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PROJECT LEADERSHIP
Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition
from Project Management to Project Leadership
Sponsored by:
2Sponsored by:
Foreword............................................................................................3
Introduction.......................................................................................4
Our Project Leadership Experts...................................................5
Learning to Share...............................................................................9
Nurturing Effective Communication...........................................10
Leading from the Front.................................................................11
Project Leadership, Not Project Management.............................12
Building Trust One Project at a Time.............................................13
The Keys to Success: Ownership, Transparency, and
Accountability.....................................................................................15
Nailing the Vision: Ensuring Project Success Through
Clarity....................................................................................................17
Business-focused Leadership.......................................................18
Wild Dogs and PM’s: Team Building for Successful Projects..........19
Preparation, Visibility, Empowerment.........................................20
Communicating with Empathy.........................................................21
Going from Boss to Teammate.................................................22
The Deal is in the Details...............................................................24
Virtual Leadership............................................................................25
How ‘WIFM’ Rescued a Failing Project.........................................26
Winning Stakeholder Support....................................................27
Lightening the Weight of the World Through Trust................28
Moving Projects Beyond “Analysis Paralysis”............................29
Getting Down to Genuine Leadership.......................................31
TABLE OF CONTENTS
No More “Winging It”: Devising a Plan to Save a Project........32
Trust and Respect: The Keys to Successful Projects...............33
Risking Your Popularity to Be a Strong Leader.........................35
Connecting Sustainability to the Enterprise..............................36
Committing to an Agile Transformation.....................................38
Encourage Autonomy, Collaboration, Exploration................39
Rescuing Failing Projects.............................................................40
Trust: The Key to Successful Leadership...................................41
Becoming the Linchpin for Your Project.......................................43
Implementing Situational Adapted Leadership.......................44
Changing an Organization’s DNA.................................................46
Ensuring Success Through Face-to-Face
Communication................................................................................47
Leading Those Who Follow...........................................................48
Starting Projects with Love and Integrity..................................49
Cultural Competence: Effective Leadership in
Multicultural Environments...........................................................50
Project Leadership: The Main Ingredient in Getting
Troubled Projects Back on Track.................................................52
Delegating Your Way to Project Leadership.............................53
Consistent Project Management Without Excuses ...............54
Clear Communication Leads to Commitment.........................56
Principles of Performance-Based Project Management......57
Love Your Project, and Your Team Will, Too............................59
Meet Workfront...........................................................................60
3Sponsored by:
FOREWORD
Strong project leadership can make the difference between success and failure but is surprisingly elusive to many
businesses.
When it comes to project management, we tend to talk about the tactical—the assignments, the tasks, the approvals, and
so on. But business is evolving, and many project teams are now being asked to lead change, instead of just timelines
and milestones. This evolution is accelerating and is driven by fresh thinking and business necessity supported by
advanced technologies that are highly accessible to a much broader range of contributors. Effectively managing work is
no longer just the role of a few specialists.
At Workfront, we’ve been both witnessing and enabling this trend for many years. It’s the reason our strategic focus goes
beyond helping clients better manage projects. Our Enterprise Work Management solution allows them to view work in a
holistic way—providing complete visibility across not just projects, but the entire lifecycle of work.
With visibility comes transparency, confidence, and ultimately, the power to lead. Decisions no longer need to be made
with out-of-date and incomplete information, resources can be truly optimized, and productivity materially improved.
We hope you’ll find the collective wisdom captured in this eBook to be a source of insight and best practice as you
continue your own journey to be a project leader.
ERIC MORGAN
Workfront CEO
4Sponsored by:
Gartner predicted a massive sea change in the world of project management—a change that is forcing project managers into
a greater leadership role and requiring them to work closely with senior executives. With the generous support of Workfront,
we reached out to 40 top Project and Portfolio Management (PPM) professionals and asked them the following question:
Please share a remarkable leadership secret that had a major impact on an enterprise
project you have managed. Please tell the story and the results that you achieved.
We received a range of insightful answers that paint a picture of an industry in transition. The essays in this book roughly
break down into three categories. Several of the practitioners focused on the new relationship that project leaders need
to forge with senior management, how to understand their concerns and communicate with them in any way that works.
Many PPM experts wrote about leading change and getting teams to work together in new ways. Finally, many of our
experts wrote about specific leadership techniques that have helped them clear hurdles and remove obstacles.
Making the shift from project management to project leadership isn’t easy, but the rewards can be significant. We hope
the collective wisdom and hard-learned lessons contained in these pages will inspire you and help you take your own
teams to a higher level.
All the best,
DAVID ROGELBERG
Editor
© 2014 Studio B Productions, Inc. I 62 Nassau Drive I Great Neck, NY 11021 I 516 360 2622 I www.studiob.com
INTRODUCTION
5Sponsored by:
Cesar Abeid
PROJECT MANAGER
Glen B. Alleman
PRINCIPLE
Paul Cable
CONSULTANT PROJECT
MANAGER
Naomi Caietti
PROJECT MANAGER /
CONSULTANT
Geoff Crane
DOCTORAL STUDENT,
PROFESSOR & COACH
Michiko Diby
CEO
Michel Dion
PROJECT MANAGER
Deanne Earle
COMPANY DIRECTOR &
PROJECT CONSULTANT
Chris Field
GLOBAL PMO MANAGER
Jeff Furman
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
INSTRUCTOR / PM BOOK AUTHOR
OUR PROJECT LEADERSHIP EXPERTS
Frank Grippo
DIRECTOR OF WEB SERVICES
Bob Hartman
CERTIFIED SCRUM TRAINER
Barry Hodge
PROJECT MANAGER
Jon Hyde
PROGRAMME MANAGER
Michael Kaplan
FOUNDER AND CEO
Robert Kelly
MANAGING PARTNER
Torsten Koerting
MANAGING PARTNER
Susanne Madsen
PROJECT LEADERSHIP COACH
Rich Maltzman &
Dave Shirley
CO-FOUNDERS
Margaret Meloni
PRESIDENT
Jose Moro
CEO
Carlos J. Pampliega
ARCHITECT & PROJECT
MANAGER
Rob Prinzo
PRESIDENT
Patrick Richard
SENIOR PROJECT /
PROGRAM MANAGER
Gregg D. Richie
INSTRUCTOR
Iván Carlos Rivera
González
SR. PROJECT MANAGER
Tres Roeder
PRESIDENT
Johanna Rothman
PRESIDENT
Peter Saddington
PRINCIPAL
Susan de Sousa
DIRECTOR
Pam Stanton
AUTHOR, SPEAKER &
CONSULTANT
Stephanie Stewart
DIRECTOR OF AGILE LEADERSHIP
Jo Ann Sweeney
FOUNDER
Peter Taylor
OWNER / DIRECTOR
Tony Toglia
DIRECTOR, PROJECT
MANAGEMENT OFFICE
Ricardo Viana Vargas
DIRECTOR - PROJECT
MANAGEMENT
Cinda Voegtli
CEO
Ed Wallington
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
ADVOCATE
Neil Walker
PROGRAM & PROJECT
PRACTITIONER
Todd C. Williams
PRESIDENT
6Sponsored by:
Share a
remarkable
leadership
secret that had
a major impact
on an enterprise
project you have
managed.
“Many enterprises may have good data,
but because they are working in silos . . .
these data are not available to end users
when they require it.”
– Ed Wallington
“When it comes to organizational project
management, communications is a critical
component that, when executed properly,
links all project stakeholders to a common
set of goals and actions.”
– Michael Kaplan
“Project leadership relates to people, 		
relationships, and behaviors.”
– Neil Walker
7Sponsored by:
“Leadership is setting a new direction or vision for a group to follow, while
management is controlling resources in a group according to defined standards.”
– Peter Taylor
“Swift trust occurs when a diverse group is brought together in a temporary
organization, such as a project office or virtual team created for an urgent project.”
– Naomi Caietti
“I included stakeholders from all areas of the organization, not just IT and not just
the team members, which helped elevate stakeholder interest, bring transparency,
and break down silos, subsequently driving success.”
– Tony Toglia
8Sponsored by:
“I don’t begin a project until I fully understand it. This means that I will sit with 	
project sponsors and not proceed until I have nailed down their vision.”
– Michiko Diby
“What turned the project around was business-focused leadership by the sponsor
and PM as well as business-focused collaboration by the team to define and pursue
what mattered most.”
– Cinda Voegtli
“The role of the PM is first and foremost to create an environment in which the PM’s
team can be successful—nothing more, nothing less.”
– Chris Field
9Sponsored by:
One aspect that enables an enterprise to work efficiently is the
ability to access up-to-date information in a timely manner.
Many enterprises may have good data, but because they are working
in silos (either because of structure or culture), these data are not
available to end users when they require it. There is a general recognition and
emphasis on creating a “single source of the truth” that staff and stakeholders
can access as appropriate. This requires an enterprise-wide change in working
practice and culture—the ability to share.
Enabling change on an enterprise scale requires buy-in from a wide range of
staff, from directors to operational delivery teams. The technical aspects of
this type of project are relatively well known, understood, and achievable; the
main effort is understanding and articulating the benefits and cultural change
required and making the change happen. The project manager (PM) in this
instance must not only focus on the core project deliverable—a system to
enable secure data storage and sharing—but also on the organization’s buy-
in and implementation, which requires the ability to articulate the long-term
benefits (having a clear view on what success looks like) and using negotiation
and persuasion skills to make it happen at all levels of staff.
This type of project can easily lose steam without senior executive buy-in and
support. You will face a lot of push back when mobilizing cultural change, so
communication is key. A PM is conformable communicating at a project delivery
level, but this is not always the case when engaging senior executives. A different
tack is required, one focusing not on the technical detail but reinforcing why the
project is being done, what is required to effect change, and what the impact is
on the executives and their teams.
There is a need to personally tailor the benefits and impact to each executive
and explain it to them regularly. Go out on a limb, buy them a coffee, and have a
chat. Regular personal engagement is important and effective.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
TO WORK EFFICIENTLY, AN
ENTERPRISE MUST BE ABLE TO
ACCESS UP-TO-DATE INFORMA-
TION IN A TIMELY MANNER.
ENABLING CHANGE ON AN
ENTERPRISE SCALE REQUIRES
BUY-IN FROM A WIDE RANGE
OF STAFF.
THE PM MUST NOT ONLY
FOCUS ON THE CORE PROJECT
DELIVERABLE BUT ALSO ON THE
ORGANIZATION’S BUY-IN AND
IMPLEMENTATION.
“Many enterprises
may have good data,
but because they are
working in silos . . .
these data are not
available to end users
when they require it.”
ED WALLINGTON
Dr. Edward Wallington is an
advocate of professional
project management and
business analysis in the
geospatial and management
information sectors. Ed is
a versatile and enthusiastic
project manager who has
a deep interest and belief
in the transfer of project
management theory into
operational application. Ed is
a member of the Association
for Project Management (APM),
a committee member of the
APM Programme Management
Specialist Interest Group, and
actively contributes to the
project portfolio community.
LEARNING TO SHARE
Twitter I Website
Project Management
Advocate at
edwallington.com
10Sponsored by:
When it comes to organizational project management,
communications is a critical component that, when executed
properly, links all project stakeholders to a common set of goals and
actions. If project managers (PM’s) do not effectively share these basic
components or team members don’t understand them, expected outcomes are
jeopardized and project budgets become subject to unwanted risk.
A basic prerequisite for a smoothly functioning project team is effective
communications within the team and between the team and other project
stakeholders. One of the dangers of project management is the belief that all
communication links are operating effectively just because people are talking to one
another. One of the most common pitfalls of communication is the assumption that
because a message was sent, a message must have been received.
According to Project Management Institute, all aspects of project communications
can be challenging to projects, but the major areas of concern are:
• The gap in comprehending the business benefits; and
• The language used to communicate project information being frequently
ambiguous and flavored with project management slang.
The responsibility for developing and nurturing real communication links belongs
to the PM. Understanding that the communication requirements of projects vary
greatly, the PM can focus on several areas to increase project communications:
• Remain an effective communicator.
• Be a communications expediter.
• Encourage good communications across boundaries.
• Leverage technology effectively.
• Use a project website.
• Run effective meetings.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
ENSURE COMMUNICATION
AMONG TEAM MEMBERS AND
BETWEEN THE TEAM AND
PROJECT STAKEHOLDERS.
CREATE AND USE A
COMMUNICATIONS
MANAGEMENT PLAN.
PLAN COMMUNICATION
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL
TO THE PROJECT.
“When it comes to
organizational project
management,
communications is
a critical component
that, when executed
properly, links all
project stakeholders to
a common set of goals
and actions.”
MICHAEL KAPLAN
Michael Kaplan is the founder
of SoftPMO, a New York–based
consulting firm that specializes
in improving execution and
resource management. He is a
recognized leader in program
management and serves as an
advisor and mentor to senior
executives. In more than 20
years of practice, Michael
has worked with several of
the world’s most successful
organizations, including
Fortune 500 companies and
government agencies, helping
them to achieve the full intent
of their most urgent and
critically important initiatives.
NURTURING EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Founder and CEO of
SoftPMO
Twitter I Website I Blog
b
11Sponsored by:
The key to communications starts with planning and includes:
• Planning communication both external and internal to the project;
• Identifying meetings, reporting, and announcements that will
occur with all stakeholders; and
• Creating a communications management plan and using it.
Communications management must include planning and delivering information
related to the project to all project stakeholders, which includes the processes
needed to handle timely and appropriate collection, generation, dissemination,
and storage of project information and the definition of critical links among
people, ideas, and information required for success.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
ENSURE COMMUNICATION
AMONG TEAM MEMBERS AND
BETWEEN THE TEAM AND
PROJECT STAKEHOLDERS.
CREATE AND USE A
COMMUNICATIONS
MANAGEMENT PLAN.
PLAN COMMUNICATION
INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL
TO THE PROJECT.
“When it comes to
organizational project
management,
communications is
a critical component
that, when executed
properly, links all
project stakeholders to
a common set of goals
and actions.”
MICHAEL KAPLAN
Michael Kaplan is the founder
of SoftPMO, a New York–based
consulting firm that specializes
in improving execution and
resource management. He is a
recognized leader in program
management and serves as an
advisor and mentor to senior
executives. In more than 20
years of practice, Michael
has worked with several of
the world’s most successful
organizations, including
Fortune 500 companies and
government agencies, helping
them to achieve the full intent
of their most urgent and
critically important initiatives.
NURTURING EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Founder and CEO of
SoftPMO
b
Twitter I Website I Blog
12Sponsored by:
The perception of project managers (PM’s) has changed
significantly over the past decade. I have witnessed a fundamental
shift in the sectors I operate in—one that has seen a divergence from
the traditional PM role to encompass leadership qualities typically
reserved for executives.
Previously, PM’s sat within an organization’s “command-and-control”
management structure. This authoritarian approach was pervasive throughout
most sectors and typically limited flexibility, stifled innovation, and reduced
the ability to respond rapidly to issues. Marketplace changes over the past
decade have compelled senior executives to demand more from their people,
compelling their people to adapt swiftly to the onslaught of change through
extensive transformational change. PM’s have been charged with unraveling the
plethora of business requirements to deliver projects successfully.
Senior executives set the strategic objectives of the organization, but they are
not experts on how the business runs at the operational level. The people
engaged at that level are. This disconnect is replicated at the project level, as
well. After all, no one person (or team) can do it all or know it all, and PM’s are no
exception. A decade ago, I discovered that successful transformation projects
need effective actions by all of the people involved at every level. This certainly
requires greater levels of collaboration and influence than hitherto seen, not only
within the delivery team implementing the change but across the organization
and even externally.
PM’s face the challenge of gaining contributions and buy-in from people who don’t
report directly to them. Therefore, project success often depends on one’s ability
to influence and persuade people at every level. This, in turn, requires leadership.
Project leadership relates to people, relationships, and behaviors. So, by leading
from the front, steering everyone toward a common objective, and engaging them
effectively en route, you’ll soon see enhanced project performance.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
COLLABORATION IS
ESSENTIAL TO SUCCESSFUL
TRANSFORMATION PROJECTS.
PROJECT SUCCESS OFTEN
DEPENDS ON YOUR ABILITY TO
INFLUENCE AND PERSUADE
PEOPLE AT EVERY LEVEL.
LEAD FROM THE FRONT.
