Project Management

Voices on Project Management

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Voices on Project Management offers insights, tips, advice and personal stories from project managers in different regions and industries. The goal is to get you thinking, and spark a discussion. So, if you read something that you agree with--or even disagree with--leave a comment.

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Cameron McGaughy
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Leadership Matters—Now More Than Ever

Categories: Disruption

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By Dave Wakeman

I’m still on lockdown here in Washington, D.C., until at least May 15. That gives me a lot of time to poorly teach 4th grade and to think about life, business and what comes next. It also gives me plenty of time to watch the news—and I have been fighting that desire, because it is frustrating to see far too many displays of poor leadership when strong leadership is so needed. 

But to bring it back to the positive, we can also see with great clarity how important good, not even great, leadership is. Here are a few principles that have been reinforced to me during this time of uncertainty: 

1. Leadership is about vision: Next to my desk I keep a shadowbox with a profile of Franklin Delano Roosevelt in it. I keep it there because of FDR’s famous quote, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” To me, it’s a constant reminder that we must have courage. 

Courage requires vision—vision of a better future and a better outcome for our project teams. As we come out of this crisis, we need to be ready to provide a vision for our teams of how we are going to grow out of this experience, what we are going to do to overcome obstacles and what future growth and opportunity we can expect. 

In too many places right now, we don’t see that. And the lack of a clear vision for the future and how we’ll come out of this pandemic is causing us more damage than necessary. That’s because business, society and life are all built on a foundation of confidence. When you don’t have the confidence that things will be okay or have direction, it becomes easy to grow demoralized. 

2. Leaders don’t micromanage: I’m only as successful as I am because I let folks do their jobs. 

I’d also tell you with complete sincerity that I only seem anywhere near as smart as you might think I am because of all the people who are willing to share their ideas, experiences and perspectives with me. 

That’s a long-winded way of me telling you: You can’t be an expert in everything. As a leader, you have to recognize your role in the project and let the experts do their jobs. That’s what they are there for. 

No one is an expert in everything, and anyone who is claiming they are is trying to fool you. This crisis should lay open the idea that not one of us, as an individual, can successfully execute all areas of a project. In fact, this crisis should highlight the power of experts, period. 

To achieve success, it is essential that we not micromanage, that we give our teams a clear goal and direction—and that we get out of their way so that they can do their jobs. 

3. Leaders accept responsibility: I think of a scene from Batman v Superman when Wonder Woman dashes in front of Batman to deflect the lasers from the metahuman that was attacking Metropolis and Gotham City. 

Bad analogy, but to me Wonder Woman sets a great example for leaders. She jumped in front of Batman to protect him so that he could get back into the Batplane and come up with a new strategy for defeating the beast with his intelligence and his arsenal of gadgets. 

As leaders, we need to think of ourselves as Wonder Woman in that regard. A leader must protect their team to be able to do the work that is required for project success. It’s relatively easy to deflect attention, pass blame or throw someone under the bus. But real leadership entails dealing with the heat from outside sources and people looking to attack or slow down your project. 

In our current crisis, we have seen many examples of leaders trying to push blame onto others, pass responsibility and remove themselves from the role as the head of the project when things aren’t going well. 

That’s not really leadership, though. That’s sun-shining: the act of leading from the front when things are going great and running for cover when the storm clouds come in. 

I hope everyone is safe, and I hope that we can begin to gain control over this pandemic so we can return to our projects, recreation and life. Until then, I’ll continue to consider lessons learned about leadership while watching this crisis unfold. 

What have you learned about leadership in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic? 

Posted by David Wakeman on: April 24, 2020 12:53 PM | Permalink | Comments (10)

Let’s Make a Deal: Negotiating During COVID-19

Categories: Negotiation

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By Lynda Bourne

Eighty percent of the posts I’ve read about dealing with COVID-19 fall into three general categories:

  1. Stay safe and obey the rules.
  2. Stay motivated.
  3. Get legal advice, and document delays and damages.

While many of these posts contain good advice, to my mind they are all focused on threat mitigation. While minimizing threats is important, these approaches miss the opportunities inherent in unstable times. You need to do more than minimize threats to come out of the COVID-19 crisis in the best shape possible.

There are two factors that will help you get through this: your innovation skills and your negotiation skills. I discussed innovation in my previous post, Innovation and Design Thinking, Part One. In this post, I’d like to focus on negotiation in a time of uncertainty.

