The Ultimate AI Primer Came From … Reader’s Digest!
| As is typical with science (particularly Management Science) trends, Artificial Intelligence, or AI, has received a lot of attention and material, and a significant portion of it is bogus. Some of the material I’ve seen is straight up laughable, particularly the idea that AI will end up controlling humans like some silicon-based, unavoidable tyrant. In my next blog I might explore how a PM-specific AI-based tyranny might manifest (it may not be that different from the current guidance-generating industry), but for now I want to focus on what AI is at its fundamental level, and why I’m not in a hurry to purchase AI-generated-dystopia insurance. The Reader’s Digest Treasury for Young Readers (Reader’s Digest Association, 1963) is truly a treasure. Published sixty years ago, it’s full of really cool pieces – it was in this book that I first read a Sherlock Holmes story (The Adventure of the Speckled Band) – including brain teasers, puzzles, games, and projects, one of which deals directly with Artificial Intelligence. It’s there on page 176, in an article entitled “How to Play ‘Hexapawn[i],’” with instructions on how to build HER, the Hexapawn Educational Robot. And make no mistake – even in 1963, with personal computers not even being conceived as a practical possibility, HER represented true Artificial Intelligence. Here’s how it works. Hexapawn is a simplified derivative of chess, played on a three square by three square board, populated by three white pawns and three black ones. Only two types of moves are allowed: the pawns may either move one square straight ahead to an unoccupied square, or it may capture diagonally. There are three ways to win: (1) by advancing a pawn to the third row, (2) by capturing all of the opponent’s pawns, or (3) placing your opponent in a position where he cannot move. To construct HER, you will need twenty-four matchboxes and some colored beads. On page 177 there’s an illustration of each of the possible 24 scenarios, with black dots representing the black pawns, and circles representing the white ones, on the nine-square board. Possible moves in each scenario are shown by colored arrows, and the HER always moves second. To construct HER, copy the scenarios from Page 177, colored arrows and all, and paste each of them on top of one of the 24 matchboxes. Also place a black, blue, red and (for just a couple of the scenarios) green bead inside. Then make a move, and find the diagram of the position from the top of the matchboxes. Without looking, pull a colored bead from the box, and make the indicated move. Continue until either you or the HER has won. If you win, go to the last move/scenario that HER made, and remove that colored bead from the corresponding matchbox, eliminating that move from the available pool. In this way the HER “learns.” In the version described in the Treasury, the robot became a perfect player after losing eleven games. And this, GTIM Nation, perfectly and simply illustrates what AI is all about. Consider: a machine can no more “learn” than 24 bead-containing matchboxes, at least not in the conventional sense. Ultimately, machines can only execute prior instructions, try random actions from a previously-defined set and eliminate the choices that led directly to undesirable outcomes, or perform some combination of the two. In a YouTube video entitled ”Open AI Broke Hide and Seek[ii],” the narrator describes how a simple digital version of the children’s game Hide and Seek was set up, with two bots being the “hiders,” and two being the “seekers.” The environment was a square room, with a smaller room in one corner, and two openings. Prior to any relevant bot behavior being observed, there were literally millions of games, with the failure of the bots to do anything “intelligent” being attributed to their “random” behavior. But that’s the whole point. Absent anything resembling real intelligence, the only way these bots could “learn” would be by playing the game and initiating some random move, arriving at an undesirable outcome, and then removing the losing choice from the repertoire, like HER did. That’s why it took millions of iterations for the Open AI application to happen across a workable strategy that any five-year-old could have ascertained within the first few instances of the game. Don’t misunderstand – much insight can be gleaned from setting up a digital environment, and then having a program execute random decisions across multiple iterations in pursuit of the stipulated goals. Almost invariably some strategy will succeed that the programmers/designers never considered viable. But we are talking about trial-and-error here. Digital errors may have no consequences, whereas using this approach in the real world often has significant ones. Also consider that Hexapawn only has twenty-four possible scenarios, whereas the PM environments’ possible situations are, well, endless. I want to close by reiterating … wait. I need to find the matchbox with “closing paragraph strategies” from my GTIM Educational Robot, and pull out a bead to see what to write next.