“Project leadership
relates to people,
relationships, and
behaviors.”
NEIL WALKER
Neil Walker is a project
management professional,
consultant, and author. He has
more than 20 years of experience
leading and delivering technology-
enablement projects and business
transformation programs that
have aligned people, process, and
technology with business strategy
for blue-chip financial services,
professional services, and UK
government organizations. Neil
has consulted across the United
Kingdom, Europe, Canada, and the
United States in specializations
such as program delivery
assurance, project turnaround,
strategic relationships, and
collaborative working.
LEADING FROM THE FRONT
Program  Project
Practitioner at Synatus
Twitter I Website I Blog
b
13Sponsored by:
Leadership has been described as the art of leading others to
deliberately create a result that wouldn’t have happened otherwise.
This is something that happens every day in project management, yet
we call it just that—project management rather than project leadership.
A confusing situation, but the difference can be thought of in the following
way: Leadership is setting a new direction or vision for a group to follow, while
management is controlling resources in a group according to defined standards.
Using this definition, then, here is a great example of how such leadership brought
about a significant change. We had a project in which, despite good plans and great
people, we experienced issues resulting from the fact that neither we as the supplier
organization nor the customer had addressed the issue of organizational change
management (OCM) in any serious way. Yet, this was a big program of change running
over a planned period of two and a half years and affecting hundreds of people.
Recognizing this gap and the risk to the overall project, the customer project
manager and I agreed that we needed to do something, and that something was
to lead the team in acquiring new skills while at the same time supporting the
project. We did look at the use of external OCM resources, but the price tag was
astonishingly high and hadn’t been budgeted for, and so this idea was rejected.
Instead, we embarked on researching good OCM material, inviting external experts
who were willing to speak to the team in return for a good meal and some expenses,
and running workshops with the team to explore the OCM challenge and develop a
plan for change management.
The result, although perhaps not the perfect OCM engagement, was twofold: The
team learned a new skill—or at least had their awareness raised over the need
to take OCM seriously—and the business change impact was relatively smooth
(certainly better than had we done nothing). Had we just “managed” the situation, I’m
not sure what the outcome would have been. The fact that we “led” the situation was
a positive thing.
KEY LESSONS
1
BE A PROJECT LEADER, NOT A
PROJECT MANAGER.
“Leadership is setting
a new direction or
vision for a group
to follow, while
management is
controlling resources
in a group according
to defined standards.”
PETER TAYLOR
Peter Taylor is the author of two
best-selling books on “productive
laziness”: The Lazy Winner and
The Lazy Project Manager. In
the past four years, he has
focused on writing and lecturing,
chalking up more than 200
presentations around the world
in more than 20 countries, and
has been described as “perhaps
the most entertaining and
inspiring speaker in the project
management world today.” Peter
also acts as an independent
consultant, working with some
of the major organizations in
the world, coaching executive
sponsors, project management
office leaders, and project
managers.
PROJECT LEADERSHIP, NOT PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Owner / Director at The
Lazy Project Manager Ltd
Twitter I Website I Blog
b
14Sponsored by:
Acurrent trend is to highlight increased engagement of project
managers (PM’s) to help drive strategic initiatives. Organizations
need to be more agile, customer focused, and innovative to stay
competitive in the global marketplace. A few years ago, I had the
opportunity to work as a PM and systems engineer on one of the
largest Medicaid data warehouse projects in the United States. The project was
complex; highly visible; and had multiple stakeholders, virtual teams, and remote
data centers of excellence. The U.S. Department of Health Care Services (DHCS)
had an urgent need to implement and deliver a 21st century business intelligence
(BI) system. Stakeholder engagement was the key to producing results and positive
outcomes for this project.
What key leadership tenet did I use? Swift trust. PM’s and program managers live
this every day: Agility is important for developing swift trust with teams, sponsors,
C-level executives, and stakeholders. Swift trust occurs when a diverse group is
brought together in a temporary organization, such as a project office or virtual
team created for an urgent project.
As a leader, you must earn trust quickly to influence key stakeholders. Everyone
will start with little or some knowledge to gauge trust among the team. You must
demonstrate that you can be trusted and trustworthy. Team members must also
demonstrate their integrity and ability to be accountable, thus earning trust within
the group and from the leader. Why is this skill set important? According to recent
Project Management Institute research, building trust is a key trait that successful
PM’s and program managers share.
Results and Outcomes
The BI solution went live on March 29, 2008, and that solution for DHCS is still
in production today. The project was designed to help more efficiently manage
California’s $38 billion Medicaid program (known as Medi-Cal), save money for
California taxpayers, and improve healthcare services for millions of California
residents. It is the largest Medicaid data warehouse in the nation.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
AGILITY IS IMPORTANT FOR
DEVELOPING SWIFT TRUST WITH
TEAMS, SPONSORS, C-LEVEL
EXECUTIVES, AND STAKEHOLDERS.
YOU MUST EARN TRUST
QUICKLY TO INFLUENCE KEY
STAKEHOLDERS.
“Swift trust occurs
when a diverse group
is brought together in
a temporary organiza-
tion, such as a project
office or virtual team
created for an urgent
project.”
NAOMI CAIETTI
Naomi Caietti is founder and 	
CEO of TheGlassBreakers
and has been a consultant,
a published author, and a
recognized expert on personal
growth and leadership
development for project
managers for more than
10 years. She is a global
speaker and a featured
subject matter expert for the
ProjectManagement.com
community and was recently
interviewed by Samad Aidance 	
of NeuroFrontier on Leadership
for Women PM’s. Naomi blogs for
LiquidPlanner and is the author
of a chapter in Peter Taylor’s
book, The Project Manager Who
Smiled.
BUILDING TRUST ONE PROJECT AT A TIME
Project Manager /
Consultant at the State
of California
Twitter I Website I Blog
b
15Sponsored by:
My story goes back 18 months, when my team and I kicked off
an implementation for a full-blown enterprise-level healthcare
system. The project involved multipoint integration and drastic
changes to current business practices. There were significant risks
and issues involving the design and build decisions. We also struggled to bring
more ownership to the project team to facilitate the focus required for the work.
We needed to tackle these challenges before they affected the critical path of the
project. Therefore, I divided my approach into leveraging three related concepts:
ownership, transparency, and accountability.
First, we focused on facilitating ownership. We made things easy and provided
incentives. We concentrated project data into our project management
information system, WorkFront, for one-stop shopping. I authorized giving
stakeholders direct access to WorkFront, which provides one-click automated
HTML email to communicate project information. It also serves as a forum
for project discussion, providing context, nurturing engagement, and driving
ownership.
Second, we focused on transparency. We built “late task” reports, and WorkFront
sent them out to the team via automated email on a weekly schedule. I included
stakeholders from all areas of the organization, not just IT and not just the team
members, which helped elevate stakeholder interest, bring transparency, and
break down silos, subsequently driving success.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
FACILITATE OWNERSHIP OF
PROJECT ELEMENTS.
BUILD TRANSPARENCY INTO
THE PROCESS.
ENSURE ACCOUNTABILITY.
“I included stakeholders
from all areas of the
organization, not just
IT and not just the
team members, which
helped elevate
stakeholder interest,
bring transparency,
and break down silos,
subsequently driving
success.”
TONY TOGLIA
Tony Toglia has been
involved in healthcare
technology, administration,
project management, and
leadership since 1987.
He currently manages a
project portfolio involving
computerized physician order
entry clinical, ancillary, and
business offices at a growing
regional healthcare delivery
organization.
THE KEYS TO SUCCESS: OWNERSHIP, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY
Director, Project
Management Office at
Rideout Health
Website
16Sponsored by:
Finally, we focused on accountability. We used project scorecards
and dashboards to leverage the transparency into accountability. Our
biggest win was creating a custom issue category called decisions,
referring to decisions that were holding up design and build efforts.
The dashboard was grouped by senior leaders and displayed before all of them in
the boardroom. That transparency drove many executive decisions forward that
had been lagging to that point.
We saw a significant improvement in performance by leveraging a preexisting
tool in a way that facilitated stakeholder ownership, brought transparency to the
project, and displayed accountability. We brought focus and resolution to our
problem areas and got back on track.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
FACILITATE OWNERSHIP OF
PROJECT ELEMENTS.
BUILD TRANSPARENCY INTO
THE PROCESS.
ENSURE ACCOUNTABILITY.
“I included stakeholders
from all areas of the
organization, not just
IT and not just the
team members, which
helped elevate
stakeholder interest,
bring transparency,
and break down silos,
subsequently driving
success.”
TONY TOGLIA
Tony Toglia has been
involved in healthcare
technology, administration,
project management, and
leadership since 1987.
He currently manages a
project portfolio involving
computerized physician order
entry clinical, ancillary, and
business offices at a growing
regional healthcare delivery
organization.
THE KEYS TO SUCCESS: OWNERSHIP, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY
Director, Project
Management Office at
Rideout Health
Website
17Sponsored by:
The clarifier often gets beat up at the beginning, but the sacrifice is
almost a necessity to bring project success in the end.
I don’t begin a project until I fully understand it. This means that
I will sit with project sponsors and not proceed until I have nailed down their
vision. First, I must be able to describe the purpose of the project in two or
three sentences. Second, I should be able to describe the plan for the project to
anyone in a way that makes sense.
I often get beat up (figuratively speaking) on the way to getting my clarity. My
favorite story was when I worked for an Army contractor at the Pentagon. I came
into an enterprise application rewrite midway through and realized that the
project team was dancing around the need to get clarity for fear of the reaction
of a certain colonel. Unclear projects really cause stress, and on my first day, a
few of my people burst into tears. Something had to be done, so over the course
of the next month, I gradually developed the tools—project charter; updated,
accurate project plan; risk log—and talked to the right people to get myself
in front of the colonel and his team. I’ll never forget that experience: Even the
lieutenant colonels were nervous when the day of the meeting actually arrived.
Through the research we had done, the team realized that we needed to focus
on a concept that had been lost in translation while people communicated
around each other. That was the first thing on our first slide. Our colonel saw it
and started to turn red. Then, he banged his fist on the table so that the whole
room jumped. I must have been staring at him wide eyed when he bellowed,
“Why didn’t we figure this out sooner?” Then began a calm, effective conversation
during which we questioned him on scope, and we left the meeting knowing that
we had the clarity we needed to be successful.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
DON’T BEGIN A PROJECT UNTIL
YOU FULLY UNDERSTAND IT.
BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE THE
PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT IN
TWO OR THREE SENTENCES.
BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE THE PLAN
FOR THE PROJECT TO ANYONE
IN A WAY THAT MAKES SENSE.
“I don’t begin a project
until I fully understand
it. This means that I
will sit with project
sponsors and not
proceed until I have
nailed down their
vision.”
MICHIKO DIBY
Michiko Diby is probably the
most no-nonsense, get-it-
done project manager (PM)
clients will ever come across.
A process guru, Michiko
is a project management
professional and Design for Six
Sigma certified. She can engage
at all levels but has a low
tolerance for obfuscation. She
has led projects and programs
for Fannie Mae, T. Rowe Price,
and the U.S. Army, and is the
author of a popular project
management blog, Kosmothink.
Michiko has been featured
in the Project Management
Institute’s global magazine, PM
Today, and holds a master’s
degree in Conflict Analysis and
Resolution.
NAILING THE VISION: ENSURING PROJECT SUCCESS THROUGH CLARITY
CEO of The SeaLight
Company
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The news was grim. The nine-month IT project, designed to deliver
a wealth of new cost data to a group of critical business users,
was six months into the schedule—and still gathering requirements.
Although some technical work was underway, the team was
floundering in how to settle the scope and proceed. Meanwhile, millions of
dollars in additional profit per week from better product pricing decisions the
new data would enable were being lost. And finishing the technical work on time
was looking like an impossible dream.
But with less than three months to go, this project recovered. It was actually
recovered on one specific day, when the sponsor, project manager (PM), and
team gathered with two key business users and laid out the state of the project.
The PM and sponsor called the meeting, because they had realized that the
team meant well—they were trying to make sure they identified all the customer
requirements so that they could deliver a full tool for the pricing analysts. But
therein lay the problem: They were gathering all the requirements as abstract,
equally weighted items to satisfy rather than focusing on the driving business
goals and what mattered most for achieving them.
That day, the group explored what mattered most to the analysts’ ability to make
better pricing decisions and reap the maximum amount of extra profit. By the
afternoon, the group had identified the five most important metrics the pricing
analysts needed from the sales and customer support data. The technical team
had started reworking the remaining schedule to deliver just those five metrics.
In the end, the project was delivered within two weeks of its original deadline.
This project was not saved by heroics or more resources or tighter schedule
management. What turned the project around was business-focused leadership
by the sponsor and PM as well as business-focused collaboration by the team to
define and pursue what mattered most.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
THE SPONSOR, PM, AND TEAM
SHOULD GATHERED WITH TWO
KEY BUSINESS USERS TO LAY
OUT THE STATE OF THE PROJECT.
DETERMINE WHAT MATTERS
MOST TO THE PROJECT AND ITS
USERS.
BUSINESS-FOCUSED LEADERSHIP
BY THE SPONSOR AND PM CAN
SAVE A PROJECT.
“What turned the
project around was
business-focused
leadership by the
sponsor and PM as
well as business-
focused collaboration
by the team to define
and pursue what
mattered most.”
CINDA VOEGTLI
Cinda Voegtli is founder and
CEO of ProjectConnections.
com, an online resources and
support service for more than
350,000 managers and team
members worldwide. She
has more than 20 years of
development and management
experience and advises
companies of all sizes on
practical project processes. Her
passions are achieving “just
enough” project management
that makes sense and gets
used; building business-savvy
cross-functional teams; and
helping project managers bring
together the skills and attitudes
that make them truly great
project leaders.
BUSINESS-FOCUSED LEADERSHIP
CEO of
ProjectConnections.com
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We’ve all heard phrases like “common sense ain’t that
common,” “the sum of the parts,” and “it’s people that
deliver projects,” and few would disagree with the sentiment
behind them. Yet, it never ceases to amaze me how few people
take these wise words to heart when managing projects, no matter how large
or small.
I’ve been fortunate enough to be involved with some really successful
projects as well as some remarkable failures, and the common denominator
among those considered successful is typically the people involved. My “not
so secret” secret reflects this.
The role of the project manager (PM) is first and foremost to create an
environment in which the PM’s team can be successful—nothing more,
nothing less. Take, for example, team building. Everyone recognizes the
importance of an effective team, yet how many of us make provision for this
in our plans and take the time to understand and play to the key strengths of
the team?
I was involved with a truly remarkable project in which the upfront investment
in team building paid dividends. The “Wild Dogs” (a name that the team
chose for themselves to reflect their determination to work effectively as a
team) were able to deliver truly remarkable results in the most challenging
of circumstances. Although the team’s success can be attributed to several
factors, including collocation, a willingness to invest in the team’s development,
and a real sense of passion, it was without a doubt the unconditional support
for fellow team members that allowed magic to happen—a lesson we can all
learn from the team’s namesakes in the wilds of Africa.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
THE TEAM IS THE KEY TO
PROJECT SUCCESS.
THE PM’S PRINCIPLE ROLE IS TO
CREATE AN ENVIRONMENT IN
WHICH THE TEAM CAN SUCCEED.
“The role of the
PM is first and
foremost to create
an environment in
which the PM’s team
can be successful—
nothing more,
nothing less.”
CHRIS FIELD
Chris Field joined Piksel Inc.
in March 2014 to establish its
Global Project Management
Office (PMO). He is passionate
about project management
and is an active member of
the UK Board of the Project
Management Institute,
having served as president
from 2009 to 2011. Chris
founded and is responsible for
organizing Synergy, one of the
largest project management
conferences in the United
Kingdom. He is also a Fellow of
the British Computer Society
and Member of the Association
for Project Management.
WILD DOGS AND PM’S: TEAM BUILDING FOR SUCCESSFUL PROJECTS
Global PMO Manager at
Piksel Inc.
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We were hosting more than 2,000 websites on an antiquated
platform when the decision was made to migrate them to a
new environment. The websites had been built over several years
using different standards. We did not have the staff for such a
challenging task, so we hired a new team, including an offshore group. The leads
were skilled but did not have large-scale project experience. The traditional
approach to project management was not going to succeed. So, how did we
accomplish this in nine months? Preparation, visibility, empowerment.