Of course, to be able to negotiate you do need to stay safe (the first category above). You also need to understand the current situation (the third). But, if you want some control over your future, you also need to be willing to have serious negotiations with the people who matter.

This is a very different situation than normal negotiations with employers, clients, subcontractors and suppliers. The traditional framework of negotiation involves having defined outcomes in mind, deciding on your “walk-away point” (best alternative to a negotiated agreement or BATNA) and using a range of negotiating stances and tactics to achieve your desired outcome. In the era of COVID-19, no one knows what the future holds, and everyone is suffering inconvenience and damage to different degrees. But we are all in this together, and playing hardball for short-term, illusory benefits is unlikely to help anyone.

For example, in normal times landlords around the globe tend to play hardball with tenants—you pay your rent or you are evicted. However, in Australia the government has now made it illegal for landlords to evict business tenants who are unable to pay their rent for the next six months (with the possibility of an extension). The objective of this measure is to ensure the tenant still has a business when the current lockdowns are over and that the landlord still has a tenant capable of paying rent in the future. There are government incentives and guidelines to encourage both parties to negotiate a workable agreement. Compare this to the normal business-as-usual alternative: The landlord evicts the tenant, the tenant goes bankrupt and the landlord misses out on 100 percent of rental income for two or three years until the market recovers.

The imposed solution has everyone sharing the pain. The tenant still has to pay some rent if possible, the landlord will receive less income, the banks support the landlords (after being asked by the government), and the government is paying some of the overall costs if there is an agreement. (Similar measures have also been introduced for private tenants.) This won’t save every business or every commercial landlord. But it will significantly reduce the damage to most businesses and the overall economy. At least, the government hopes this will be the outcome—no one really knows, given the unique situation we are all in.

So, how does this concept translate to your own situation during the COVID-19 crisis? Obviously, everyone and every business is in a unique situation, but there are some useful ideas you can apply at both the business and personal level:

  1. Start talking. You will not be able to influence your situation by passively accepting everything that happens to you. And more importantly, the only effective way to negotiate in the current situation is based on achieving a win-win outcome (while recognizing that the win may be a reduced loss). The ability of good negotiators to influence outcomes is not limited by contract terms or organizational position.
  2. Be realistic and adaptable. For some projects, the negotiation will result in shutting everything down with minimum costs all around. For example, I seriously doubt anyone will be interested in a new cruise liner terminal for a few years. This can be done cooperatively with costs minimized for everyone or arbitrarily with the likelihood of massive legal costs as the solution is fought through the courts. For other projects, the question may be how to stall the project for a period, and for others it may be how to accelerate or adapt the project to the new normal. In any of these situations, proactive win-win negotiations are likely to deliver better outcomes.
  3. Accept change is inevitable—even after the negotiations. Every negotiated agreement needs to be part of an adaptive and evolving approach that recognizes circumstances will change unpredictably. The only thing that taking a hard “win-lose” approach to a negotiated outcome is likely to achieve is cutting off possibilities for a better outcome as the situation changes. Collaboration is likely to deliver far better results than confrontation.
  4. Be innovative. In Australia, the smart rental agents and facilities managers are dealing with their massive loss of income by innovating processes to help landlords and tenants reach agreements and maximize government receipts. What’s in it for them? In part, a new stream of fees for services rendered and being in the box seat to carry on managing the facility once the lockdowns are over. Win-win-win.
  5. Be agile and adaptive. Vast areas of business will never return to “normal,” and many jobs will be permanently lost. But there will be a new normal, and there will be new jobs. It doesn’t matter if you are a person looking for work or a business looking for clients—the ones that succeed will be those that adapt fastest to whatever the new normal looks like.  But remember: Agility is not anarchy! Useful agility is based on research and assessment of what the future may hold. The problem is that no one knows for certain what this will look like—so being a pragmatic risk-taker is essential.

People and organizations that come through the current situation ready to succeed in the post-COVID-19 world will be resilient, adaptive and collaborative. Great negotiating skills and innovative thinking will be essential.

Still, a little luck will go a long way. As I discussed in my post Probability vs. Luck: Lessons Learned From a Day at the Races, luck will also play a major part in deciding who comes out of this in the best shape. But, to quote Coleman Cox: “I am a great believer in luck. The harder I work, the more of it I seem to have.”

How are you preparing for the post-COVID-19 future?

