Project Management

Project Signposts

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This blog is designed to help illuminate those key behaviors that facilitate project success. The focus is to revisit those foundational elements that often get lost in all of the project methodologies and terminologies—but which are essential across all disciplines in project management.

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Artificial Intelligence, Change Management, Communications Management, PMO, Project Management, Scope Management, Sponsors, Stakeholder Management

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Do You Unlock the Value in your Project Sponsors?

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One of the lessons I should have learned in my early years but did not always capitalize on effectively was unlocking the value of actively partnering with my project sponsors. As project managers, we generally understand that project stakeholders are those who the project directly impacts and acknowledge that our project sponsors are intended to be those who are the key champions of the project's success. But are we truly engaging in a valuable partnership with our sponsors?

Many of my past projects would begin with a quick meeting or phone call with a senior leader asking me to manage a project in support of a key business objective. I usually had a sense that while this leader was sponsoring and ultimately accountable for the success of the project we were discussing, they also had several other pressing priorities and that my primary role would be to alleviate their need to spend focused time on the project. Unless the project was a major system or culture change, the high-level requirements would be quickly handed-off to me to run with. The project team, other key stakeholders and I would plan and execute the requirements as closely as we could, with interaction with the sponsor being limited to key reviews and resolution of major issues. This sponsor role in my experience was often more one of silent partner rather than engaged participant.

This approach opens the door for a communication gap to develop with the sponsor. This gap would sometimes be identified while assembling the project lessons learned, but I do not recall that solid improvement opportunities were developed to improve the sponsor's engagement quality or frequency.

As a result, an enormously powerful tool in effective project management was often left out. I believe there is a great opportunity to facilitate project success through simply building an active partnership with your sponsor.  It can be as easy as routinely encouraging them to verbally support and champion your project in their staff and cross-functional interactions. The benefits will go in both directions.  After all, not only are sponsors held accountable for the outcome of our projects, they are also well positioned in the organization to influence project support, remove obstacles and add synergy to our efforts.  When working well, this PM-Sponsor relationship makes everyone's work easier to manage.

With a few small behavioral changes designed to make the most of the valuable time sponsors have available for us, we can more effectively engage them as partners. If we keep them up to date on critical project issues on a routine cadence; request they remove obstacles as needed and show them how they can display visible leadership, all without taking too much of their valuable time, we can significantly improve the chances of project success!

Have you unlocked untapped value by really engaging your project sponsors as partners in these activities on your current projects?

  • Participate in developing the Project Charter.
  • Develop a cadence of quick touchpoint sessions to gauge the need for removing project obstacles, adjust resources, or highlight successes.
  • Advocate the project's value with the team and organizational leadership.
  • Facilitate timely decision-making.
  • Actively participate in critical stage gate reviews.

A quick glance at this list might lead you to answer "Yes" to all. A good challenge for you might be to get your project sponsor's opinion on these activities. Then reflect on their input and see if there is room to improve the active partnership with your sponsors and unlock more of their value.  I think you'll find it will be an exercise worth your time!

Posted on: December 10, 2021 12:00 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)

Focus: The Timeless Behavior in Project Success

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Recently, I was reflecting on the evolving landscape of project management and methodologies promoted over the past two decades. My mind kept returning to one rarely mentioned, but essential behavior that is present in the effectiveness of all good project approaches. It should be fundamental, but it is clearly missing from most of the unsuccessful project efforts I’ve seen throughout my career. That behavior is a properly placed focus. The benefits of applying sufficient focus on the right things in any project can never be overstated.

Shine a light on it:

About 20 years ago I had the privilege of working within an organization that successfully modified its overall approach to projects. It was led by a CEO who was intent on building a culture based on getting the right people together to focus on those issues most critical to the company’s success. He would talk about “shining a light” on the issue at hand, coupled with developing a path forward toward a solution. Being part of that emerging culture as an IT director, we soon incorporated focus as a common thread in our projects and it didn’t take too long before it just became part of the way we did our work. As with anything new, the approach was initially met with skepticism and resistance. But being so logical, it was easy to get aligned, and good results quickly followed. Focus enabled our once languishing master data integrity efforts, ERP system rollouts and data warehouse solutions to thrive. System adoption soared!

In the ensuing years, we replicated these positive results by putting our focus on the right things for systems integration, standardizing our business processes, and building a Sustainability program. To this day, I have tried to stay true to the approach of putting focus on the critical project issues at hand and its has been a large part of the project successes I have been a part of.

Recent culture and organizational change efforts I’ve seen undertaken at numerous companies further illustrate the power of focus as a timeless behavior to project success. To drive new behaviors in an organization, it is essential to put the right focus on your efforts. Cultures change slowly through repetition and visible reinforcement from leadership. Focus facilitates the building of new habits in those most impacted by the change, and further reinforces their value to the organization.

Experience has taught me that the chances of instilling effective change with an unfocused project are low. Experience has also repeatedly shown me the timeless power of properly placed focus in improving the chances of project success. Whether your current project issue is related to scope, stakeholder engagement, change management, communications, or something else, focus will certainly put you on the right path to improving your chances of success. So, if your project is struggling, take a step back and ask yourself if you have the right focus. The answer will likely come quickly and allow you to dig in to determine where a properly placed focus will facilitate your project’s success.

Do you have the proper focus on what’s important to your project?

Posted on: November 30, 2021 11:54 AM | Permalink | Comments (4)
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