What was the process? We wrote a program that created each new website
and entered it into our tracking software. A project coordinator was assigned to
evaluate the new website, and updates to copy and design were implemented
as needed. The quality assurance (QA) team then received the website for
testing. Any issues found were logged and assigned to a development team.
With the onsite and offshore teams working together, most websites were
tested and fixed in a day. When teams came across situations they didn’t know
how to handle, the issues were logged and assigned to management. We had
weekly training sessions with the teams, teaching them how to handle issues
on their own. After a few months, the teams were functioning without upper
management.
To accomplish this much work in such a short time takes preparation. We
had supporting software, workflows, reports, and queues in place before
we hired any staff. A large-scale initiative also requires visibility. Our reports
tracked progress in real time and sent us alerts if a project was stalled. Most
importantly, a busy team needs to be empowered. Instead of micromanaging
routine issues, we gave our people the skills to make decisions.
So, how do you migrate 2,000 websites in nine months? Preparation, visibility,
empowerment.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
PREPARE FOR YOUR PROJECT IN
ADVANCE AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE.
TRACK PROGRESS IN REAL TIME
TO ENSURE VISIBILITY.
GIVE PEOPLE THE SKILLS THEY
NEED TO MAKE DECISIONS.
“A busy team needs
to be empowered.
Instead of
micromanaging
routine issues, we
gave our people the
skills to make
decisions.”
FRANK GRIPPO
Frank Grippo graduated
from Purdue University
with a degree in Computer
Science. Starting his career
as a database and web
developer for Dialogic and
Healthstreet, he has since
been at LexisNexis for 13 years
and is currently the director
of Web Services. In LexisNexis’
Web Visibility group, Frank is
creating websites to help law
firms market their businesses.
He is responsible for project
managers, developers, quality
assurance, and support staffs.
PREPARATION, VISIBILITY, EMPOWERMENT
Director of Web Services
at LexisNexis
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Let me start by admitting that I am not currently a project
manager; rather, I’m writing from the perspective of an Agile
coach and trainer. This essay reflects what I have seen while
working with clients over the past year.
The one “remarkable leadership secret” I have seen project managers
and Scrum Masters alike employ is the ability to communicate with senior
executives effectively. This sounds simple, but communicating with an
executive requires special skills that aren’t normally taught. It is not a type of
communication that happens naturally. It certainly requires impeccable logic,
confidence, and an ability to speak clearly, but it also requires more than the
obvious: It requires empathy and an understanding of the issues executives
face. This rarely considered idea is often the difference between the success
and failure of a conversation or idea.
The formula for communicating with empathy begins by framing the context
at the start of the conversation (“In our organization . . .” or “On this
project . . .”) and asking executives for their opinion (“What do you see as
our biggest challenges?” or “What things do you see as risks?”). Having a
conversation about what worries the executive shows your empathy and
respect for his or her position. Trying to solve your problems without regard
for the executive’s problems will generally not produce positive results.
This leadership secret can move executives who were violently opposed to
an idea to support it after they understand how it would fix their problem,
too. If you have empathy for your executives and the things they are
concerned about, your ability to tie their problems to yours will allow you to
come up with solutions that solve both. Transform your conversations today
using this leadership technique.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
LEARN TO COMMUNICATE
EFFECTIVELY WITH EXECUTIVES.
FRAME THE CONTEXT AT THE
START OF THE CONVERSATION
AND ASK EXECUTIVES FOR THEIR
OPINION.
TIE YOUR PROBLEM TO THE
EXECUTIVE’S PROBLEM.
“If you have empathy
for your executives
and the things they
are concerned about,
your ability to tie their
problems to yours will
allow you to come up
with solutions that
solve both.”
BOB HARTMAN
Bob Hartman, known as
Agile Bob, has been involved
in the software industry
for more than 30 years.
He uses his experience to
help organizations, teams,
and individuals all around
the world. Bob is a popular
conference speaker, a certified
scrum trainer and certified
scrum coach, and is assistant
chairman of the Scrum Alliance
Board of Directors.
COMMUNICATING WITH EMPATHY
Certified Scrum Trainer
and Coach at Agile For
All, LLC
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Ionce had to manage a team of electricians on a job site in the
Peruvian desert. I had never met those guys before, and they
only spoke Spanish (my Spanish is passable at best). In addition,
we had a tight deadline, leaving us only three days to complete
all the work. In those three days, I learned a lot about leadership, and the
secrets I uncovered stay with me to this day.
During our first meeting, I had to explain what needed to be done—the
requirements—and why we only had three days to accomplish it all. At first,
I started talking to them in English with the help of a translator. Because
I understand Spanish way better than I speak it, I quickly realized that my
translator was not conveying exactly what I needed to express. So, I decided
to switch to my frail Spanish.
As soon as I did, I noticed that the attitude of the team completely changed.
In their eyes, I went from being a Canadian who had arrived to tell them what
to do to a visitor who was speaking their language. Almost immediately, they
moved to a position of hosts and also realized that, though I was an engineer
project manager, there was something essential to this project (the Spanish
language) that they knew way better than I.
I went from boss, to someone who was in a position to learn from them.
Next, I explained how absolutely important their work was going to be to
make this project successful. We went over the requirements and started
working.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
TRY TO SPEAK YOUR TEAM’S
LANGUAGE, EVEN IF YOU DON’T
KNOW IT WELL.
DEMONSTRATE THAT YOU NEED
PEOPLE.
SHOW THAT YOU’RE READY TO
PITCH IN AND GET DIRTY.
“Demonstrate that
you need people.
Doing so empowers
your team, humanizes
you as a manager, and
helps all stakeholders
own the project and
its success.”
CESAR ABEID
Cesar Abeid is a certified
project management
professional and has a B.E.Sc.
in Electrical Engineering from
the University of Western
Ontario. Cesar joined
Remontech in 2004, and
since then has successfully
implemented and managed
projects throughout Canada,
the United States, Brazil, and
Peru. He has a passion for
bringing project management
ideas to all. Cesar is also the
host of the weekly Project
Management for the Masses
podcast and the Construction
Industry podcast.
GOING FROM BOSS TO TEAMMATE
Project Manager at
Remontech, Inc.
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Because our deadline was quickly approaching, I made another
decision that turned out to be important: I decided to join them
in their work. I suited up in personal protective equipment and
accompanied them into the field, got dirty, and did some of the
work myself. The tasks were all completed within our timeframe, and I made
friends I am still in touch with to this day.
So, what were the leadership lessons here?
The answer is surprisingly simple. To lead, you need to try to speak your
team’s language, even if you don’t know it well enough. Demonstrate that you
need people. Doing so empowers your team, humanizes you as a manager,
and helps all stakeholders own the project and its success.
Finally, show that you are ready to do the work yourself, if needed. Show
that you are not afraid to roll up your sleeves and get dirty. This will earn
you respect and help you position yourself to compel all to do what needs
to be done.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
TRY TO SPEAK YOUR TEAM’S
LANGUAGE, EVEN IF YOU DON’T
KNOW IT WELL.
DEMONSTRATE THAT YOU NEED
PEOPLE.
SHOW THAT YOU’RE READY TO
PITCH IN AND GET DIRTY.
“Demonstrate that
you need people.
Doing so empowers
your team, humanizes
you as a manager, and
helps all stakeholders
own the project and
its success.”
CESAR ABEID
Cesar Abeid is a certified
project management
professional and has a B.E.Sc.
in Electrical Engineering from
the University of Western
Ontario. Cesar joined
Remontech in 2004, and
since then has successfully
implemented and managed
projects throughout Canada,
the United States, Brazil, and
Peru. He has a passion for
bringing project management
ideas to all. Cesar is also the
host of the weekly Project
Management for the Masses
podcast and the Construction
Industry podcast.
GOING FROM BOSS TO TEAMMATE
Project Manager at
Remontech, Inc.
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Several years ago, I moved into a senior program management role
at an Asian bank, managing a struggling steady-state enterprise
resource planning (ERP) installation. Luckily, I was friends with the
managing director of operations, who was able to give me the heads
up: “We’ve had other senior people in your position who focused on technical
competency and business acumen. The business tore them to shreds. Find
another approach.”
Somewhat unnerved, I cautiously stepped into the role. There were all kinds of
functional problems on the ground. From my perspective, though, the single
biggest problem was a silo-based work culture. Everyone around me was smart
and talented, but those things clearly weren’t enough. To be able to make this
ERP system work, the organization as a whole needed to work as a single team.
That’s tough in a large, traditionally minded bank, and even tougher when
countless fingers are already pointing with hostile intent in every direction!
I started by cleaning up my own house. Using techniques I’d learned from my
father (a schoolteacher), I set weekly customer-focused challenges for my people
that they had to solve in groups. For example, the risk management department
was regularly missing its morning risk reports. So: “Find a solution that (1) lets us
notify them in person if the report will be late (before they go looking for it) and
(2) solve the late report problem.” This had two effects: (1) We were finally able
to get out in front of my customers’ issues across the enterprise and stop the
grumbling; and (2) my front-line customers went to their management (on their
own) to let them know they were seeing some interesting changes in my unit.
At this point, I had an opening to invite representatives from all of my customer
groups to the table to begin working on short-term capacity plans. The result?
High praise from my most demanding customer: “Geoff did in six months what
three VPs before him could not. He got those people to work together.”
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
AVOID A SILO-BASED WORK
CULTURE.
BEFORE IMPLEMENTING ANY
OTHER CHANGES, CLEAN UP
YOUR OWN HOUSE.
SET WEEKLY CUSTOMER-
FOCUSED CHALLENGES THAT
YOUR PEOPLE HAVE TO SOLVE
IN GROUPS.
“We’ve had other
senior people in your
position who focused
on technicalcompetency
and business acumen.
The business tore
them to shreds. Find
another approach.”
GEOFF CRANE
Geoff Crane is a former senior
project portfolio manager
who has ties to some of the
world’s largest banks and
professional services firms. A
staunch believer in the value
of soft skills over hard skills, he
has returned to university to
pursue a doctorate in clinical
psychology. Unable to stay
away from the action, though,
Geoff continues to help
aspiring executives organize
their project work and is an
adjunct professor of Project
Management at Durham
College in Ontario, Canada.
THE DEAL IS IN THE DETAILS
Doctoral Student,
Professor and Coach at
The Papercut Project
Manager
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The most successful project managers (PM’s) possess leadership
abilities and employ them. As a military PM, it was a skill I learned
from watching the good leaders, and it was taught to us from the
beginning of our military journey. We were often required to brief
much higher-ranking officers about our projects.
Once, I managed the delivery, installation, data collection, and analysis of a
project to test solar photovoltaic panels as a back-up power source at remote
construction sites around the western Pacific. This region included 14 sites,
stretching north and south from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, to Adak, Alaska, as
well as east and west from California to Japan and Subic Bay, Philippines. The U.S.
Department of Energy provided the solar systems, but the U.S. Navy SEABEES
installed, tested, and collected the data. Because this was a high-level government
project, it was high-visibility, watched by all levels of the chain of command.
The biggest challenge? Not only had no one on the project ever worked together
before, but we couldn’t see each other. We conducted all communications over
ham radio gear. Today, we call this a virtual team, but in the early 1980s, that term
did not exist. So, how do you get a team of people who had never met face to face,
to get to know each other and work together? How do you conduct team-building
activities? Two words: virtual leadership.
I asked each team member to have a head-and-shoulders picture taken, then
send that picture to the 13 other sites. I implemented the policy that when they
were speaking to another member of the team, they bring their picture up so that
the speakers could see each other’s faces. I also conducted sessions in which we
asked questions and discussed the issues and challenges we faced. Finally, I had
an “open-door policy,” where any person from the team could come to me with
any issue, and we would openly and freely discuss it. The outcome was that when
we all came together at a base near Los Angeles, California, the team met as if they
had been working side by side the entire time. They discussed family, hobbies, and
common interests, because they already knew so much about each other.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
WHEN TEAM MEMBERS WORK
VIRTUALLY, HAVING A PICTURE
OF EACH TEAM MEMBER FOSTERS
BETTER COMMUNICATION.
MAINTAIN AN OPEN-DOOR
POLICY TO ENCOURAGE
COMMUNICATION.
“The most successful
project managers
possess leadership
abilities and employ
them.”
GREGG D. RICHIE
Gregg D. Richie, PMP, CNP,
MCTS, is a full-time instructor
for Project Management
Academy. He also teaches for
the University of Washington
in the Project Management
Certificate Program, has written
two books on Microsoft Project,
and is a 20 year veteran of
the U.S. Navy SEABEES. His
copyrighted signature saying
is, “Goals are like underwear:
You have to change them once
in a while to feel better about
yourself.”
VIRTUAL LEADERSHIP
Instructor at Project
Management Academy
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For many years, I worked in a fast-paced brokerage firm in
Manhattan that had more than 1,000 developers working on
concurrent projects. Sometimes, they had to move in code changes
on the fly midday, while stocks were trading. And sometimes, these
changes had bugs that had to be eliminated immediately to prevent trading with
the wrong calculations. Sound chaotic?
To bring order to this “cowboy” environment, our chief information officer (CIO)
issued an edict that the developers must start using a new change management
system for all future software changes. This CIO was highly respected and
enjoyed all the forms of power one might find on the Project Management
Professional test: “formal,” “punishment,” “referent,” but the developers put up
strong resistance, and the cut-over failed for more than a year.
I was put in charge of converting the developers to the system, and I created
a hands-on class that I made all about the WIFM factor (What’s in It for Me?).
I showed the developers that they would benefit greatly from the system,
especially because of its “auto–back-out” option. This feature meant that the
next time a developer would get a 3:00 a.m. call to back-out one of his or her
changes, that developer would no longer need to scramble around looking
for the old version of the code. If he or she had entered the change through
our system, it could be backed out automatically. All the person had to do was
have management key in “B” for back-out. The developers found this to be an
appealing argument, because it would save them hours of major stress on every
back-out.
The benefit?
The result was the IT department went from almost 0% to 100% compliance,
bringing a huge drop in the number of defects in our production-trading
environment.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
SHOW PEOPLE HOW THEY CAN
BENEFIT FROM YOUR PROJECT.
PEOPLE ARE MORE LIKELY TO
COMPLY WITH CHANGE WHEN
THEY UNDERSTAND THE
BENEFIT TO THEM PERSONALLY.
“I was put in charge
of converting the
developers to the
system, and I created
a hands-on class that
I made all about the
WIFM factor (What’s
in It for Me?).”
JEFF FURMAN
Jeff Furman, PMP, is a highly
experienced IT project
manager and project
management instructor. He
managed software projects
for Fortune 100 firms in the
New York City area for more
than 15 years and currently
teaches project management
for New York University and
for the U.S. Army at Fort Hood
and other bases around the
United States. The second
edition of his book, The Project
Management Answer Book
(Management Concepts Press),
came out in August 2014.
HOW “WIFM” RESCUED A FAILING PROJECT
Project Management
Instructor / PM Book
Author at NYU
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Communicating projects is more than information flows among
team members: It’s winning the trust and support of key
stakeholders outside the team.
For any project to succeed, we need to take our stakeholders on a journey. This
journey starts where those stakeholders are in terms of how much they know and
how they feel about our project. It ends when they are where we want them to be.
Before people act in the way we want, they have to feel positive about what we
are asking them to do. Before they feel positive, they need to know the essentials
that will change their attitudes from negative or neutral. Thus, communications
becomes an escalator that we take our stakeholders up. First, we make them
aware of our project; then, we build their understanding. Next, we win their
support, then involvement. Finally, we ask them to commit to our project.
Just focusing on information flows gives people an intellectual concept of our
project. They’re familiar but have no emotional investment to support us and
ensure that our project succeeds. That’s assuming they pay attention to the
information we circulate.
A few years ago, I supported four projects, together transforming a multitude
of in-country systems and processes to a single European-wide system. One
project manager (PM) got the concept of stakeholder journey, and together we
developed a simple communications plan with stakeholder route maps at its
heart. The others didn’t. One said, “No need for communications; we’ll just tell
them and they’ll do it.” Another PM pulled out a door-stop document and said,
“I already have a comms plan.” It was just for show. The fourth project team had
great fun creating entertaining videos and posters but no plan.
