Project Management

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What tool or technique could you recommend me to gather opinions and evaluate how stakeholders felt with the project once it is closed?

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Manuel López Arredondo Emiliano Zapata, Morelos, Mexico
I am handing over a project to another PM and I am leaving the client.

However, I would like to know how stakeholders felt about the project, particularly for communications and alignment with the business objective. Therefore, I will appreciate if you can suggest me any tool or technique to objectively gather stakeholder´s point of view.
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Stéphane Parent Self Employed / Semi-retired| Leader Maker Prince Edward Island, Canada
I find SurveyMonkey a great way to get feedback anonymously.
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Drew Craig Sr. Agile & Product Coach| Vanguard Philadelphia, Pa, United States
Ha, yes. Came to say the same as Stéphane. Survey Monkey, or Google Forms.
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Mayte Mata Sivera PMO Leader | Speaker | Author Ut, United States
SurveyMonkey is great, if your company or organization have a tool to get feedback Anonymously that will be great, but always the key is anonymous. I've realized that the stakeholders were more participative and more critical when we don't know who wrote what.
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Andrey Grubin PMP, PMI-ACP Brooklyn, Ny, United States
SurveyMonkey for sure
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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Manuel -

Depends on the volume of stakeholders. If time is tight and there are lots of stakeholders, then a well constructed survey might get you a good representative sample.

However, if I have a bit more time to spare and fewer key stakeholders that I really care to poll, I might prefer to do a few 1:1 meetings with them but have a consistent set of questions which I'd ask them.

Kiron
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1 reply by Manuel López Arredondo
Oct 03, 2017 5:05 PM
Manuel López Arredondo
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This is a great piece of advice. I never thought about that that is a clever idea that I should pursue. Appreciate it.
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Manuel López Arredondo Emiliano Zapata, Morelos, Mexico
Oct 03, 2017 5:03 PM
Replying to Kiron Bondale
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Manuel -

Depends on the volume of stakeholders. If time is tight and there are lots of stakeholders, then a well constructed survey might get you a good representative sample.

However, if I have a bit more time to spare and fewer key stakeholders that I really care to poll, I might prefer to do a few 1:1 meetings with them but have a consistent set of questions which I'd ask them.

Kiron
This is a great piece of advice. I never thought about that that is a clever idea that I should pursue. Appreciate it.
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Anonymous
100% with Kiron
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Bala Sripada Hyderabad, Ap, India
I agree with Kiron.
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Bala Sripada Hyderabad, Ap, India
I used to seek 20 minutes of their time and then have a call.

Will be going through set of questions...and seeking their feedback/opinion/experience.

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