[i] Gardner, Martin, “How To Play Hexapawn,” Reader’s Digest Treasury for Young Readers, pp. 176-177. [ii] Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVxedkeOo7w on August 26, 2023, 20:12 MDT. |
On Why PMs Get Stymied (Part II)
| Last week I discussed some of the tactics that the Anti-Project Management crowd employs, and this week I’d like to review their strategies and motivations. Why do they act that way? I mean, let our friends the accountants announce a new module in the general ledger, say, payroll, and nobody even notices, even if it means the timecard entry process has just become harder than changing the password to your wireless router. But let someone introduce an Earned Value Management System (EVMS), and certain people start to scream like scalded howler monkeys. What gives? Let me start with a caveat – if you are doing PM wrong, either in the characteristics of the system or its implementation strategy, then your opponents are on the right side of this conflict, motives notwithstanding. And while there are, no doubt, many reasons that would come into play in the execution of this thwarting-of-PM business, I believe there are three main drivers behind the PMO’s opponents. Here they are, in reverse order of severity.
This instance of management science reductionism stands in stark contrast to the raison d’etre of PM, with its focus on delivering the customers’ scope within the customers’ cost and schedule parameters. To engage in a bit of hyperbole, we don’t care if the assets are over- or under-worked, just that the scope is being accomplished on-time, on-budget. And, if it is, then we don’t worry if Project Team members aren’t putting in any overtime at all, or even (gasp!) taking the occasional afternoon off. As long as the client is happy, attempting to wring more (potentially excessive in addition to being unpaid) effort out of the Project Team is often counter-productive, in that it can lead to a decline in morale. Of course common management theory holders are put off by the rise of Project Management’s codex. They are epistemologically inconsistent, and no narrative that insists on the supremacy of Asset Management over PM can remain intact if a successful PMO implementation demonstrates its worth. Such a PMO would establish that they, and their nominal approach to creating and maintaining the organization’s business model, are misguided. Yeah, I know it’s dangerous to reverse engineer motives from observed behaviors, but I’m fairly confident that, if those opposed to implementing even the most basic of PM techniques were to be hit by one of those random flying sodium pentothal-tipped darts, and asked why they are opposed, they would admit to one of these three, or a derivative. Or, I suppose, they could actually be right in their opposition. Nah. |
On Why PMs Get Stymied (Part I)
| When last week’s blog, the one where I relay a story about a “manager” who had a Ph.D. in a technical field, but really didn’t know much about management, attracted more comments than I usually see, I realized I had touched on something of a sensitive subject. For those PM-types who are tasked with heading up a Project Management Office (PMO) with the objective of either advancing the PM capability within the macro-organization, or even introducing PM to the org, a whole host of seemingly irrational issues lie in wait to hinder or even derail your efforts altogether. While these issues may appear to be irrational, they do, in fact, have some rationale behind them, but they’re rather dark. I’d like to spend some time pulling back the curtain on these motives behind the PMO’s opposition. By no means am I guaranteeing a remedy to them – I’m just wanting to do some clarifying. It helps to know your opponents. Prior to evaluating motives, let’s take a look at some of the more common tactics employed by those who seek to undermine the PMO’s mission. Virtually all of the opposition the PMO Director will encounter will be covert, and yet still highly effective. So, in no particular order, here are some of the ways the opposition will resist the expansion or advancement of PM.