Only the first project won wide stakeholder support and delivered new systems
that people willingly used from day one.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
ENSURE THAT STAKEHOLDERS
BUY IN TO YOUR PROJECT.
WIN STAKEHOLDER SUPPORT,
THEN THEIR INVOLVEMENT.
ASK STAKEHOLDERS TO COMMIT
TO THE PROJECT.
“Communicating
projects is more
than information
flows among team
members: It’s winning
the trust and support
of key stakeholders
outside the team.”
JO ANN SWEENEY
Jo Ann Sweeney is a
communications consultant
known for her results-
focused approach, rapport
and consensus building,
and clarifying complex
information. An FCIM and FIIC,
she specializes in working
with complex project teams
that have focused on the
technology solution rather
than its delivery. Jo Ann
helps them get key people
committed so that the project
delivers the expected business
goals and wins recognition
for a great job. In addition,
she runs communications
training for project teams and
mentors leaders who have
communication responsibilities.
View more at: Communicating
Projects System
WINNING STAKEHOLDER SUPPORT
Founder of Sweeney
Communications Ltd
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“There is something wrong; the conversion does not balance. We
might have to call it off.” These were the words my team member
blurted out as I approached. Unfortunately, not far behind me was
my boss, the chief information officer. My boss was trailing me from
desk to desk, because this was a large conversion involving most of our major
applications. If one failed, they all failed. We had been rehearsing this for months.
I calmly asked my team member to tell me what had happened. He showed me
the conversion report and the out-of-balance totals. On his face, I saw fatigue; at
that moment, I could see that he thought the weight of the entire project was on
his shoulders. I knew that he was smart and committed. He did not need me or
my boss to jump in and start reviewing reports and issuing orders. He needed
time to step back, take another look, tell me the nature of the situation, and offer
a potential solution.
I looked at him and said, “Okay, go take a quick break. Walk away from your
computer and your desk. After your break, come back and revisit the report. I will
check back with you in one hour.” Then, I walked away.
My boss trailed me; in not-so-hushed tones, he barked, “Take a break? That’s
how you solve a problem that could bring us to our knees? Take a break?” I
looked at him and said, “Just trust us and give us an hour.” In less than an hour,
my team member called me over to advise me that everything was in fact fine
and that in his nervousness and fatigue, he had transposed two numbers.
In this scenario, trust made all the difference. My boss grudgingly trusted me. I
had to trust myself and stand firm in my approach, I had to trust that my team
member could resolve the problem, and my team member had to trust in the
fact that I believed in him.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
DURING PROJECTS, TRUST
MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE.
TRUST YOURSELF, AND STAND
FIRM IN YOUR APPROACH.
“On his face, I saw
fatigue; at that
moment, I could see
that he thought the
weight of the entire
project was on his
shoulders.”
MARGARET MELONI
Margaret Meloni, MBA, PMP, is
president of Meloni Coaching
Solutions, Inc., a company
devoted to helping clients
successfully navigate the
human side of the project
world. Her background in
IT project management and
project management office
leadership enables Margaret
to understand the challenges
clients face when managing
projects. A recipient of the
University of California,
Los Angeles, Extension
Distinguished Instructors
Award, her wish is to see
her students take on tough
projects and emerge strong
and sought-after project
managers.
LIGHTENING THE WEIGHT OF THE WORLD THROUGH TRUST
President of Meloni
Coaching Solutions, Inc.
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My boss called me into her office to assign the latest mandate
from corporate IT. The scope, she said, was for our business
unit to deliver a major upgrade of Windows to our 10,000 end users,
who were spread across several countries and dozens of sites. The
deadline was 12 months.
Now, let’s talk about scope. The project had many unknowns. Before we could
deploy the upgrade, we would need to test all of our business applications for
compatibility. Because there was no authoritative inventory of applications, we
would need to gather that first.
There was some buzz about a new tool that would deploy the upgrade “auto-
magically” over the network, but it was still in development at Microsoft. This
meant that we might have to configure each of those 10,000 computers
manually, one at a time.
Budget, you ask? No one knew, yet, what would be funded by corporate IT versus
the local business units. Still, we would need to prepare a funding proposal
and get it approved in time to submit our deployment schedule to the chief
information officer within 30 days. The optics and politics of this situation were
so massive that failure, as they say, was not an option.
I summoned an emergency workshop of representatives from our functions and
sites to build a plan for application inventory, testing, remediation, and end-user
deployment. I stood at the whiteboard with an eager smile, marker in hand.
That’s where it got ugly.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
DEVELOP A WHAT-IF
SCENARIO TO BEGIN THE
PLANNING PROCESS.
USE THE SCENARIO TO BUILD
A PROPOSAL AND DRIVE
CONSENSUS.
“Technical people
make fact-based
decisions and commit
to plans grounded in
data. What I was
asking of them
violated their very
core.”
PAM STANTON
Born and raised in New
Jersey and a graduate of Yale
University, Pam Stanton is an
author, speaker, coach, and
consultant who has 25 years of
experience in transformational
leadership. She specializes in
the impact of group dynamics
on project outcomes—or,
as she puts it, “The Human
Part of the Gantt Chart.” Her
book, The Project Whisperer,
chronicles two decades
of insight into the human
element of successful projects.
MOVING PROJECTS BEYOND “ANALYSIS PARALYSIS”
Author, Speaker, and
Consultant at The Project
Whisperer
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The pushback was immediate and fierce. “Too many variables to
build a plan!” “How can we build a plan before we know whether the
deployment will be automated or manual?” “Our plan depends on
what version of Windows they will use.” “Sorry, but we can’t possibly
build a plan until we have all these questions answered first!”
I was stumped. I mean, couldn’t we just throw ideas onto the whiteboard and
work out some reasonable guesstimates? That’s when it hit me: Plan, plan, plan.
The people around the table were hung up on the word plan! To this room full
of highly analytical people, plan equaled commitment. Technical people make
fact-based decisions and commit to plans grounded in data. What I was asking of
them violated their very core.
Immediately, I dropped the word plan. Drawing a large timeline on the
whiteboard, I wrote, “What if . . . ?” When the exercise changed from building a
plan to developing a what-if scenario, the floodgates opened and ideas poured
out. We captured the “what-if’s” as assumptions that would need to be met for
this scenario to work. Fantastic! That’s all I ever wanted in the first place.
By the end of the workshop, we had a great plan for how this project could work,
assuming that we could get certain commitments on resources, technology,
funding, etc. It wasn’t a huge Gantt chart but rather a simple one-pager that
included graphical boxes and stars showing major activities and decision points.
I called it our Assumption-based Scenario and used it to build a proposal that
drove consensus with leadership and articulated what decisions had to be made
for us to proceed.
I’ve reused this approach dozens of times since to move project teams out of
analysis paralysis. It works like a charm as long as I never utter that four-letter word.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
DEVELOP A WHAT-IF
SCENARIO TO BEGIN THE
PLANNING PROCESS.
USE THE SCENARIO TO BUILD
A PROPOSAL AND DRIVE
CONSENSUS.
“Technical people
make fact-based
decisions and commit
to plans grounded in
data. What I was
asking of them
violated their very
core.”
PAM STANTON
Born and raised in New
Jersey and a graduate of Yale
University, Pam Stanton is an
author, speaker, coach, and
consultant who has 25 years of
experience in transformational
leadership. She specializes in
the impact of group dynamics
on project outcomes—or,
as she puts it, “The Human
Part of the Gantt Chart.” Her
book, The Project Whisperer,
chronicles two decades
of insight into the human
element of successful projects.
MOVING PROJECTS BEYOND “ANALYSIS PARALYSIS”
Author, Speaker, and
Consultant at The Project
Whisperer
b
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31Sponsored by:
When I hear that Gartner is predicting a major shift in the
leadership role that project managers (PM) will take on over the
next few months, I get excited. Although I am a fan of technology and
systems, I have been tremendously frustrated by the “productization”
of project management. Cloud-based portfolio management, turnkey program
management office models, and magic methodologies have all been lauded as
the key to success. When it comes down to it, though, for this shift to become a
reality, PM’s must get down to raw, genuine leadership, especially when working
with executives.
I had this revelation several years ago while working on two enterprise projects
whose teams consisted of multiple executives. On both engagements, I felt
confident about the projects. I had executive support, firm budgets, and so on.
The problem was that progress was hard fought every step of the way. Decisions
weren’t being made, and the team was polluted with organizational politics. This
is when I learned that project leadership often required being uncomfortable.
When projects are running smoothly, you are managing them, and the other
aspects of leadership (coaching, vision casting, etc.) are enjoyable, but calling
out executives in front of their peers and subordinates is not a comfortable
place to be. No methodology or tool was going to help me. I needed to dot my
i’s and cross my t’s, then have a frank conversation with each of them about
expectations and issues affecting the project. Although it was not an accusatory
position—rather, collaboration on working together—it was unnerving. In the
end, I was able to illustrate the issues and develop solutions to get the projects
moving forward. Most gratifying was the increased confidence in my leadership
abilities.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
STRIVE TO BE A LEADER, NOT
JUST A MANAGER.
PROJECT LEADERSHIP
OFTEN REQUIRES BEING
UNCOMFORTABLE.
“When it comes down
to it…PM’s must get
down to raw, genuine
leadership, especially
when working with
executives.”
ROBERT KELLY
Prior to starting KPS,
Robert Kelly successfully
led enterprise projects for
15 years, with a portfolio
that spans IT, marketing,
procurement, and sales
initiatives and project results
in more than 40 countries.
Robert is a sought-after
expert, with speaking and
print contributions to the
Project Management Institutes’
PMNetwork, Fast Company’s
30 Second MBA, and
Triangle Technical Recruiters
Association. In addition, Robert
is the co-founder of #PMChat,
a global community of project
managers sharing best
practices.
GETTING DOWN TO GENUINE LEADERSHIP
Managing Partner at
Kelly Project Solutions, LLC
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“The program is going really well, probably because we have an
exceptional team working on it,” said the chief executive officer (CEO).
I was more than a little confused to hear this. “So, why do you need
me?” I asked. “Well, I just get this feeling I could be missing something important,”
said the CEO. He wasn’t wrong.
The Global Program was in fact in total disarray. There was no plan, no budget,
no requirements—in fact, no documentation at all. The three “milestones” were
all more than four months late, and no one had any idea what, if any, work had
been done on them. In fact, the only concrete documentation was the contracts
the business had signed with various clients promising delivery of a new
infrastructure with stringent penalty clauses for non-delivery.
Sadly, this situation is not unusual in my world. As a troubleshooter, I am invariably
brought in to turn around failing programs or to ensure that the impossible is
delivered. In such cases, leadership skills are paramount. But leadership doesn’t
mean shouting and banging heads together. Well, not initially anyway.
In these projects, having the confidence to take a step back, calmly assess the
situation, and devise a plan of action demonstrates true leadership. After all, the
old adage of “keep your head while all others are losing theirs” still holds true,
especially in such chaotic political situations.
And that is exactly what I did. The result? I was able to determine where the real
problems lay and get them fixed. I also renegotiated the client contracts with
zero penalties and ensured that the new delivery dates were met. Meanwhile,
the CEO and board learned a valuable lesson—namely, to bring in a project
management professional from the outset rather than trying to “wing it.”
KEY LESSONS
1
2
LEADERSHIP SKILLS ARE
PARAMOUNT WHEN TRYING
TO SAVE A FAILING PROJECT.
HAVE THE CONFIDENCE TO STEP
BACK, ASSESS THE SITUATION,
AND DEVISE A PLAN.
“Meanwhile, the CEO
and board learned
a valuable lesson—
namely, to bring in a
project management
professional from the
outset rather than
trying to “wing it.”
SUSAN DE SOUSA
Susan de Sousa is MyPMExpert
and runs the industry-leading
website of the same name. She
is internationally a recognized
expert in project management
theory, practice, and delivery,
having successfully managed
some of Europe’s highest-
profile programs. Many of
these deliveries were “firsts”
and had been deemed
impossible to deliver in the
designated timeframes and
budgets. Susan is also a
frequent media contributor
and sought-after conference
speaker as well as a published
author. She is in the process
of writing a book entitled How
to Deliver Impossible Projects
Successfully.
NO MORE “WINGING IT”: DEVISING A PLAN TO SAVE A PROJECT
Director at Interzone
Services Ltd
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Trust and recognition. These two actions transform a rag-tag group
of individuals into a team. Trust and recognition implicitly build
pride, boost morale, and increase performance. Evaluating your
project team by their capabilities, not their titles or tenure, breaks
down the artificial walls established in organizations and creates energy that
cannot be surpassed.
About six years ago, when called into a client to rescue a project that was months
behind schedule and projected to exceed its budget by more than 100%, I was
challenged with a senior accounting manager who was the lead for one of the
three tracks on the project—a track responsible for integrating online payment
functionality from a financial institution. He was arrogant, cocky, and not a team
player. One member of his team was a junior analyst new to the organization.
During the project assessment interviews, the junior analyst—let’s call her
Michelle—showed an amazing ability to organize information and understand
the complexities of third-party integration, and she had a calming demeanor that
is so critical in the high-stress environment of a project turnaround. After three
weeks of working with the senior manager to no avail, I turned to Michelle and
asked her to be the lead of that track. Her immediate response was that she was
unqualified. After 20 minutes of her justifying her position and me explaining
why she was fully capable, I simply told her, “Michelle, I have more confidence in
your capabilities than you do. I will check in on you daily to answer any questions,
but you do not need to change anything you are doing. You have the skills.” This
concluded our meeting, and she apprehensively left my cubicle.
I did as I promised, checking in with her daily. After a week or so she agreed this
was unnecessary, and she came to me when she needed help. Needless to say,
she succeeded. The benefits, however, went far beyond her.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
TRUST AND RECOGNITION
TRANSFORM A GROUP OF
INDIVIDUALS INTO A TEAM.
CHOOSE THE PROPER PERSON
FOR THE JOB RATHER THAN THE
ONE WHO HAS SENIORITY.
TRUSTING THE RIGHT PEOPLE
GAINS YOU THE RESPECT OF
YOUR EXTENDED TEAM.
“Evaluating your
project team by their
capabilities, not their
titles or tenure, breaks
down the artificial
walls established in
organizations and
creates energy that
cannot be surpassed.”
TODD C. WILLIAMS
Todd C. Williams is an expert
witness, executive consultant,
published author, blogger for
four sites, and president of
eCameron Inc. He has spent
the past 25 years rescuing
failed projects and teaching
companies how to turn their
vision into profit by creating
initiative-ready organizations. In
his book, Rescue the Problem
Project, A Complete Guide to
Identifying, Preventing, and
Recovering from Project Failure,
he defines a people approach
to rescuing and preventing
project failure.
TRUST AND RESPECT: THE KEYS TO SUCCESSFUL PROJECTS
President of
eCameron, Inc.
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Most people on a team know who is capable. It was no exception
with this crew. The other members watched Michelle with
excitement, because they knew she would excel. Executives
saw a new face in meetings and heard how she was reining in
the problems on the payment-processing track. The result was contagious
enthusiasm spreading within and beyond the team. The proper person was
doing the job rather than the one who had seniority.
Furthermore, it was transformational for the accounting manager, who became
more humble; contributed to the team; and, after four weeks of having Michelle
working as the lead, apologized for his arrogance and complemented the
decision to place Michelle at the helm. She had a better demeanor for working
with the service provider, and he was happier providing the systems knowledge
for the integration.
Trusting the right people, recognizing their skills, challenging them to question
their abilities, and placing them in successful situations gains the respect of your
extended team—your superiors, subordinates, and your customer.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
TRUST AND RECOGNITION
TRANSFORM A GROUP OF
INDIVIDUALS INTO A TEAM.
CHOOSE THE PROPER PERSON
FOR THE JOB RATHER THAN THE
ONE WHO HAS SENIORITY.
TRUSTING THE RIGHT PEOPLE
GAINS YOU THE RESPECT OF
YOUR EXTENDED TEAM.
“Evaluating your
project team by their
capabilities, not their
titles or tenure, breaks
down the artificial
walls established in
organizations and
creates energy that
cannot be surpassed.”
TODD C. WILLIAMS
Todd C. Williams is an expert
witness, executive consultant,
published author, blogger for
four sites, and president of
eCameron Inc. He has spent
the past 25 years rescuing
failed projects and teaching
companies how to turn their
vision into profit by creating
initiative-ready organizations. In
his book, Rescue the Problem
Project, A Complete Guide to
Identifying, Preventing, and
Recovering from Project Failure,
he defines a people approach
to rescuing and preventing
project failure.
