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Viewing Posts by Dave Davis

ACP Certified, I'd Like to talk to you

If you're attending the Global Conference and have taken the ACP exam, I would like to chat with you.  Sign up for a time or just stop by as I will be "hanging out" here during the conference.

Why am I interested in talking to you if you have an ACP cert?  I have a couple of reasons:

1) I mentor some aspiring project managers and would like to be able to set their expectations for the exam and to share stories from people what have the cert.

2) After PMBOK 6 and the Agile Addition, I am curious if you felt the exam covered the agile knowledge with the 10 PMBOK Guide Knowledge areas.

3) Do you have any study tips for future ACPers?  Your personal experience is a story waiting to be heard (Agile pun intended).

4) Has your career changed after getting the cert?  

5) Can you still tell me what the CRACK acronym represents?

In closing, I am interested in talking to you whether you have the cert or not.  I figure information I can get from Cert holders, I can share with Cert seekers.  I'm hoping to be able to create stories for this blog to recognize achievement and to inspire our professionals to grow!  INVEST in your profession ;) 

Dave

 

Posted by Dave Davis on: September 20, 2018 05:36 PM | Permalink | Comments (8)

Rethinking the Charter

Since I retired after 26 years in one company, I have had assignments in various PMOs in different industries.  I’ve been in the energy sector, the insurance sector, credit card services, industrial/manufacturing, and now healthcare.  Every industry has struggled with the project charter.  What does baselining it mean? Does it ever get updated? Who should issue it? And the list goes on.  And while PMOs in all these industries try to invent the perfect process – we are ignoring one important aspect.

The project charter, as defined by PMI, does not meet the needs of today’s business!

Before you call me a heretic and an incompetent – hear me out.  The problem I have with the charter is it becomes a reformatting of existing information, bloated, and redundant – and it doesn’t provide the project team with the most important information it needs.  Shouldn’t the charter give the team a definition of what success looks like?

I propose the charter should be extremely streamlined.  After all, how many people, let along executives, will read a 14 page charter?  Many charter templates contain information that is already in one artifact and will no doubt be included in another.  I propose we throw away the bloated all-inclusive charter of today and replace it with a simple charter.

Project Organizational Wrapper

You need to have the organizational wrapper of project control structures.  If the project pipeline has a defined Demand Process and there is a demand id, it should be in the charter.   This should also be aligned to the business case information – what went into the approval, and other justifications.  No need to repeat them in the charter – they already exist in a corporate database of record.  If information is in two places – that doubles the risk of inconsistency, confusion, and delay.

If you have an integrated project management system (IPMS) that tracks project work in process – then that project id should be there. Projects assume titles and identify from the ideation phase through project initiation.  That title, or name, should be included in the charter because that’s the lingo that has defined the initiative.

Should be results focused

Once the project is ready to kick off, the work initiative needs to be focused on the results.  If your organization is mature enough to be doing Benefits Management Realization, the charter should map directly to the benefit register.  The next section of the charter should be:

What does success look like?

Quite simply – what is the vision in reality?  Knowing what success is far outweighs the value of several scope bullet points.  The definition of success can be expressed in several ways including:

Critical success factors

The essential areas of activity that must be performed well if you are to achieve the mission, objectives or goals for your business or project.

What can we do in the future that we can’t do now?

How do we measure success?

Not calling for specific key performance indicators here, but should have an idea of how we will measure success.  It also provides requirements for the product and what are the critical success factors.

External/legal requirements

If you are driven by a legal requirement or an industry standard (HIPPA or an ISO requirement comes to mind) than that should be identified.  The charter must identify conformation to external factors.

What benefits are being realized?

Again, if you have a mature benefits realization process, then the entire benefits quantification/qualification should be in place and your project is delivering outcomes and capabilities to realize the defined benefits.

Organizational RACI

The charter must be able to identify all the organizations that are impacted by the initiative.  After all, how did you get high level estimates for the business case if you didn’t have a means of identifying organizations involved?  This RACI should then be driven to know which groups need to receive and approve the charter. 

Time Frame

What time frame is expected for the organization to start to realize benefits?  Let’s avoid the charade of bottom up estimates and defining the schedule after you have all requirements defined etc.  We are driven by budget cycles and funding is only approved to last so long.  This isn’t to say those things can’t and shouldn’t happen, but at a Charter level – the approval has a defined end time.  This also helps define the scope.