Posted by Lynda Bourne on: April 23, 2020 10:16 PM | Permalink | Comments (3)

COVID-19 Gives New Meaning—and Urgency—to Earth Day

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By Cyndee Miller

In a matter of mere months, the coronavirus has changed everything. At this point, I can barely remember what pre-pandemic life was like—or what day it is.

Oh wait, it’s Earth Day. And COVID-19 has transformed that, too. Something weird—and good—is happening.

In locked-down India, home to 21 of the world’s 30 most polluted cities, the air in Delhi is cleaner than it has been in decades, and Indians can once again glimpse the Himalayas. The European Space Agency last week released satellite images showing how Venice, Italy’s famed canals have been virtually emptied of boat traffic, leaving clear blue waters and visible marine life. At Yosemite National Park, now quiet and tourist-free, the bear population has quadrupled. From the U.S. to Thailand, sea turtles are thriving in the absence of humans at closed beaches.

And in China, industrial inactivity led to a drop in CO2 emissions by a whopping 100 million metric tons in February. With the coronavirus outbreak bringing economies to a screeching halt, carbon dioxide emissions could fall by more than 5 percent this year—the largest global decrease since World War II, according to Rob Jackson, chair of the Global Carbon Project and a professor at Stanford University.

But is this environmental progress built to last? Or will it fade away as the world economy begins to rebuild?

After world greenhouse gas emissions dipped alongside the 2008 global financial crisis, they shot back up 5.1 percent amid the recovery, Mr. Jackson told Reuters. The rebound effect is already playing out in China: By the end of March, coal consumption and nitrogen dioxide pollution had returned to normal levels.

Without a strategy for enduring structural change, any environmental improvements in the age of COVID-19 will likely be short-lived. I get that the fight against climate change probably isn’t top of mind right now. But that’s the real danger—that the issue moves to the back burner and we blindly return to business as usual when there is clearly so much work to be done. The United Nations in November called for a 7.6 percent emissions reduction every year between now and 2030 to give the world a viable chance of achieving the goal of the Paris Agreement and limiting global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The coronavirus-induced shutdown has shown the world what climate action can look like in hyper-focus. But it will be just a fleeting moment without a real commitment to strong and sustainable change carried out by project leaders. One prime example: A project in Milan, Italy aims to reallocate street space from cars to cycling and walking. Under the nationwide lockdown, traffic congestion—and air pollution—saw a dramatic drop. And now government leaders want to keep it that way.

It’s up to forward-looking leaders to use this moment to fund projects that foster environmental action and economic growth.

An aggressive move to renewables could power a post-pandemic recovery with a US$98 trillion boost to the GDP between now and 2050, per a new report by the International Renewable Energy Agency. The investment in renewables would also almost quadruple renewable energy jobs to 42 million, while simultaneously tackling climate change.

“Stimulus and recovery packages can also accelerate the shift to sustainable, decarbonized economies and resilient inclusive societies,” Francesco La Camera, the group’s director-general said in a statement. “As the current crisis makes clear, we can no longer afford to make policy decisions and investments in isolation amid elaborately intertwined social, economic and environmental challenges.”

The battle to conquer COVID-19 is a powerful testament to the strength of global collaboration. And on this Earth Day especially, it’s worth giving some thought to how project leaders can help the world recover and rebuild a more sustainable future. Are you ready?

Posted by cyndee miller on: April 22, 2020 12:29 PM | Permalink | Comments (3)

Digital Transformation in the Midst of Chaos

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By Mario Trentim

There have been a number of memes and social media jokes about how the COVID-19 crisis is “accelerating” the digital transformations of many organizations. But that’s a misunderstanding: The pandemic is in fact a major setback to digital transformation, as organizations venture into the uncharted waters of sustained virtual work and remote project management.

What Is Digital Transformation Anyway?

Digital transformation refers to the integration of technology into all areas of business operations, fundamentally changing how the organization operates and delivers value. It also describes the application of digital capabilities to processes, assets and products.

Let’s take the sharing economy, for example. Uber, Airbnb and many other modern services are built on the idea of collaborative consumption. But did you know that bike-sharing was first introduced as a business model in the 1960s? At that time, it didn’t work well because there was no easy way to find the bicycles. Now that we have mobile phones, GPS locators and ubiquitous connectivity, business models that seemed unviable before are now possible.

The pillars of digital transformation include:

  • Engage your customers by reaching them where they are with offerings that speak directly to their needs.
  • Empower your employees with effective collaboration and productivity tools.
  • Transform your service offerings by evolving your products and business models to better serve your customers.
  • Optimize your operations, focusing on data-driven management, clear workflows, better resource management and more.