TRUST AND RESPECT: THE KEYS TO SUCCESSFUL PROJECTS
President of
eCameron, Inc.
b
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35Sponsored by:
Iwas told the chief executive officer (CEO) would be difficult to
get along with. He was “old school.” He pushed too hard, had
unreasonable expectations, and was relentless. He smoked and he
growled. All of this I was told. A picture began to form in my head, and
it was not a pretty one. My project had to get through this CEO. He had his hands
on everything. Despite being at the top of a successful organization with more
than $1 billion in revenue, he still approved expense reports, training room layouts,
and other details. Without his explicit support, our project would die. As I prepared
for the meeting, I realized I had not packed my business cards. He always asked for
business cards, and it could make or break a meeting, I had been informed earlier
in the day. I quickly called my office and had a few cards overnighted to the hotel.
The next day, I walked into the CEO’s office. I was wearing my best suit and
holding a fresh business card. We sat down, and I braced myself. What followed
surprised me. The CEO was cordial, asked questions, and was introspective. He
explained his challenges and his desire to be more “hands off.” He wanted the
team to do more and wanted our project, which was to improve organizational
project management maturity, to liberate him to focus more on the big picture.
Could it be that this “difficult” CEO was actually just a real person with hopes and
fears like the rest of us? Was it possible that he was doing what he felt was best
to lead the organization to the next level? I walked out of his office, well past our
scheduled finish time, with a pat on the back and his strong support. The project
would live to see another day. I walked down the hallway and smiled to myself as I
was reminded that strong leadership sometimes means being unpopular. Others
may see it negatively as pushing and prodding, just as we don’t like our personal
trainers when they ask for one more push-up, but those seemingly stubborn
demands from leaders encourage us to be our best.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
RISK UNPOPULARITY TO BE A
GOOD LEADER.
SEEMINGLY STUBBORN
DEMANDS FROM LEADERS
ENCOURAGE US TO BE OUR
BEST.
“Strong leadership
sometimes means
being unpopular.”
TRES ROEDER
Tres Roeder, PMP, is a
recognized global expert on
project management and
organizational change. He is
the author of two Amazon best
sellers, A Sixth Sense for Project
Management and Managing
Project Stakeholders. Tres has
been quoted by The New York
Times, The Wall Street Journal,
MSN Money, and others. He
holds a B.A. in Economics from
the University of Illinois and an
MBA from the Kellogg Graduate
School of Management at
Northwestern University.
RISKING YOUR POPULARITY TO BE A STRONG LEADER
President of Roeder
Consulting
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With the increasing emphasis on sustainability in the “C-Suite,”
it becomes more and more necessary to be able to connect
that emphasis to the fundamental workings of the enterprise. The
question becomes, where is the best place to make that connection?
Projects are the lifeblood of any enterprise. Projects are “where
the rubber meets the road,” where ideas are made real. The project charter
therefore should be where the connection between the C-Suite and the
fundamental workings of the enterprise is made apparent and strong. But who is
responsible for insuring that the project charter includes an accurate portrayal of
the message being communicated from the C-Suite, and what is that message?
Answering the second question is much easier than answering the first. The
answer to the second question is that the “message” is part of the enterprise’s
mission/vision statement. As a PM, would you want to undertake a project that
was not specifically aligned with one of your organization’s
stated missions, say for example, sustainability? Maybe. But your answer may
also be: “Sorry, I don’t really think about that. I’m too busy managing my project.”
That answer is perfectly legitimate if the sustainability message has not been
brought—with emphasis—to the project managers. So where does the project
manager get his or her marching orders? Sometimes it comes from a project
sponsor. Other times it may come from program management.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
WITH AN INCREASING
EMPHASIS ON SUSTAINABILITY,
IT IS NECESSARY TO BE ABLE TO
CONNECT THAT EMPHASIS TO
THE FUNDAMENTAL WORKINGS
OF THE ENTERPRISE.
THE PROJECT CHARTER IS WHERE
THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE
C-SUITE AND THE WORKINGS
OF THE ENTERPRISE IS MADE
APPARENT AND STRONG.
THE MESSAGE COMING
FROM “ABOVE” SHOULD BE
CONSISTENT AND DIRECTLY
CONNECTED FROM THE
ENTERPRISE MISSION/VISION
TO THE PROJECT CHARTER.
“It takes true project leadership
(i.e. more than project
management) to communicate
a consistent message to the
project charters so that all of
them reflect the enterprise’s
mission, vision, and values.”
RICH MALTZMAN
AND DAVE SHIRLEY
Rich Maltzman, PMP, has been an
engineer since 1978 and a project
management supervisor since
1988. As a second, but intertwined
career, Rich has also focused on
consulting and teaching. Currently
Rich is a Director, Learning and
Professional Advancement, at the
Global Program Management
Office of a major telecom concern.
Dave Shirley, PMP, has been an
instructor and consultant, with
more than 30 years’ experience
in management and project
management, in the corporate,
public, and small business arenas.
EarthPM, LLC is the collaboration
of Rich Maltzman, PMP and Dave
Shirley, PMP.
CONNECTING SUSTAINABILITY TO THE ENTERPRISE
Co-Founders of
EarthPM, LLC
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Where does the project sponsor or program manager get their
marching orders? Hopefully, there is portfolio management. That
could be either a formal function in larger organizations that may
have a portfolio management organization, or a smaller company
where one person makes the decision about which projects to
pursue. Whatever the structure, the message coming from “above”
should be consistent and directly connected from the enterprise mission/vision
to the project charter.
It takes true project leadership (i.e. more than project management) to
communicate a consistent message to the project charters so that all of them
reflect the enterprise’s mission, vision, and values. And this leadership will pay off
in the short, medium, and long term.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
WITH AN INCREASING
EMPHASIS ON SUSTAINABILITY,
IT IS NECESSARY TO BE ABLE TO
CONNECT THAT EMPHASIS TO
THE FUNDAMENTAL WORKINGS
OF THE ENTERPRISE.
THE PROJECT CHARTER IS WHERE
THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE
C-SUITE AND THE WORKINGS
OF THE ENTERPRISE IS MADE
APPARENT AND STRONG.
RICH MALTZMAN
AND DAVE SHIRLEY
Rich Maltzman, PMP, has been an
engineer since 1978 and a project
management supervisor since
1988. As a second, but intertwined
career, Rich has also focused on
consulting and teaching. Currently
Rich is a Director, Learning and
Professional Advancement, at the
Global Program Management
Office of a major telecom concern.
Dave Shirley, PMP, has been an
instructor and consultant, with
more than 30 years experience
in management and project
management, in the corporate,
public, and small business arenas.
EarthPM, LLC is the collaboration
of Rich Maltzman, PMP and Dave
Shirley, PMP.
CONNECTING SUSTAINABILITY TO THE ENTERPRISE
Co-Founders of
EarthPM, LLC
THE MESSAGE COMING
FROM “ABOVE” SHOULD BE
CONSISTENT AND DIRECTLY
CONNECTED FROM THE
ENTERPRISE MISSION/VISION
TO THE PROJECT CHARTER.
“It takes true project leadership
(i.e. more than project
management) to communicate
a consistent message to the
project charters so that all of
them reflect the enterprise’s
mission, vision, and values.”Twitter I Website
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It’s no secret that Agile is the most remarkable of all leadership
secrets. Yes, that’s right: Agile! I learned this first hand in 2011, when
I led the Agile transformation of Valpak based on nothing more than
a gut feeling that there must be a better way. I quickly went from the
rules of the Project Management Body of Knowledge and the flaws of Waterfall
to the values and principles of The Agile Manifesto and the magic of self-
organizing teams. It was probably the most enlightening moment of my career,
and over the next couple of years, I had the pleasure of inspiring that same truth
across the entire organization.
As a result of our Agile transformation, we are not only achieving greater results
and delivering more value more quickly than ever before, but we are also
enjoying our work, our teams, and our company more than ever before. Other
outcomes of our Agile transformation include:
• Our Agile transformation case study contributing to a book by Charles G.
Cobb, entitled Managed Agile Development: Making Agile Work for Your
Business; and
• Becoming the community poster child for all things Agile. We organize The
Tampa Bay Agile Meetup group and have grown membership by almost
300% this past year. In addition, we regularly give Agile tours of our process to
companies looking to go Agile and offer advice and mentorship upon request.
Unlike a project, our Agile journey will never be complete, but we continue to
make progress each and every day. Our progress is evident in the ways in which
we are truly being Agile, not just doing Agile. In such a short time, my company
went from being behind the times to being a role model for Agile transformation.
I couldn’t be more proud of how far we have come.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
UNLIKE A PROJECT, UNDERTAKING
AN AGILE TRANSFORMATION
WILL NEVER BE COMPLETE.
TO MAKE PROGRESS,
ORGANIZATIONS MUST BE
AGILE, NOT JUST DO AGILE.
“I quickly went from
the rules of the Project
Management Body of
Knowledge and the
flaws of Waterfall to
the values and princi-
ples of The Agile Mani-
festo and the magic of
self-organizing teams.”
STEPHANIE STEWART
Stephanie Stewart is director
of Agile Leadership at Valpak,
a Cox Target Media company.
Stephanie is a career project
leader who has more than 16
years in the field, including past
positions with ATT Business
and IBM Global Services, and
has maintained the project
management professional
certification since early in her
career. More recently, she
earned the PMI-Agile Certified
Practitioner credential. Her
academic credentials include
a B.S. in Marketing from the
University of South Florida
and an MBA in International
Business from the University of
Bristol in England.
COMMITTING TO AN AGILE TRANSFORMATION
Director of Agile
Leadership at Cox
Target Media
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My leadership secret? Tell people the results you want to achieve.
Remove their impediments. Create an environment that helps
the team see where they are and provides feedback. Keep other
people out of their hair. Make sure they don’t multitask. Encourage
the team to collaborate and explore together. They will make magic. Of course,
this is not easy. You can tell people the results you want to achieve by creating a
project charter together. Doing so helps a team jell.
Sometimes, the biggest impediment I’ve removed was to get a senior developer
a new desk, so his back didn’t hurt. Sometimes, I had to take on the facilities
department and tell them that, “Yes, we need to remove those cube walls. I know
you think it’s strange, but the people have agreed to it. You have the emails. The
testers and developers want to work together.”
Sometimes, the challenges are at the senior management level. “You can have
everyone busy, or you can have projects out the door. If you have everyone busy,
you won’t make this quarter’s revenue. If you have projects out the door, you will.
You do not want ‘busyness,’ you want throughput. That will allow us to ship and
to recognize revenue.” That one was a tough sell.
In contrast, when a team works together, collaborating and exploring to
complete the product with me facilitating them, as needed, we are all in flow.
We maintain a visual board of work in progress and what’s complete, so that
everyone can see status.
Project management is not project control. We don’t need hierarchy. We need
to know the results we’re supposed to deliver. We need the autonomy to deliver
those results so that we can collaborate and explore together. It sounds simple,
but it’s magic when it happens.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
TELL PEOPLE THE RESULTS
YOU WANT TO ACHIEVE, AND
REMOVE IMPEDIMENTS.
CREATE AN ENVIRONMENT
THAT HELPS THE TEAM SEE
WHERE THEY ARE AND
PROVIDES FEEDBACK.
ENCOURAGE THE TEAM TO
COLLABORATE AND EXPLORE
TOGETHER.
“Project management
is not project control.
We don’t need
hierarchy. We need to
know the results we’re
supposed to deliver.”
JOHANNA ROTHMAN
Johanna Rothman, known
as the Pragmatic Manager,
provides frank advice to
clients’ tough problems. She
helps organizational leaders
recognize potential risks, seize
opportunities, and remove
impediments. Johanna is the
author of several books and
more than 200 articles. She
writes two blogs on her website,
jrothman.com, as well as a blog
on createadaptablelife.com.
ENCOURAGE AUTONOMY, COLLABORATION, EXPLORATION
President of Rothman
Consulting Group, Inc.
Twitter I Website I Blog
b
40Sponsored by:
When you read about project management methodology, you will
see the ideal scenario: A project is initiated, planned, executed,
and closed. A successful project will be well defined, well planned,
have the proper resources, and be successfully managed. At the end
of a project, lessons learned can be used to improve the approach for future,
similar projects and create better project managers (PM’s).
However, life as a PM is not always as simple. Sometimes, project gets into
trouble. It can then be abandoned or rescued. Rescuing a project is also different
from managing issues. There will always be issues on a project, but a project that
needs to be rescued has reached the point of “there is no hope.”
Rescue project management is a specialty of its own in project management, just
like the emergency room is a specialty for medical doctors. Rescuing projects
requires a unique mindset from the PM and the project team. It is different from
the usual project management. If you have to work on a project that needs to be
rescued, here are some key considerations to remember.
Identify Key Success Factors
It is essential to identify the key success factors of the project and manage
them closely. It will help to gain some key successes and ensure that they don’t
become points of failure.
Review Project Plans
It is also important to review the project plans and challenge the assumptions in
it. A project plan will have dependencies that are based on best practices or just
past experience. Often, the dependencies were just added to make the Gantt
chart look good.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
IDENTIFY KEY SUCCESS FACTORS
FOR THE PROJECT.
REVIEW PROJECT PLANS
AND CHALLENGE THEIR
ASSUMPTIONS.
BE CREATIVE, AND FOCUS ON
ACTION, MAKING DECISIONS
QUICKLY.
“It is essential to
identify the key
success factors of the
project and manage
them closely.”
MICHEL DION
Michel Dion is a certified
public accountant and project
management professional
in Canada. He also holds
the internal auditor and risk
management assurance
certifications. Michel has
managed various projects in
the past decade, including
audits, financial analysis,
application development, data
analysis, business transitions,
and special initiatives. He is
also the author and developer
of the blog Project-Aria, a
website featuring thoughts
on project management,
leadership, and productivity.
RESCUING FAILING PROJECTS
Project Manager at
Project-Aria
Twitter I Blog
b
41Sponsored by:
Be Creative
If you step back from the original plan, you can often be creative and
find new ways of doing things. Here are two examples. A project
team on a difficult project used some innovative data-analysis
methods to complete a research task faster. Another team was able to reduce
the time required for an analytical report by breaking it into smaller parts and
performing the quality assurance activities on each part more quickly.
Focus on Action
Finally, you have to focus on action and make decisions quickly. The project is
already in trouble, so a leader must be able to decide—not recklessly, but there
is no time for indecision and confusion. As such, it is important to focus on
results, and perfection.
Sometimes, the project may just need to be abandoned, but rescuing projects
can often be surprising. The experience can be stressful, even discouraging,
but if the project team are focused on finding solutions and achieving results,
such rescues can be rewarding. It is also a powerful way to improve project
management skills.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
3
IDENTIFY KEY SUCCESS FACTORS
FOR THE PROJECT.
REVIEW PROJECT PLANS
AND CHALLENGE THEIR
ASSUMPTIONS.
BE CREATIVE, AND FOCUS ON
ACTION, MAKING DECISIONS
QUICKLY.
“It is essential to
identify the key
success factors of the
project and manage
them closely.”
MICHEL DION
Michel Dion is a certified
public accountant and project
management professional
in Canada. He also holds
the internal auditor and risk
management assurance
certifications. Michel has
managed various projects in
the past decade, including
audits, financial analysis,
application development, data
analysis, business transitions,
and special initiatives. He is
also the author and developer
of the blog Project-Aria, a
website featuring thoughts
on project management,
leadership, and productivity.
RESCUING FAILING PROJECTS
Project Manager at
Project-Aria
b
Twitter I Blog
42Sponsored by:
Trust is a key leadership skill. Without trust, you could find obstacles
throughout your projects and discover that teams will not
optimally perform for you within the execution phase of your project.
Gaining trust from your senior stakeholders ensures that your project
has the appropriate level of support from the business and provides you with a
level of authorization for any political issues.
A few years ago, I accepted an assignment with a large UK supermarket chain.
The project was already in flight, and the project team was already established,
but the project manager had departed. When I arrived, the thoughts from the
main stakeholders were that this project was doomed and would continue to
fail. I needed to gain trust from the stakeholders to continue with the project
and from the team to improve their morale and organize them to complete the
project.