I have purposely omitted several pieces of what is considered part of a charter.  Not that I don’t think they are important, I do, but they belong in defined sections of the project plan.  There is no need for budget as that should already be in the business case approval – and I don’t know if it directly contributes to the definition of the outcomes and capabilities.    Scope is implied in what success looks like and the Critical Success Factors.  If during requirements definition, a question is raised that doesn’t directly support the definition of success, than it is out of scope.  Assumptions, risks, issues, and constraints are all important, but they live elsewhere.  The charter should identify the future state, not dwell on the challenges of the present state.  And the charter should be a onetime document that is not modified or have addendums.  It initiates the work – other artifacts ebb and flow during the project life cycle.

In closing – the purpose of the charter is to authorize the project manager to start delivering on the project.  It is not to cut and paste from all over to make an all-inclusive summary of all business intelligence that justified the project.  I propose to make it a lean document focused on the outcomes and capabilities and the definition of success.  Items that have a workflow/life cycle (risks, assumptions, issues, etc.) do not need to be in a charter, they are taken care of elsewhere.  A lean, concise, and easy to read charter allows the team to focus on delivering within the success criteria.

 

 

Please sign up for a 1:1 with me while at the PMI Global Conference! We can talk about PMOs, healthcare project management, teaching project management, or any other topic related to project management!

To schedule a 1:1, use the SIGN UP button on this page.

Posted by Dave Davis on: October 21, 2017 06:03 PM | Permalink | Comments (7)

Project Scheduling Professional Certification | SP - PMI

I have been contacted by a colleague who has a friend that is pursuing the SP-PMI certification.  Is there anybody out there that has the cert that is willing to answer questions for a perspective candidate.   If so, please email me at [email protected].

I would also ask that you put a brief summary of the test content on here, so I can talk a little more intelligently on the topic.  I can talk constraint, critical path, slack, lag, float and other rudimentary terminology, but I cannot get into the level of detail that I would expect to be needed to obtain the credential.

I do know one of the biggest challenges in my group is optimizing multiple schedules across projects.  Things such as analyzing change across projects, determining impact to benefits realization when schedule slips, and models are opportunities for my education.

Dave

Posted by Dave Davis on: October 17, 2017 04:08 PM | Permalink | Comments (5)

So Hard to Communicate

I saw this potshots comic today and liked it, so I'm sharing it.

Why do many people (myself included) find it so hard to communicate?  I actually find it pretty easy to broadcast (as you can see from my posts), but true interactive communication is difficult.  I'm not sure if it's the risk of exposing my feelings, if its a disconnect of values with the person I'm communicating with, if it's my attitude, or if I just don't add anything of value to the person I'm communicating with.  Or is could be I'm just overthinking everything :)

Regardless, I frequently challenge my own ability to communicate.  Granted, I thought I was a good communicator until I had children, but I found that what I thought I communicated clearly, was not received clearly.

My path to green for this is to keep on trying,  Use active listening and watch for body language signs, paraphrasing back what the person said, and accept that I don't have to respond to everything said to me.  I can acknowledge with a smile or the nodding of my head.

Anybody else find communication more difficult that it should be?

Get your most burning project management questions answered in “Ask the Experts” at PMI Global Conference.  Sign up for a specific time at: http://www.signupgenius.com/go/4090c44a9ad23a7fb6-askthe5 or just stop by.

Times Dave is scheduled for:

Saturday October 28:  3:00PM -  4:30 PM

Sunday October 29: 10:00  11:50 AM, 3:00 5:00 PM

Monday October 30:  1:00 – 2:30 PM

David L. Davis PMP, PgMP, PBA

Senior Project Manager OhioHealth

[email protected]

Posted by Dave Davis on: October 16, 2017 09:13 AM | Permalink | Comments (10)

ATA Risk Question

ATA (Ask to Answer) for the Risk expert Mr. Maynard.

I wonder if there is a formal explanation for something I call “Organizational Accepted Risk”.  There are many risk items that I personally don’t call out in my risk mitigation strategy because the Organization automatically accepts the Risk and will deal with it when it occurs.  I mention it in my governance document, but not in my Risk Plan. Some examples of these risks are listed below:

  1. A team member leaves the organization (whatever the reason: resignation, layoffs, death, etc.)  It definitely can impact my deliverables, but.
  2. A cyber attack.  I do a lot of network projects and there is always the risk of a cyber attack taking resources (wanacry is one example).  We deal with it, but it can cause a jeopardy.
  3. Funding cut.  I treat this as an issue when and if it occurs and requires the project plan to be reviewed.
  4. Act of God – there are lots of things that can happen to disrupt the project.  Fire, hurricane, tornado, zombie apocalypse.  I don’t call these out as specific Risk items as we just accept them.  The probability is low for some areas (not too many hurricanes in Ft Wayne) 

My question: “is there an accepted best-practice for handling Organization Accepted Risk” and could you direct me to it?

Posted by Dave Davis on: October 10, 2017 04:29 PM | Permalink | Comments (4)
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