Finally, A Use For Risk Managers!
| As my regular readers are aware, I take a rather dim view of the entire risk management arena, and have, on more than one occasion, referred to it as “institutional worrying, tripped out in statistical jargon.” I have also accused them of pushing their ideas of management information generation and analysis way past their proper epistemological boundaries, wasting time and resources that could be better spent on the creation or maintenance of legitimate information streams. And, while I still hold these views, it occurs to me that the risk managers could actually provide a much-needed service to the project management world. This much-needed service has to do with the second accusation I’ve leveled against them – that they push their Gaussian-curve-based notions of management information creation into areas where they simply don’t work. This is also something our friends, the accountants, do all the time. To be fair, business schools across the world regularly teach that virtually any piece of management information that involves money must originate with the general ledger, and their students simply take this notion into the real world. However, once a project has been provided its actual costs by Work Breakdown Structure element at the reporting level, the general ledger has no further contribution to the information systems that allow the assessment of project cost, scope, or schedule performance, period. None. Zero. Zilch. Nada. Ah, but the accountants will never accede to that notion. Need an analysis on the cost variance? They’ll be happy to compare your budgets to your actuals, and can’t be convinced that that’s not a cost variance. Need an estimate at completion (EAC)? They will gladly provide a number based on the rate that you are spending, without taking into account (or even recognizing, really) the role of the actual performance against the project’s scope. It’s just the way they roll. It is futile to try to reason them out of these analysis techniques – they’re convinced of their efficacy, and similarly convinced that all who disagree with them are rubes. What’s a project management information system analyst to do? Call in the risk managers! Look at all the damage they do to legitimate PMISs. Surely, with a little redirection, they could inflict similar devastation on the accountants! I remember in the early 1990s, I saw a whole host articles from contributors who would perform some sort of statistical analysis on the float (both free and total) from complex schedule networks, trying to tease out some kernel of insight. It would take a few attempts to read the entire article, since these tended to be about as interesting as watching grass grow. Just think of all the introspection that could be caused by a statistical analysis of some similarly irrelevant data sets, such as the number of transactions within a given project compared to the variability of labor overhead rates! It sounds really insightful, yes? But it’s completely irrelevant, much like the “information” the risk analysts force upon project teams. Something similar has already occurred – the whole statistical analysis of how much women make compared to men. That this analysis has been completely debunked once one takes into account the nature of the work, the degree requirements, the general preference of women to take jobs that provide more schedule flexibility, etc., etc., doesn’t stop the statistic of “X number of cents for every dollar men make” from being lobbed about ad infinitum. Also, by Metcalf’s Law, any comparison of the average wages earned by any disparate demographic groups will yield a variance. It’s irrelevant, which will make the accountants’ jobs far, far more frustrating as they attempt to round those square epistemological pegs. Let the risk managers perform their analyses on the data sets within the general ledger! With the accountants’ energy so diverted away from advancing their misguided agenda, the risk analysts will have finally contributed significantly to the advancement of PM!
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The Thirtieth Annual Business Management Championship!
| “Hi, this is Ron, and I’m here with my partner Verne to call the 30th annual Business Management Championship. Verne, it’s pretty much been just the asset managers in blowout victories every year. Kind of makes you wonder why they bother having the competition in the first place, much less give it world-wide network coverage.” |
“To the Moon, Alice!”