I found that two members of the development team were leading the others,
so these were the people with whom I needed to establish a mutual trust. I set
about by asking questions and listening to their opinions, guiding them into
making decisions that I could follow through with. This gave the team a sense of
empowerment, as the actions of their decisions delivered results. I made it feel as
if the decision had come from the team, which provided self-belief, pride, and a
sense that they mattered. This, in turn, encouraged them to deliver. In addition, it
secured the trust of management, as they could start to see the project delivering
the business benefits.
Without obtaining the trust of the team, we would not have been able to deliver.
The updated project plan set smaller deliverables; therefore, I was quickly able to
gain the trust of the project sponsor and senior stakeholders by delivering results.
KEY LESSONS
1
2
GAIN THE TRUST OF SENIOR
STAKEHOLDERS BY DELIVERING
RESULTS.
GAIN THE TRUST OF TEAM
MEMBERS GIVING THEM A STAKE
IN THE PROJECT’S SUCCESS.
“Gaining trust from
your senior stakeholders
ensures that your
project has the
appropriate level of
support from the
business and provides
you with a level of
authorization for any
political issues.”
PAUL CABLE
Paul Cable is a certified project
management professional and
risk management professional
in addition to a Prince2
Practitioner. Working in the
IT industry for more than 15
years in a leadership role, Paul
has a wealth of experience
influencing stakeholders from
all levels in different industries,
most recently in banking,
telecommunications, oil, and
retail. He has worked with a
variety of clients, such as Bank
of Tokyo, Daiwa Capital Markets,
HSBC, Waitrose, Orange, Ricoh,
and Statoil.
TRUST: THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL LEADERSHIP
Consultant Project
Manager at Empachal
Solutions Limited
Twitter I Website I Blog
b
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership
Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership

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Project Leadership -- Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership

  • 1. 1 PROJECT LEADERSHIP Lessons from 40 PPM Experts on Making the Transition from Project Management to Project Leadership Sponsored by:
  • 2. 2Sponsored by: Foreword............................................................................................3 Introduction.......................................................................................4 Our Project Leadership Experts...................................................5 Learning to Share...............................................................................9 Nurturing Effective Communication...........................................10 Leading from the Front.................................................................11 Project Leadership, Not Project Management.............................12 Building Trust One Project at a Time.............................................13 The Keys to Success: Ownership, Transparency, and Accountability.....................................................................................15 Nailing the Vision: Ensuring Project Success Through Clarity....................................................................................................17 Business-focused Leadership.......................................................18 Wild Dogs and PM’s: Team Building for Successful Projects..........19 Preparation, Visibility, Empowerment.........................................20 Communicating with Empathy.........................................................21 Going from Boss to Teammate.................................................22 The Deal is in the Details...............................................................24 Virtual Leadership............................................................................25 How ‘WIFM’ Rescued a Failing Project.........................................26 Winning Stakeholder Support....................................................27 Lightening the Weight of the World Through Trust................28 Moving Projects Beyond “Analysis Paralysis”............................29 Getting Down to Genuine Leadership.......................................31 TABLE OF CONTENTS No More “Winging It”: Devising a Plan to Save a Project........32 Trust and Respect: The Keys to Successful Projects...............33 Risking Your Popularity to Be a Strong Leader.........................35 Connecting Sustainability to the Enterprise..............................36 Committing to an Agile Transformation.....................................38 Encourage Autonomy, Collaboration, Exploration................39 Rescuing Failing Projects.............................................................40 Trust: The Key to Successful Leadership...................................41 Becoming the Linchpin for Your Project.......................................43 Implementing Situational Adapted Leadership.......................44 Changing an Organization’s DNA.................................................46 Ensuring Success Through Face-to-Face Communication................................................................................47 Leading Those Who Follow...........................................................48 Starting Projects with Love and Integrity..................................49 Cultural Competence: Effective Leadership in Multicultural Environments...........................................................50 Project Leadership: The Main Ingredient in Getting Troubled Projects Back on Track.................................................52 Delegating Your Way to Project Leadership.............................53 Consistent Project Management Without Excuses ...............54 Clear Communication Leads to Commitment.........................56 Principles of Performance-Based Project Management......57 Love Your Project, and Your Team Will, Too............................59 Meet Workfront...........................................................................60
  • 3. 3Sponsored by: FOREWORD Strong project leadership can make the difference between success and failure but is surprisingly elusive to many businesses. When it comes to project management, we tend to talk about the tactical—the assignments, the tasks, the approvals, and so on. But business is evolving, and many project teams are now being asked to lead change, instead of just timelines and milestones. This evolution is accelerating and is driven by fresh thinking and business necessity supported by advanced technologies that are highly accessible to a much broader range of contributors. Effectively managing work is no longer just the role of a few specialists. At Workfront, we’ve been both witnessing and enabling this trend for many years. It’s the reason our strategic focus goes beyond helping clients better manage projects. Our Enterprise Work Management solution allows them to view work in a holistic way—providing complete visibility across not just projects, but the entire lifecycle of work. With visibility comes transparency, confidence, and ultimately, the power to lead. Decisions no longer need to be made with out-of-date and incomplete information, resources can be truly optimized, and productivity materially improved. We hope you’ll find the collective wisdom captured in this eBook to be a source of insight and best practice as you continue your own journey to be a project leader. ERIC MORGAN Workfront CEO
  • 4. 4Sponsored by: Gartner predicted a massive sea change in the world of project management—a change that is forcing project managers into a greater leadership role and requiring them to work closely with senior executives. With the generous support of Workfront, we reached out to 40 top Project and Portfolio Management (PPM) professionals and asked them the following question: Please share a remarkable leadership secret that had a major impact on an enterprise project you have managed. Please tell the story and the results that you achieved. We received a range of insightful answers that paint a picture of an industry in transition. The essays in this book roughly break down into three categories. Several of the practitioners focused on the new relationship that project leaders need to forge with senior management, how to understand their concerns and communicate with them in any way that works. Many PPM experts wrote about leading change and getting teams to work together in new ways. Finally, many of our experts wrote about specific leadership techniques that have helped them clear hurdles and remove obstacles. Making the shift from project management to project leadership isn’t easy, but the rewards can be significant. We hope the collective wisdom and hard-learned lessons contained in these pages will inspire you and help you take your own teams to a higher level. All the best, DAVID ROGELBERG Editor © 2014 Studio B Productions, Inc. I 62 Nassau Drive I Great Neck, NY 11021 I 516 360 2622 I www.studiob.com INTRODUCTION
  • 5. 5Sponsored by: Cesar Abeid PROJECT MANAGER Glen B. Alleman PRINCIPLE Paul Cable CONSULTANT PROJECT MANAGER Naomi Caietti PROJECT MANAGER / CONSULTANT Geoff Crane DOCTORAL STUDENT, PROFESSOR & COACH Michiko Diby CEO Michel Dion PROJECT MANAGER Deanne Earle COMPANY DIRECTOR & PROJECT CONSULTANT Chris Field GLOBAL PMO MANAGER Jeff Furman PROJECT MANAGEMENT INSTRUCTOR / PM BOOK AUTHOR OUR PROJECT LEADERSHIP EXPERTS Frank Grippo DIRECTOR OF WEB SERVICES Bob Hartman CERTIFIED SCRUM TRAINER Barry Hodge PROJECT MANAGER Jon Hyde PROGRAMME MANAGER Michael Kaplan FOUNDER AND CEO Robert Kelly MANAGING PARTNER Torsten Koerting MANAGING PARTNER Susanne Madsen PROJECT LEADERSHIP COACH Rich Maltzman & Dave Shirley CO-FOUNDERS Margaret Meloni PRESIDENT Jose Moro CEO Carlos J. Pampliega ARCHITECT & PROJECT MANAGER Rob Prinzo PRESIDENT Patrick Richard SENIOR PROJECT / PROGRAM MANAGER Gregg D. Richie INSTRUCTOR Iván Carlos Rivera González SR. PROJECT MANAGER Tres Roeder PRESIDENT Johanna Rothman PRESIDENT Peter Saddington PRINCIPAL Susan de Sousa DIRECTOR Pam Stanton AUTHOR, SPEAKER & CONSULTANT Stephanie Stewart DIRECTOR OF AGILE LEADERSHIP Jo Ann Sweeney FOUNDER Peter Taylor OWNER / DIRECTOR Tony Toglia DIRECTOR, PROJECT MANAGEMENT OFFICE Ricardo Viana Vargas DIRECTOR - PROJECT MANAGEMENT Cinda Voegtli CEO Ed Wallington PROJECT MANAGEMENT ADVOCATE Neil Walker PROGRAM & PROJECT PRACTITIONER Todd C. Williams PRESIDENT
  • 6. 6Sponsored by: Share a remarkable leadership secret that had a major impact on an enterprise project you have managed. “Many enterprises may have good data, but because they are working in silos . . . these data are not available to end users when they require it.” – Ed Wallington “When it comes to organizational project management, communications is a critical component that, when executed properly, links all project stakeholders to a common set of goals and actions.” – Michael Kaplan “Project leadership relates to people, relationships, and behaviors.” – Neil Walker
  • 7. 7Sponsored by: “Leadership is setting a new direction or vision for a group to follow, while management is controlling resources in a group according to defined standards.” – Peter Taylor “Swift trust occurs when a diverse group is brought together in a temporary organization, such as a project office or virtual team created for an urgent project.” – Naomi Caietti “I included stakeholders from all areas of the organization, not just IT and not just the team members, which helped elevate stakeholder interest, bring transparency, and break down silos, subsequently driving success.” – Tony Toglia
  • 8. 8Sponsored by: “I don’t begin a project until I fully understand it. This means that I will sit with project sponsors and not proceed until I have nailed down their vision.” – Michiko Diby “What turned the project around was business-focused leadership by the sponsor and PM as well as business-focused collaboration by the team to define and pursue what mattered most.” – Cinda Voegtli “The role of the PM is first and foremost to create an environment in which the PM’s team can be successful—nothing more, nothing less.” – Chris Field
  • 9. 9Sponsored by: One aspect that enables an enterprise to work efficiently is the ability to access up-to-date information in a timely manner. Many enterprises may have good data, but because they are working in silos (either because of structure or culture), these data are not available to end users when they require it. There is a general recognition and emphasis on creating a “single source of the truth” that staff and stakeholders can access as appropriate. This requires an enterprise-wide change in working practice and culture—the ability to share. Enabling change on an enterprise scale requires buy-in from a wide range of staff, from directors to operational delivery teams. The technical aspects of this type of project are relatively well known, understood, and achievable; the main effort is understanding and articulating the benefits and cultural change required and making the change happen. The project manager (PM) in this instance must not only focus on the core project deliverable—a system to enable secure data storage and sharing—but also on the organization’s buy- in and implementation, which requires the ability to articulate the long-term benefits (having a clear view on what success looks like) and using negotiation and persuasion skills to make it happen at all levels of staff. This type of project can easily lose steam without senior executive buy-in and support. You will face a lot of push back when mobilizing cultural change, so communication is key. A PM is conformable communicating at a project delivery level, but this is not always the case when engaging senior executives. A different tack is required, one focusing not on the technical detail but reinforcing why the project is being done, what is required to effect change, and what the impact is on the executives and their teams. There is a need to personally tailor the benefits and impact to each executive and explain it to them regularly. Go out on a limb, buy them a coffee, and have a chat. Regular personal engagement is important and effective. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 TO WORK EFFICIENTLY, AN ENTERPRISE MUST BE ABLE TO ACCESS UP-TO-DATE INFORMA- TION IN A TIMELY MANNER. ENABLING CHANGE ON AN ENTERPRISE SCALE REQUIRES BUY-IN FROM A WIDE RANGE OF STAFF. THE PM MUST NOT ONLY FOCUS ON THE CORE PROJECT DELIVERABLE BUT ALSO ON THE ORGANIZATION’S BUY-IN AND IMPLEMENTATION. “Many enterprises may have good data, but because they are working in silos . . . these data are not available to end users when they require it.” ED WALLINGTON Dr. Edward Wallington is an advocate of professional project management and business analysis in the geospatial and management information sectors. Ed is a versatile and enthusiastic project manager who has a deep interest and belief in the transfer of project management theory into operational application. Ed is a member of the Association for Project Management (APM), a committee member of the APM Programme Management Specialist Interest Group, and actively contributes to the project portfolio community. LEARNING TO SHARE Twitter I Website Project Management Advocate at edwallington.com
  • 10. 10Sponsored by: When it comes to organizational project management, communications is a critical component that, when executed properly, links all project stakeholders to a common set of goals and actions. If project managers (PM’s) do not effectively share these basic components or team members don’t understand them, expected outcomes are jeopardized and project budgets become subject to unwanted risk. A basic prerequisite for a smoothly functioning project team is effective communications within the team and between the team and other project stakeholders. One of the dangers of project management is the belief that all communication links are operating effectively just because people are talking to one another. One of the most common pitfalls of communication is the assumption that because a message was sent, a message must have been received. According to Project Management Institute, all aspects of project communications can be challenging to projects, but the major areas of concern are: • The gap in comprehending the business benefits; and • The language used to communicate project information being frequently ambiguous and flavored with project management slang. The responsibility for developing and nurturing real communication links belongs to the PM. Understanding that the communication requirements of projects vary greatly, the PM can focus on several areas to increase project communications: • Remain an effective communicator. • Be a communications expediter. • Encourage good communications across boundaries. • Leverage technology effectively. • Use a project website. • Run effective meetings. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 ENSURE COMMUNICATION AMONG TEAM MEMBERS AND BETWEEN THE TEAM AND PROJECT STAKEHOLDERS. CREATE AND USE A COMMUNICATIONS MANAGEMENT PLAN. PLAN COMMUNICATION INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL TO THE PROJECT. “When it comes to organizational project management, communications is a critical component that, when executed properly, links all project stakeholders to a common set of goals and actions.” MICHAEL KAPLAN Michael Kaplan is the founder of SoftPMO, a New York–based consulting firm that specializes in improving execution and resource management. He is a recognized leader in program management and serves as an advisor and mentor to senior executives. In more than 20 years of practice, Michael has worked with several of the world’s most successful organizations, including Fortune 500 companies and government agencies, helping them to achieve the full intent of their most urgent and critically important initiatives. NURTURING EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Founder and CEO of SoftPMO Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 11. 11Sponsored by: The key to communications starts with planning and includes: • Planning communication both external and internal to the project; • Identifying meetings, reporting, and announcements that will occur with all stakeholders; and • Creating a communications management plan and using it. Communications management must include planning and delivering information related to the project to all project stakeholders, which includes the processes needed to handle timely and appropriate collection, generation, dissemination, and storage of project information and the definition of critical links among people, ideas, and information required for success. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 ENSURE COMMUNICATION AMONG TEAM MEMBERS AND BETWEEN THE TEAM AND PROJECT STAKEHOLDERS. CREATE AND USE A COMMUNICATIONS MANAGEMENT PLAN. PLAN COMMUNICATION INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL TO THE PROJECT. “When it comes to organizational project management, communications is a critical component that, when executed properly, links all project stakeholders to a common set of goals and actions.” MICHAEL KAPLAN Michael Kaplan is the founder of SoftPMO, a New York–based consulting firm that specializes in improving execution and resource management. He is a recognized leader in program management and serves as an advisor and mentor to senior executives. In more than 20 years of practice, Michael has worked with several of the world’s most successful organizations, including Fortune 500 companies and government agencies, helping them to achieve the full intent of their most urgent and critically important initiatives. NURTURING EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION Founder and CEO of SoftPMO b Twitter I Website I Blog
