s another area where that becomes a factor. It takes a good measure of courage for the newly introduced manager to listen to those in the organization who may disagree with them, and to patiently and even-handedly review their criticisms’ validity before rejecting them and attributing their motivation to a lack of respect, or even insubordination. In short, newbie managers who aspire to legitimate leadership roles should never fear the Storming phase from Tuckman’s Stages, and instead use it as an opportunity to gauge which members of the inherited team are both talented, and have a personal stake in a successful outcome, the proverbial “skin in the game.” So, what’s the litmus test for whether or not criticism from the Project Team represents a legitimate technical approach alternative, or simply snarky opposition? If it’s not clear based on content, consider if the criticism/recommendation was intended to benefit the entire team, or just a subset (or even the critic alone). If it’s the former, it could well be legitimate. If the latter, not so much. I would think it rather impossible to advise on how to become a leader in an 800-word weekly blog. But I do believe that such a venue does support relaying tips on how to avoid finding yourself in the role without a few foundational elements in place. In short, don’t become a non-leader. |
How risk management Dilutes Leadership
| Lots of pixel ink has been spent attempting to define Leadership (ProjectManagement.com’s theme for October), typically as a preamble to instructing those who do not come by those qualities naturally on how to acquire them. I think such trains of thought are on the wrong track, particularly when the discussion turns to whether leaders are born into the role, or if they learn the necessary characteristics over time (i.e., are “made”). As GTIM Nation knows, I have previously laid out the three characteristics that I believe are central to the success of anybody who aspires to the role of managerial leadership, so:
A key component of this last bullet is courage. The willingness to pursue strategies that are derived from novel approaches to problem resolution will almost certainly draw criticisms from those who have previously tackled analogous problems in a different manner, and often these criticisms can become positively cacophonous. The problem, of course, is that novel approaches to problem resolution that are actually sub-optimal, or even flat-out wrong, will also draw criticism, meaning that the virtue of courage in managerial leadership is immediately converted to vice when the first bullet, having the technical expertise to correctly identify the optimal technical approach, is given short-shrift, or ignored. Meanwhile, Back In The risk management (No Initial Caps) World… With all of this as a backdrop, let’s take a look at the actual mechanics of developing a risk management plan or project risk analysis. The risk analyst, with Work Packages in hand, interviews the Subject Matter Experts on the Project Team in order to ascertain
Keep in mind that only in rare instances are the SMEs involved with the actual Scope Baseline also trained cost or schedule estimators, meaning that, even if they somehow have insight as to the odds of an in-scope, uncosted event occurring, they can only guess at the figure for the cost/schedule impact of said event. To quote the late Michael Crichton, guessing at parameters in a structured formula is simply an exercise in expressing our own prejudices. Also keep in mind who these SMEs are – members of the existing Project Team, and usually not the PM’s superiors. In other words, the entirety of the risk analysis is essentially to produce an expensive document of the PM’s organizational inferiors speculating on what could go wrong with the selected strategy, and substituting their prejudices for usable data parameters in order to add credence to the whole exercise. Do I have to say it? This is not how leaders in general develop their strategies, nor how Project Management leaders in particular produce and pursue a technical agenda. Indeed, to allow a risk analysis to drive (or even influence) the production or pursuit of a given technical agenda is to allow the vague and poorly-quantified worries of those within the existing Project Team to determine the path forward, the precise opposite of leadership. Engage the risk managers if your customer insists that you do so, but feel free to only pretend to ingest and respect their “analysis.” Then you can get back to doing real PM stuff, including leading. [i]Taleb, Nassim, Skin In The Game, Hidden Asymmetries in Daily Life, Random House, 2018. |