Of course, there are other tactics, but in my experience these are the most common. Feel free to add the ones that irritate you the most in the comments section. Next week, in Part II, I’ll seek to reveal the motives of the people who tend to hinder PMs just on principle, and explore possible counter-measures. |
PM Isn’t Rocket Science, But Neither Is It Easy
| They don’t call Project Management “the accidental profession” for nothing. Many of us arrived here from a business or management background, but a lot of us came into this profession via a more indirect route, specifically, through a technical discipline that landed us in front of a new project. And this is where it can get really interesting. I recall one particular meeting I attended based on an invitation from a high-level executive who suspected his head of Program Controls was doing a poor job. The executive was right. This fellow wasn’t trained in PM – he had a Ph.D. in a technical discipline, and knew just enough PM jargon to insinuate himself into the newly-created slot he occupied. His Team was large, as was the conference room, so I just took a seat in the back and kept my ears open. “Here’s the problem I want addressed” he began, standing in front of the rather large white board. He drew five large rectangles on the upper third portion of the white board. “These represent the major program offices” he stated. He then drew about a dozen smaller rectangles in the middle third of the white board, in a different color. “These are the major projects within the portfolio” he said, as he drew lines both between the mid-level rectangles and the high-level ones. He then drew around twenty small rectangles on the bottom third. “These represent the organizations that perform the work.” Using another dry-erase marker color, he drew lines between the small rectangles and the mid-sized ones, with many of them reaching to the opposite side of the white board. “Some of these projects cross programs, and most of them use multiple organizations, often at the same time.” Using yet another color, the lines drawn were proliferating. “They also use some of the same facilities,” (more lines) “and, in some cases, the projects’ work overlaps with others.” At this point the white board looked like someone had thrown up on it after having eaten a massive amount of spaghetti with Skittles sauce. If he thought he was depicting a desired business model end-state, he was comically mistaken. “We have to be able to capture all of these entities, and their relationships to each other, in order to create a comprehensive program plan.” The individual Team members, almost all Project Controls Specialist, were strangely silent. I guessed (rightly) that most of them recognized that this manager didn’t know what he was talking about, but were reluctant to offer their opinions about how to properly approach the problem. It wouldn’t be long before I found out why. After the meeting, I approached him, and asked for a sidebar. He knew me by reputation (I had actually trained most of the Project Controllers in this organization), and, after summoning his deputy, we sat in the foyer. “When you say that you need to capture how the projects ‘overlap,’ that’s typically accomplished with a Work Breakdown Structure, where the scope is delineated in a hierarchical fashion. Which elements of scope belong to which project and program are then clearly defined. When you discuss the need to identify possible overloading or underloading of the resources needed, that’s usually done using a resource dictionary in your Critical Path Methodology software. By assigning specific resources to the activities laid out in your WBS, possible conflicts can be identified and avoided. Finally, the issue of more than one activity or organization using the same facility can be resolved by loading the work’s locator codes into the schedule baseline. Once the schedule baseline is calculated, those conflicts will also be identified.” The fact that I had to tell this fellow such fundamental things about PM was a bit frustrating, and I rather had the impression that he believed his technical Ph.D. should have entitled him to automatic deference in PM matters. I learned later that he was planning on solving his problem by purchasing and employing a specific software package, one based on the Earned Value Methodology. There appeared to be no effort at ascertaining whether or not the package cleanly interfaced with the CPM software, or the general ledger. I came to believe that he had simply seen a presentation by this particular software vendor, and had been sold without a clue of how the package would fit into the overarching MIS architecture – and he wasn’t about to change his mind. I then realized why the room of Project Controls analysts stayed silent – they knew it was futile to reset this fellow’s technical agenda towards something that might actually work. Don’t misunderstand – I’m not saying a plurality, or even a sizeable proportion of technical Ph.D.s view their PM counterparts as intellectual inferiors. But PM isn’t easy. It’s not rocket science, but doing it right is not easy. |
Family Feud Hosts Shouldn’t Be Setting Your Business Model, Either