  • 12. 12Sponsored by: The perception of project managers (PM’s) has changed significantly over the past decade. I have witnessed a fundamental shift in the sectors I operate in—one that has seen a divergence from the traditional PM role to encompass leadership qualities typically reserved for executives. Previously, PM’s sat within an organization’s “command-and-control” management structure. This authoritarian approach was pervasive throughout most sectors and typically limited flexibility, stifled innovation, and reduced the ability to respond rapidly to issues. Marketplace changes over the past decade have compelled senior executives to demand more from their people, compelling their people to adapt swiftly to the onslaught of change through extensive transformational change. PM’s have been charged with unraveling the plethora of business requirements to deliver projects successfully. Senior executives set the strategic objectives of the organization, but they are not experts on how the business runs at the operational level. The people engaged at that level are. This disconnect is replicated at the project level, as well. After all, no one person (or team) can do it all or know it all, and PM’s are no exception. A decade ago, I discovered that successful transformation projects need effective actions by all of the people involved at every level. This certainly requires greater levels of collaboration and influence than hitherto seen, not only within the delivery team implementing the change but across the organization and even externally. PM’s face the challenge of gaining contributions and buy-in from people who don’t report directly to them. Therefore, project success often depends on one’s ability to influence and persuade people at every level. This, in turn, requires leadership. Project leadership relates to people, relationships, and behaviors. So, by leading from the front, steering everyone toward a common objective, and engaging them effectively en route, you’ll soon see enhanced project performance. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 COLLABORATION IS ESSENTIAL TO SUCCESSFUL TRANSFORMATION PROJECTS. PROJECT SUCCESS OFTEN DEPENDS ON YOUR ABILITY TO INFLUENCE AND PERSUADE PEOPLE AT EVERY LEVEL. LEAD FROM THE FRONT. “Project leadership relates to people, relationships, and behaviors.” NEIL WALKER Neil Walker is a project management professional, consultant, and author. He has more than 20 years of experience leading and delivering technology- enablement projects and business transformation programs that have aligned people, process, and technology with business strategy for blue-chip financial services, professional services, and UK government organizations. Neil has consulted across the United Kingdom, Europe, Canada, and the United States in specializations such as program delivery assurance, project turnaround, strategic relationships, and collaborative working. LEADING FROM THE FRONT Program Project Practitioner at Synatus Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 13. 13Sponsored by: Leadership has been described as the art of leading others to deliberately create a result that wouldn’t have happened otherwise. This is something that happens every day in project management, yet we call it just that—project management rather than project leadership. A confusing situation, but the difference can be thought of in the following way: Leadership is setting a new direction or vision for a group to follow, while management is controlling resources in a group according to defined standards. Using this definition, then, here is a great example of how such leadership brought about a significant change. We had a project in which, despite good plans and great people, we experienced issues resulting from the fact that neither we as the supplier organization nor the customer had addressed the issue of organizational change management (OCM) in any serious way. Yet, this was a big program of change running over a planned period of two and a half years and affecting hundreds of people. Recognizing this gap and the risk to the overall project, the customer project manager and I agreed that we needed to do something, and that something was to lead the team in acquiring new skills while at the same time supporting the project. We did look at the use of external OCM resources, but the price tag was astonishingly high and hadn’t been budgeted for, and so this idea was rejected. Instead, we embarked on researching good OCM material, inviting external experts who were willing to speak to the team in return for a good meal and some expenses, and running workshops with the team to explore the OCM challenge and develop a plan for change management. The result, although perhaps not the perfect OCM engagement, was twofold: The team learned a new skill—or at least had their awareness raised over the need to take OCM seriously—and the business change impact was relatively smooth (certainly better than had we done nothing). Had we just “managed” the situation, I’m not sure what the outcome would have been. The fact that we “led” the situation was a positive thing. KEY LESSONS 1 BE A PROJECT LEADER, NOT A PROJECT MANAGER. “Leadership is setting a new direction or vision for a group to follow, while management is controlling resources in a group according to defined standards.” PETER TAYLOR Peter Taylor is the author of two best-selling books on “productive laziness”: The Lazy Winner and The Lazy Project Manager. In the past four years, he has focused on writing and lecturing, chalking up more than 200 presentations around the world in more than 20 countries, and has been described as “perhaps the most entertaining and inspiring speaker in the project management world today.” Peter also acts as an independent consultant, working with some of the major organizations in the world, coaching executive sponsors, project management office leaders, and project managers. PROJECT LEADERSHIP, NOT PROJECT MANAGEMENT Owner / Director at The Lazy Project Manager Ltd Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 14. 14Sponsored by: Acurrent trend is to highlight increased engagement of project managers (PM’s) to help drive strategic initiatives. Organizations need to be more agile, customer focused, and innovative to stay competitive in the global marketplace. A few years ago, I had the opportunity to work as a PM and systems engineer on one of the largest Medicaid data warehouse projects in the United States. The project was complex; highly visible; and had multiple stakeholders, virtual teams, and remote data centers of excellence. The U.S. Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) had an urgent need to implement and deliver a 21st century business intelligence (BI) system. Stakeholder engagement was the key to producing results and positive outcomes for this project. What key leadership tenet did I use? Swift trust. PM’s and program managers live this every day: Agility is important for developing swift trust with teams, sponsors, C-level executives, and stakeholders. Swift trust occurs when a diverse group is brought together in a temporary organization, such as a project office or virtual team created for an urgent project. As a leader, you must earn trust quickly to influence key stakeholders. Everyone will start with little or some knowledge to gauge trust among the team. You must demonstrate that you can be trusted and trustworthy. Team members must also demonstrate their integrity and ability to be accountable, thus earning trust within the group and from the leader. Why is this skill set important? According to recent Project Management Institute research, building trust is a key trait that successful PM’s and program managers share. Results and Outcomes The BI solution went live on March 29, 2008, and that solution for DHCS is still in production today. The project was designed to help more efficiently manage California’s $38 billion Medicaid program (known as Medi-Cal), save money for California taxpayers, and improve healthcare services for millions of California residents. It is the largest Medicaid data warehouse in the nation. KEY LESSONS 1 2 AGILITY IS IMPORTANT FOR DEVELOPING SWIFT TRUST WITH TEAMS, SPONSORS, C-LEVEL EXECUTIVES, AND STAKEHOLDERS. YOU MUST EARN TRUST QUICKLY TO INFLUENCE KEY STAKEHOLDERS. “Swift trust occurs when a diverse group is brought together in a temporary organiza- tion, such as a project office or virtual team created for an urgent project.” NAOMI CAIETTI Naomi Caietti is founder and CEO of TheGlassBreakers and has been a consultant, a published author, and a recognized expert on personal growth and leadership development for project managers for more than 10 years. She is a global speaker and a featured subject matter expert for the ProjectManagement.com community and was recently interviewed by Samad Aidance of NeuroFrontier on Leadership for Women PM’s. Naomi blogs for LiquidPlanner and is the author of a chapter in Peter Taylor’s book, The Project Manager Who Smiled. BUILDING TRUST ONE PROJECT AT A TIME Project Manager / Consultant at the State of California Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 15. 15Sponsored by: My story goes back 18 months, when my team and I kicked off an implementation for a full-blown enterprise-level healthcare system. The project involved multipoint integration and drastic changes to current business practices. There were significant risks and issues involving the design and build decisions. We also struggled to bring more ownership to the project team to facilitate the focus required for the work. We needed to tackle these challenges before they affected the critical path of the project. Therefore, I divided my approach into leveraging three related concepts: ownership, transparency, and accountability. First, we focused on facilitating ownership. We made things easy and provided incentives. We concentrated project data into our project management information system, WorkFront, for one-stop shopping. I authorized giving stakeholders direct access to WorkFront, which provides one-click automated HTML email to communicate project information. It also serves as a forum for project discussion, providing context, nurturing engagement, and driving ownership. Second, we focused on transparency. We built “late task” reports, and WorkFront sent them out to the team via automated email on a weekly schedule. I included stakeholders from all areas of the organization, not just IT and not just the team members, which helped elevate stakeholder interest, bring transparency, and break down silos, subsequently driving success. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 FACILITATE OWNERSHIP OF PROJECT ELEMENTS. BUILD TRANSPARENCY INTO THE PROCESS. ENSURE ACCOUNTABILITY. “I included stakeholders from all areas of the organization, not just IT and not just the team members, which helped elevate stakeholder interest, bring transparency, and break down silos, subsequently driving success.” TONY TOGLIA Tony Toglia has been involved in healthcare technology, administration, project management, and leadership since 1987. He currently manages a project portfolio involving computerized physician order entry clinical, ancillary, and business offices at a growing regional healthcare delivery organization. THE KEYS TO SUCCESS: OWNERSHIP, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY Director, Project Management Office at Rideout Health Website
  • 16. 16Sponsored by: Finally, we focused on accountability. We used project scorecards and dashboards to leverage the transparency into accountability. Our biggest win was creating a custom issue category called decisions, referring to decisions that were holding up design and build efforts. The dashboard was grouped by senior leaders and displayed before all of them in the boardroom. That transparency drove many executive decisions forward that had been lagging to that point. We saw a significant improvement in performance by leveraging a preexisting tool in a way that facilitated stakeholder ownership, brought transparency to the project, and displayed accountability. We brought focus and resolution to our problem areas and got back on track. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 FACILITATE OWNERSHIP OF PROJECT ELEMENTS. BUILD TRANSPARENCY INTO THE PROCESS. ENSURE ACCOUNTABILITY. “I included stakeholders from all areas of the organization, not just IT and not just the team members, which helped elevate stakeholder interest, bring transparency, and break down silos, subsequently driving success.” TONY TOGLIA Tony Toglia has been involved in healthcare technology, administration, project management, and leadership since 1987. He currently manages a project portfolio involving computerized physician order entry clinical, ancillary, and business offices at a growing regional healthcare delivery organization. THE KEYS TO SUCCESS: OWNERSHIP, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY Director, Project Management Office at Rideout Health Website
  • 17. 17Sponsored by: The clarifier often gets beat up at the beginning, but the sacrifice is almost a necessity to bring project success in the end. I don’t begin a project until I fully understand it. This means that I will sit with project sponsors and not proceed until I have nailed down their vision. First, I must be able to describe the purpose of the project in two or three sentences. Second, I should be able to describe the plan for the project to anyone in a way that makes sense. I often get beat up (figuratively speaking) on the way to getting my clarity. My favorite story was when I worked for an Army contractor at the Pentagon. I came into an enterprise application rewrite midway through and realized that the project team was dancing around the need to get clarity for fear of the reaction of a certain colonel. Unclear projects really cause stress, and on my first day, a few of my people burst into tears. Something had to be done, so over the course of the next month, I gradually developed the tools—project charter; updated, accurate project plan; risk log—and talked to the right people to get myself in front of the colonel and his team. I’ll never forget that experience: Even the lieutenant colonels were nervous when the day of the meeting actually arrived. Through the research we had done, the team realized that we needed to focus on a concept that had been lost in translation while people communicated around each other. That was the first thing on our first slide. Our colonel saw it and started to turn red. Then, he banged his fist on the table so that the whole room jumped. I must have been staring at him wide eyed when he bellowed, “Why didn’t we figure this out sooner?” Then began a calm, effective conversation during which we questioned him on scope, and we left the meeting knowing that we had the clarity we needed to be successful. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 DON’T BEGIN A PROJECT UNTIL YOU FULLY UNDERSTAND IT. BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE THE PURPOSE OF THE PROJECT IN TWO OR THREE SENTENCES. BE ABLE TO DESCRIBE THE PLAN FOR THE PROJECT TO ANYONE IN A WAY THAT MAKES SENSE. “I don’t begin a project until I fully understand it. This means that I will sit with project sponsors and not proceed until I have nailed down their vision.” MICHIKO DIBY Michiko Diby is probably the most no-nonsense, get-it- done project manager (PM) clients will ever come across. A process guru, Michiko is a project management professional and Design for Six Sigma certified. She can engage at all levels but has a low tolerance for obfuscation. She has led projects and programs for Fannie Mae, T. Rowe Price, and the U.S. Army, and is the author of a popular project management blog, Kosmothink. Michiko has been featured in the Project Management Institute’s global magazine, PM Today, and holds a master’s degree in Conflict Analysis and Resolution. NAILING THE VISION: ENSURING PROJECT SUCCESS THROUGH CLARITY CEO of The SeaLight Company Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 18. 18Sponsored by: The news was grim. The nine-month IT project, designed to deliver a wealth of new cost data to a group of critical business users, was six months into the schedule—and still gathering requirements. Although some technical work was underway, the team was floundering in how to settle the scope and proceed. Meanwhile, millions of dollars in additional profit per week from better product pricing decisions the new data would enable were being lost. And finishing the technical work on time was looking like an impossible dream. But with less than three months to go, this project recovered. It was actually recovered on one specific day, when the sponsor, project manager (PM), and team gathered with two key business users and laid out the state of the project. The PM and sponsor called the meeting, because they had realized that the team meant well—they were trying to make sure they identified all the customer requirements so that they could deliver a full tool for the pricing analysts. But therein lay the problem: They were gathering all the requirements as abstract, equally weighted items to satisfy rather than focusing on the driving business goals and what mattered most for achieving them. That day, the group explored what mattered most to the analysts’ ability to make better pricing decisions and reap the maximum amount of extra profit. By the afternoon, the group had identified the five most important metrics the pricing analysts needed from the sales and customer support data. The technical team had started reworking the remaining schedule to deliver just those five metrics. In the end, the project was delivered within two weeks of its original deadline. This project was not saved by heroics or more resources or tighter schedule management. What turned the project around was business-focused leadership by the sponsor and PM as well as business-focused collaboration by the team to define and pursue what mattered most. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 THE SPONSOR, PM, AND TEAM SHOULD GATHERED WITH TWO KEY BUSINESS USERS TO LAY OUT THE STATE OF THE PROJECT. DETERMINE WHAT MATTERS MOST TO THE PROJECT AND ITS USERS. BUSINESS-FOCUSED LEADERSHIP BY THE SPONSOR AND PM CAN SAVE A PROJECT. “What turned the project around was business-focused leadership by the sponsor and PM as well as business- focused collaboration by the team to define and pursue what mattered most.” CINDA VOEGTLI Cinda Voegtli is founder and CEO of ProjectConnections. com, an online resources and support service for more than 350,000 managers and team members worldwide. She has more than 20 years of development and management experience and advises companies of all sizes on practical project processes. Her passions are achieving “just enough” project management that makes sense and gets used; building business-savvy cross-functional teams; and helping project managers bring together the skills and attitudes that make them truly great project leaders. BUSINESS-FOCUSED LEADERSHIP CEO of ProjectConnections.com Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 19. 19Sponsored by: We’ve all heard phrases like “common sense ain’t that common,” “the sum of the parts,” and “it’s people that deliver projects,” and few would disagree with the sentiment behind them. Yet, it never ceases to amaze me how few people take these wise words to heart when managing projects, no matter how large or small. I’ve been fortunate enough to be involved with some really successful projects as well as some remarkable failures, and the common denominator among those considered successful is typically the people involved. My “not so secret” secret reflects this. The role of the project manager (PM) is first and foremost to create an environment in which the PM’s team can be successful—nothing more, nothing less. Take, for example, team building. Everyone recognizes the importance of an effective team, yet how many of us make provision for this in our plans and take the time to understand and play to the key strengths of the team? I was involved with a truly remarkable project in which the upfront investment in team building paid dividends. The “Wild Dogs” (a name that the team chose for themselves to reflect their determination to work effectively as a team) were able to deliver truly remarkable results in the most challenging of circumstances. Although the team’s success can be attributed to several factors, including collocation, a willingness to invest in the team’s development, and a real sense of passion, it was without a doubt the unconditional support for fellow team members that allowed magic to happen—a lesson we can all learn from the team’s namesakes in the wilds of Africa. KEY LESSONS 1 2 THE TEAM IS THE KEY TO PROJECT SUCCESS. THE PM’S PRINCIPLE ROLE IS TO CREATE AN ENVIRONMENT IN WHICH THE TEAM CAN SUCCEED. “The role of the PM is first and foremost to create an environment in which the PM’s team can be successful— nothing more, nothing less.” CHRIS FIELD Chris Field joined Piksel Inc. in March 2014 to establish its Global Project Management Office (PMO). He is passionate about project management and is an active member of the UK Board of the Project Management Institute, having served as president from 2009 to 2011. Chris founded and is responsible for organizing Synergy, one of the largest project management conferences in the United Kingdom. He is also a Fellow of the British Computer Society and Member of the Association for Project Management. WILD DOGS AND PM’S: TEAM BUILDING FOR SUCCESSFUL PROJECTS Global PMO Manager at Piksel Inc. Twitter I Website