| I think that one of the funniest bits from the late Douglas Adams’ Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy (misnamed) trilogy involves a scene where Ford Prefect and Arthur Dent are getting a ride on a ship populated by 1/3 of the people from their home world. The backstory is that they were told their planet was about to be destroyed cataclysmically, and so the population was loaded onto evacuation ships and divided into three groups: In my previous two blogs I discussed the dichotomy between two types of project management practitioners, whom I labelled Processors and Effectives. Since the August theme is Business Project Management, I thought I’d take an opportunity to evaluate some of the distinct disciplines within PM, to see which ones are of more value to the overall enterprise management information feed, and which, well, are not. In short, I want to make the case for which PM sub-groups we ought to put on their own starship and send them away. Okay, that might be a little harsh, but I have to admit that, now that it’s written down, it might not be such a bad… Just kidding! From an overall business point of view, the most valuable PM-type is the one who knows which kinds of work ought to be managed as a project, and which should not. Much harberdashery exists here, with accountants trying to provide insight on project performance, critical path schedulers being asked to perform staff allocation, and risk managers pretending it’s all about Gaussian Curves. On the question of whether or not some element of work ought to be managed as a project or not, one simple question represents the litmus test: what percent complete have you accomplished? If asked of legitimate project work, a usable answer can be provided. If asked, say, of the document preparation organization, as an organization, there can be no sensible response. These ought to be managed as an asset, and not a project. Besides, if you were to ask them to develop a critical path methodology baseline, it would just be a series of constrained activities, yielding no usable performance information. At the opposite end of the spectrum, the least valuable PM-types are those whose analyses provide little or no value when it comes to bringing the project in on-time, on-budget. Among these I list: These are the ones I recommend putting on the epistemological starship, and sending away from planet Project Management. Also, I understand that recent developments on an electromagnetic drive could power a ship to the Moon in four hours… |
Dumb Innovation
| In my last blog I made the observation that those seeking to advance project management capability in the macro organization tend to fall in to one of two groups, whom I called the Processors and the Effectives. Processors, as one might guess, love the process of performing project management practices, and tend to define PM success as having a project team demonstrate compliance with procedures. Conversely, Effectives will define PM success as actually bringing their projects in on-time, on-budget, or even early and under-budget. I wrapped last week’s blog speculating that the Processors, by definition, had very little opportunity to bring innovative approaches to the table. That may have been a rash assertion. If others on the project team aren’t “doing” project management, there are two broad categories from which the Processors can pull their tactics: if the Processor is of high rank, they can attempt to leverage their organizational power to compel compliance. However, if our Processor is of equal or lower status, they are reduced to whining and eat-your-peas-style hectoring to change the behavior of their associates. The first category, that of attempting to leverage organizational power to compel an advancement in project management capability, never works in the long-term. Some short-term “success” may be realized, sure, as the project team becomes painfully aware that the prospects for their continued employment may hinge on how effectively they can perform the added requirements placed upon them as they pursue the project’s objectives. However, as soon as they can opt out, they inevitably do, leaving the macro organization no better off than before. This is especially true if the added procedural burden doesn’t have any clear link to the project’s overall success in cost, schedule, or scope performance. Indeed, the leaned-on project team will often come away with an embittered perspective on project management in general, and will tend to avoid (or even openly eschew) it in the future, all thanks to the way the Procedurals like to try and advance PM in their teams. The second category – hectoring and whining – can (and often does) assume the audio acceptance level of a dentist’s drill on a molar needing a filling replaced. But there is a variety of hectoring that invites innovation, and is, in fact, somewhat compelling. This is the appeal to sophistication. The appeal to sophistication works on Processors like catnip. Not only can they nakedly assert that others ought to be doing that project management thing they way the Processors want, but it goes without saying that to do otherwise is, well, kind of dumb! How convenient! Leveraging off of the fear of the project team’s members looking intellectually backwards, the Processors can advance all sorts of charlatanisms, to wit: I could go on (and often do), but I’m sure my readers see my point: Processors don’t actually advance project management as a science; rather, they use pseudo-science tripped out in PM phrases as leverage to try and convince others to do as they say, and respect them for saying it. And I think that’s dumb. |
The PM Revolution Under Our Noses
| In the near-science of Economics, two predominant free-market theories stand in stark opposition to each other: Keynesianism, named after John Maynard Keynes (1883 – 1946), and Economic Freedom, probably best articulated by Friedrich Von Hayek (1899-1992) and Milton Friedman (1912-2006). Each of these schools of economic thought has their adherents, with probably the most articulate ones today being Paul Krugman and Thomas Sowell, respectively. So, I have to ask: is there a similar theoretical divide within the project management community? I believe there is, and, from my observations, they fall along two lines of thought: the first group, whom I’ll call Processors, tend to devote time and energy into perfecting the process of project management. They love to identify “best practices,” and encode these into official procedures that the macro organization is then compelled to follow, to the letter. Failure is determined by the frequency and level of infractions against approved procedures, and success is attained when the process is followed perfectly. The rival camp, whom I’ll call Effectives, are not only reluctant to embrace proceduralized “best practices,” they will often actively oppose them. Instead, they are interested in adapting the tools and techniques that improve their chances of bringing in their projects on-time, on-budget. If, say, the risk managers want to perform an extensive analysis on the cost and schedule risks involved in a large project, with the end-product being something that an Effective won’t (or can’t) use in coming to informed decisions, the Effective will, in all probability, refuse to fund the risk analysis. Are you wondering which you are? Well, I’ve devised a little multiple-choice test to help determine this. My prediction is that innovations in project management will tend to fall along the lines of the tools and techniques that deliver more on-time, on-budget projects (such as Agile/Scrum), or those approaches that represent more formal observance of process – if such things can even be called “innovative.” |