| A few weeks ago I was complaining about the fictional Sherriff of Nottingham influencing (or even setting) modern organizations’ business models. This week I want to point out another dubious source of such influence, that being those wretched surveys, or polls. Family Feud is an American television game show, which pits two teams of (usually) closely-related contestants in attempts to guess the answer to questions previously posed to the studio audience, based on the most popular response, the next most popular response, and so forth. Originally hosted by British actor Richard Dawson, subsequent hosts have included Ray Combs, Louie Anderson, Richard Karn, John O’Hurley, and Steve Harvey. Perhaps one of the most iconic lines that these hosts repeated in each show is uttered after a contestant has offered up what they believe was an audience response. In order to queue the operator of the board to show the correct answer, one of these hosts would call out “Survey says…!”[i] When a contestant’s answer appeared to have absolutely no connection to anything on the board, comedy gold could be had. Meanwhile, Back In The Project Management World… All valid Management Information Systems (MISs) have the same basic architecture, with three sequential steps:
First, data is collected, based on some sort of discipline. Accountants, for example, need to know expenses, budgets, and other details about the assets they are tracking in the General Ledger. The data is then processed into usable information based on some sort of methodology. We PM types primarily use Earned Value and Critical Path methodologies. Finally, the information is presented to decision-makers in a format that’s actually usable. Pushing a balance sheet in front of a manager who is unfamiliar with GAAP is probably not the best way to support a business-related assertion. Unfortunately, there are a good number of so-called MISs that do not follow this basic architecture, the most common invalid alternative being what I’ve nicknamed The Poll. The Poll is basically a central database or data depository, surrounded by input/output nodes. Going under names like “Action Item Trackers” or “Issues Management Systems,” these systems not only fail to incorporate a legitimate methodology, what they collect is often not even objective data. Opinions and unquantified observations can constitute a significant portion of the “data,” rendering these holding largely subjective, and, therefore, unreliable. Indeed, a handy litmus test for whether or not an entry into a poll-structured MIS has any merit resides in the answer to the question, “is this actionable right now?” If the answer is no, then the entry is suspect. These Polls should not be confused with systems that record events that have already occurred. Lists of accidents or infractions can be informative as long as they’re not being used to try to precisely predict future occurrences. If Plant N has had 1.3 accidents per month that led to at least one worker having to spend time away from work, that can be valuable in assessing the overall safety environment. It’s kind of useless, though, when trying to predict the exact place and time of the next such accident. The main problem with polls is that there’s always someone with more recent, accurate, or complete “data.” In an attempt to overcome these types of systems’ inherent unreliability, the protocols for access to them are usually pretty loose. Essentially, anybody within the organization who has an “observation,” “action item,” or “issue” can sign on, and make an entry. The more advanced versions of this type of system will accept downloads from scheduling systems that incorporate the Critical Path Methodology, but that simply raises the question, if the scheduling system is the source and residence of this data in the first place, why not just view it in the original? Then we have the problem of how all of these “issues” or “action items” are to be categorized, or binned. By date, either of occurrence, or estimated resolution? By organization? Place? Project? Severity? No matter how these entries are categorized, some impacted manager will want to see them presented differently, in line with their specific function or area of expertise. Besides, if a worker becomes aware of a problem like an unsafe condition or activity, doesn’t the immediacy of such a situation demand that they stop work and alert those responsible, rather than going to a computer terminal to do some data entry? Finally, poll-structured MISs have the inherent problem of answering the question “So what?” Randomly submitted “issues” or “action items” will need to be assigned to someone to “correct,” or else be dismissed. Just so we’re clear, random action items getting assigned to PMs is a clear example of the dreaded scope creep, in that it’s a piece of work that is (typically) not part of the original baseline, has not been formally added via the BCP process, but nonetheless has to be accomplished. And scope creep is poisonous to projects. So, the next time a PM is hit with some “action item” that needs addressing stemming from an information system predicated on the poll model, and flunks the actionable test, that PM should feel free to imagine its contents being spoken by a Family Feud host, after the words “Survey says…!” Because what follows is not really reliable, and well may be better suited to game shows.
[i] Retrieved from https://www.shmoop.com/quotes/survey-says.html on July 14, 2023, 21:34 MDT. |