As project teams across the globe settle into the reality that remote work is the new normal, focusing on these pillars becomes even more important.

What Lies Ahead for Project Teams

A few months from now, organizations may face unforeseen cybersecurity issues, sensitive information leaks and the uncontrolled spread of data across digital channels.

In terms of cost, adopting consumer-grade or free preventive tools might seem reasonable now. But that’s because organizations are not taking into account the fact that these tools won’t be effective to take their competitive advantage to the next level.

In fact, a myriad of tools without integration, uncategorized information, old business processes and tech-averse employees pose a huge challenge to collaboration and productivity.

As teams continue to collaborate virtually, people will likely waste even more time trying to reach a solution, and they will plan multiple, unfocused daily meetings, as managers struggle to provide guidance and accurately measure the performance of employees working from home.

But it doesn’t have to be this way.

How to Avoid a Dark Project Fate

Now that you know what digital transformation is and the setbacks imposed by the COVID-19 crisis, what can you do?

1. Review your digital transformation strategy and reprioritize all projects and initiatives. If you don’t have an official strategy, start working on it now before it is too late.

2. Your organization likely already put in place business continuity plans, contingency plans and crisis management measures. As a result, you probably launched projects to enable remote work. Considering there was not enough time to conduct proper analysis, now take a step back and reevaluate these choices. Do they still make sense? How can they be improved?

3. Begin by understanding different organizational needs, since digital transformation starts with people and processes. Next, develop a teamwork architecture that encompasses people, processes and tools. Finally, create a roadmap to implement integrated tools that accounts for the total cost of the life cycle, including support, maintenance, training and more.

Final Thoughts

Digital transformation is platform-dependent, relying on common data and integrated information flows and workflows. On top of that, security, compliance and general data protection must be observed at all times. There are no shortcuts.

Digital transformation is a very serious strategic topic. Wrong assumptions might lead your organization into a dark future of low productivity, ineffective collaboration and potential issues and liabilities.

How is your organization navigating the digital transformation shifts brought about by the COVID-19 crisis?

 

 

Posted by Mario Trentim on: April 20, 2020 02:46 PM | Permalink | Comments (6)

Confessions of a First-Time Project Management Volunteer

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By Yasmina Khelifi, PMP

Are you considering volunteering for a professional association or within your corporate organization? Almost two years ago, I did for the first time by joining the PMI France and PMI United Arab Emirates (UAE) Chapters—and I haven’t looked back since. What a transformational journey! Volunteering has helped me sharpen my leadership skills, unleash my creativity and broaden my professional network.

Whether you’re thinking about becoming a first-time volunteer or hoping to start volunteering again, here are some great benefits of giving your time to a larger project:

1. Volunteer to hone your project leadership skills

In November 2018, I joined the PMI France Chapter’s marketing communications team to contribute to an internal newsletter. Volunteering allowed me to interact with people from different cultures, countries, backgrounds, education levels, ages and professional experiences. I was able to collaborate with a diverse group of people, which is essential for any project leader.

Volunteering has opened many new doors:

  • I have discovered new ways of working.
  • I have found new energy and passion for projects.
  • I have learned how to better communicate with people from different backgrounds.
  • I have sharpened my writing skills in French and English, and learned how to be more concise in my communications.
  • I have strengthened my skills in virtual project management, a key pillar in our globalized world.

2. Volunteer to experiment in a safe environment

Volunteering has pushed me outside of my comfort zone and given me the confidence to experiment in new areas:

  • For the first time, I presented a webinar about leadership skills for the PMI UAE Chapter in collaboration with a friend there. Despite the bad sound during the presentation, I enjoyed the great learning experience, especially in preparing the slides, revising and rehearsing.
  • For the first time, I managed social network posts and created accompanying visuals.

3. Volunteer to expand your professional network

Volunteering has helped me to broaden my perspectives and network outside of my enterprise. Having worked almost exclusively in an international environment, I wanted to expand my network more in France. Surprisingly, thanks to the PMI volunteers’ network, I ended up meeting new people within my own company! I now belong to a worldwide and strong project management community: We support each other during this tough time.

Looking back on this incredible journey, I cherish the gifts I’ve received. Volunteering provides an invaluable source of learning and growth.

Leave a comment below sharing how volunteering has benefited your project teams or your project leadership abilities.

Posted by Yasmina Khelifi on: April 17, 2020 01:00 PM | Permalink | Comments (27)
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