  • 20. 20Sponsored by: We were hosting more than 2,000 websites on an antiquated platform when the decision was made to migrate them to a new environment. The websites had been built over several years using different standards. We did not have the staff for such a challenging task, so we hired a new team, including an offshore group. The leads were skilled but did not have large-scale project experience. The traditional approach to project management was not going to succeed. So, how did we accomplish this in nine months? Preparation, visibility, empowerment. What was the process? We wrote a program that created each new website and entered it into our tracking software. A project coordinator was assigned to evaluate the new website, and updates to copy and design were implemented as needed. The quality assurance (QA) team then received the website for testing. Any issues found were logged and assigned to a development team. With the onsite and offshore teams working together, most websites were tested and fixed in a day. When teams came across situations they didn’t know how to handle, the issues were logged and assigned to management. We had weekly training sessions with the teams, teaching them how to handle issues on their own. After a few months, the teams were functioning without upper management. To accomplish this much work in such a short time takes preparation. We had supporting software, workflows, reports, and queues in place before we hired any staff. A large-scale initiative also requires visibility. Our reports tracked progress in real time and sent us alerts if a project was stalled. Most importantly, a busy team needs to be empowered. Instead of micromanaging routine issues, we gave our people the skills to make decisions. So, how do you migrate 2,000 websites in nine months? Preparation, visibility, empowerment. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 PREPARE FOR YOUR PROJECT IN ADVANCE AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE. TRACK PROGRESS IN REAL TIME TO ENSURE VISIBILITY. GIVE PEOPLE THE SKILLS THEY NEED TO MAKE DECISIONS. “A busy team needs to be empowered. Instead of micromanaging routine issues, we gave our people the skills to make decisions.” FRANK GRIPPO Frank Grippo graduated from Purdue University with a degree in Computer Science. Starting his career as a database and web developer for Dialogic and Healthstreet, he has since been at LexisNexis for 13 years and is currently the director of Web Services. In LexisNexis’ Web Visibility group, Frank is creating websites to help law firms market their businesses. He is responsible for project managers, developers, quality assurance, and support staffs. PREPARATION, VISIBILITY, EMPOWERMENT Director of Web Services at LexisNexis
  • 21. 21Sponsored by: Let me start by admitting that I am not currently a project manager; rather, I’m writing from the perspective of an Agile coach and trainer. This essay reflects what I have seen while working with clients over the past year. The one “remarkable leadership secret” I have seen project managers and Scrum Masters alike employ is the ability to communicate with senior executives effectively. This sounds simple, but communicating with an executive requires special skills that aren’t normally taught. It is not a type of communication that happens naturally. It certainly requires impeccable logic, confidence, and an ability to speak clearly, but it also requires more than the obvious: It requires empathy and an understanding of the issues executives face. This rarely considered idea is often the difference between the success and failure of a conversation or idea. The formula for communicating with empathy begins by framing the context at the start of the conversation (“In our organization . . .” or “On this project . . .”) and asking executives for their opinion (“What do you see as our biggest challenges?” or “What things do you see as risks?”). Having a conversation about what worries the executive shows your empathy and respect for his or her position. Trying to solve your problems without regard for the executive’s problems will generally not produce positive results. This leadership secret can move executives who were violently opposed to an idea to support it after they understand how it would fix their problem, too. If you have empathy for your executives and the things they are concerned about, your ability to tie their problems to yours will allow you to come up with solutions that solve both. Transform your conversations today using this leadership technique. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 LEARN TO COMMUNICATE EFFECTIVELY WITH EXECUTIVES. FRAME THE CONTEXT AT THE START OF THE CONVERSATION AND ASK EXECUTIVES FOR THEIR OPINION. TIE YOUR PROBLEM TO THE EXECUTIVE’S PROBLEM. “If you have empathy for your executives and the things they are concerned about, your ability to tie their problems to yours will allow you to come up with solutions that solve both.” BOB HARTMAN Bob Hartman, known as Agile Bob, has been involved in the software industry for more than 30 years. He uses his experience to help organizations, teams, and individuals all around the world. Bob is a popular conference speaker, a certified scrum trainer and certified scrum coach, and is assistant chairman of the Scrum Alliance Board of Directors. COMMUNICATING WITH EMPATHY Certified Scrum Trainer and Coach at Agile For All, LLC Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 22. 22Sponsored by: Ionce had to manage a team of electricians on a job site in the Peruvian desert. I had never met those guys before, and they only spoke Spanish (my Spanish is passable at best). In addition, we had a tight deadline, leaving us only three days to complete all the work. In those three days, I learned a lot about leadership, and the secrets I uncovered stay with me to this day. During our first meeting, I had to explain what needed to be done—the requirements—and why we only had three days to accomplish it all. At first, I started talking to them in English with the help of a translator. Because I understand Spanish way better than I speak it, I quickly realized that my translator was not conveying exactly what I needed to express. So, I decided to switch to my frail Spanish. As soon as I did, I noticed that the attitude of the team completely changed. In their eyes, I went from being a Canadian who had arrived to tell them what to do to a visitor who was speaking their language. Almost immediately, they moved to a position of hosts and also realized that, though I was an engineer project manager, there was something essential to this project (the Spanish language) that they knew way better than I. I went from boss, to someone who was in a position to learn from them. Next, I explained how absolutely important their work was going to be to make this project successful. We went over the requirements and started working. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 TRY TO SPEAK YOUR TEAM’S LANGUAGE, EVEN IF YOU DON’T KNOW IT WELL. DEMONSTRATE THAT YOU NEED PEOPLE. SHOW THAT YOU’RE READY TO PITCH IN AND GET DIRTY. “Demonstrate that you need people. Doing so empowers your team, humanizes you as a manager, and helps all stakeholders own the project and its success.” CESAR ABEID Cesar Abeid is a certified project management professional and has a B.E.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Western Ontario. Cesar joined Remontech in 2004, and since then has successfully implemented and managed projects throughout Canada, the United States, Brazil, and Peru. He has a passion for bringing project management ideas to all. Cesar is also the host of the weekly Project Management for the Masses podcast and the Construction Industry podcast. GOING FROM BOSS TO TEAMMATE Project Manager at Remontech, Inc. Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 23. 23Sponsored by: Because our deadline was quickly approaching, I made another decision that turned out to be important: I decided to join them in their work. I suited up in personal protective equipment and accompanied them into the field, got dirty, and did some of the work myself. The tasks were all completed within our timeframe, and I made friends I am still in touch with to this day. So, what were the leadership lessons here? The answer is surprisingly simple. To lead, you need to try to speak your team’s language, even if you don’t know it well enough. Demonstrate that you need people. Doing so empowers your team, humanizes you as a manager, and helps all stakeholders own the project and its success. Finally, show that you are ready to do the work yourself, if needed. Show that you are not afraid to roll up your sleeves and get dirty. This will earn you respect and help you position yourself to compel all to do what needs to be done. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 TRY TO SPEAK YOUR TEAM’S LANGUAGE, EVEN IF YOU DON’T KNOW IT WELL. DEMONSTRATE THAT YOU NEED PEOPLE. SHOW THAT YOU’RE READY TO PITCH IN AND GET DIRTY. “Demonstrate that you need people. Doing so empowers your team, humanizes you as a manager, and helps all stakeholders own the project and its success.” CESAR ABEID Cesar Abeid is a certified project management professional and has a B.E.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from the University of Western Ontario. Cesar joined Remontech in 2004, and since then has successfully implemented and managed projects throughout Canada, the United States, Brazil, and Peru. He has a passion for bringing project management ideas to all. Cesar is also the host of the weekly Project Management for the Masses podcast and the Construction Industry podcast. GOING FROM BOSS TO TEAMMATE Project Manager at Remontech, Inc. b Twitter I Website I Blog
  • 24. 24Sponsored by: Several years ago, I moved into a senior program management role at an Asian bank, managing a struggling steady-state enterprise resource planning (ERP) installation. Luckily, I was friends with the managing director of operations, who was able to give me the heads up: “We’ve had other senior people in your position who focused on technical competency and business acumen. The business tore them to shreds. Find another approach.” Somewhat unnerved, I cautiously stepped into the role. There were all kinds of functional problems on the ground. From my perspective, though, the single biggest problem was a silo-based work culture. Everyone around me was smart and talented, but those things clearly weren’t enough. To be able to make this ERP system work, the organization as a whole needed to work as a single team. That’s tough in a large, traditionally minded bank, and even tougher when countless fingers are already pointing with hostile intent in every direction! I started by cleaning up my own house. Using techniques I’d learned from my father (a schoolteacher), I set weekly customer-focused challenges for my people that they had to solve in groups. For example, the risk management department was regularly missing its morning risk reports. So: “Find a solution that (1) lets us notify them in person if the report will be late (before they go looking for it) and (2) solve the late report problem.” This had two effects: (1) We were finally able to get out in front of my customers’ issues across the enterprise and stop the grumbling; and (2) my front-line customers went to their management (on their own) to let them know they were seeing some interesting changes in my unit. At this point, I had an opening to invite representatives from all of my customer groups to the table to begin working on short-term capacity plans. The result? High praise from my most demanding customer: “Geoff did in six months what three VPs before him could not. He got those people to work together.” KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 AVOID A SILO-BASED WORK CULTURE. BEFORE IMPLEMENTING ANY OTHER CHANGES, CLEAN UP YOUR OWN HOUSE. SET WEEKLY CUSTOMER- FOCUSED CHALLENGES THAT YOUR PEOPLE HAVE TO SOLVE IN GROUPS. “We’ve had other senior people in your position who focused on technicalcompetency and business acumen. The business tore them to shreds. Find another approach.” GEOFF CRANE Geoff Crane is a former senior project portfolio manager who has ties to some of the world’s largest banks and professional services firms. A staunch believer in the value of soft skills over hard skills, he has returned to university to pursue a doctorate in clinical psychology. Unable to stay away from the action, though, Geoff continues to help aspiring executives organize their project work and is an adjunct professor of Project Management at Durham College in Ontario, Canada. THE DEAL IS IN THE DETAILS Doctoral Student, Professor and Coach at The Papercut Project Manager Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 25. 25Sponsored by: The most successful project managers (PM’s) possess leadership abilities and employ them. As a military PM, it was a skill I learned from watching the good leaders, and it was taught to us from the beginning of our military journey. We were often required to brief much higher-ranking officers about our projects. Once, I managed the delivery, installation, data collection, and analysis of a project to test solar photovoltaic panels as a back-up power source at remote construction sites around the western Pacific. This region included 14 sites, stretching north and south from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, to Adak, Alaska, as well as east and west from California to Japan and Subic Bay, Philippines. The U.S. Department of Energy provided the solar systems, but the U.S. Navy SEABEES installed, tested, and collected the data. Because this was a high-level government project, it was high-visibility, watched by all levels of the chain of command. The biggest challenge? Not only had no one on the project ever worked together before, but we couldn’t see each other. We conducted all communications over ham radio gear. Today, we call this a virtual team, but in the early 1980s, that term did not exist. So, how do you get a team of people who had never met face to face, to get to know each other and work together? How do you conduct team-building activities? Two words: virtual leadership. I asked each team member to have a head-and-shoulders picture taken, then send that picture to the 13 other sites. I implemented the policy that when they were speaking to another member of the team, they bring their picture up so that the speakers could see each other’s faces. I also conducted sessions in which we asked questions and discussed the issues and challenges we faced. Finally, I had an “open-door policy,” where any person from the team could come to me with any issue, and we would openly and freely discuss it. The outcome was that when we all came together at a base near Los Angeles, California, the team met as if they had been working side by side the entire time. They discussed family, hobbies, and common interests, because they already knew so much about each other. KEY LESSONS 1 2 WHEN TEAM MEMBERS WORK VIRTUALLY, HAVING A PICTURE OF EACH TEAM MEMBER FOSTERS BETTER COMMUNICATION. MAINTAIN AN OPEN-DOOR POLICY TO ENCOURAGE COMMUNICATION. “The most successful project managers possess leadership abilities and employ them.” GREGG D. RICHIE Gregg D. Richie, PMP, CNP, MCTS, is a full-time instructor for Project Management Academy. He also teaches for the University of Washington in the Project Management Certificate Program, has written two books on Microsoft Project, and is a 20 year veteran of the U.S. Navy SEABEES. His copyrighted signature saying is, “Goals are like underwear: You have to change them once in a while to feel better about yourself.” VIRTUAL LEADERSHIP Instructor at Project Management Academy Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 26. 26Sponsored by: For many years, I worked in a fast-paced brokerage firm in Manhattan that had more than 1,000 developers working on concurrent projects. Sometimes, they had to move in code changes on the fly midday, while stocks were trading. And sometimes, these changes had bugs that had to be eliminated immediately to prevent trading with the wrong calculations. Sound chaotic? To bring order to this “cowboy” environment, our chief information officer (CIO) issued an edict that the developers must start using a new change management system for all future software changes. This CIO was highly respected and enjoyed all the forms of power one might find on the Project Management Professional test: “formal,” “punishment,” “referent,” but the developers put up strong resistance, and the cut-over failed for more than a year. I was put in charge of converting the developers to the system, and I created a hands-on class that I made all about the WIFM factor (What’s in It for Me?). I showed the developers that they would benefit greatly from the system, especially because of its “auto–back-out” option. This feature meant that the next time a developer would get a 3:00 a.m. call to back-out one of his or her changes, that developer would no longer need to scramble around looking for the old version of the code. If he or she had entered the change through our system, it could be backed out automatically. All the person had to do was have management key in “B” for back-out. The developers found this to be an appealing argument, because it would save them hours of major stress on every back-out. The benefit? The result was the IT department went from almost 0% to 100% compliance, bringing a huge drop in the number of defects in our production-trading environment. KEY LESSONS 1 2 SHOW PEOPLE HOW THEY CAN BENEFIT FROM YOUR PROJECT. PEOPLE ARE MORE LIKELY TO COMPLY WITH CHANGE WHEN THEY UNDERSTAND THE BENEFIT TO THEM PERSONALLY. “I was put in charge of converting the developers to the system, and I created a hands-on class that I made all about the WIFM factor (What’s in It for Me?).” JEFF FURMAN Jeff Furman, PMP, is a highly experienced IT project manager and project management instructor. He managed software projects for Fortune 100 firms in the New York City area for more than 15 years and currently teaches project management for New York University and for the U.S. Army at Fort Hood and other bases around the United States. The second edition of his book, The Project Management Answer Book (Management Concepts Press), came out in August 2014. HOW “WIFM” RESCUED A FAILING PROJECT Project Management Instructor / PM Book Author at NYU Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 27. 27Sponsored by: Communicating projects is more than information flows among team members: It’s winning the trust and support of key stakeholders outside the team. For any project to succeed, we need to take our stakeholders on a journey. This journey starts where those stakeholders are in terms of how much they know and how they feel about our project. It ends when they are where we want them to be. Before people act in the way we want, they have to feel positive about what we are asking them to do. Before they feel positive, they need to know the essentials that will change their attitudes from negative or neutral. Thus, communications becomes an escalator that we take our stakeholders up. First, we make them aware of our project; then, we build their understanding. Next, we win their support, then involvement. Finally, we ask them to commit to our project. Just focusing on information flows gives people an intellectual concept of our project. They’re familiar but have no emotional investment to support us and ensure that our project succeeds. That’s assuming they pay attention to the information we circulate. A few years ago, I supported four projects, together transforming a multitude of in-country systems and processes to a single European-wide system. One project manager (PM) got the concept of stakeholder journey, and together we developed a simple communications plan with stakeholder route maps at its heart. The others didn’t. One said, “No need for communications; we’ll just tell them and they’ll do it.” Another PM pulled out a door-stop document and said, “I already have a comms plan.” It was just for show. The fourth project team had great fun creating entertaining videos and posters but no plan. Only the first project won wide stakeholder support and delivered new systems that people willingly used from day one. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 ENSURE THAT STAKEHOLDERS BUY IN TO YOUR PROJECT. WIN STAKEHOLDER SUPPORT, THEN THEIR INVOLVEMENT. ASK STAKEHOLDERS TO COMMIT TO THE PROJECT. “Communicating projects is more than information flows among team members: It’s winning the trust and support of key stakeholders outside the team.” JO ANN SWEENEY Jo Ann Sweeney is a communications consultant known for her results- focused approach, rapport and consensus building, and clarifying complex information. An FCIM and FIIC, she specializes in working with complex project teams that have focused on the technology solution rather than its delivery. Jo Ann helps them get key people committed so that the project delivers the expected business goals and wins recognition for a great job. In addition, she runs communications training for project teams and mentors leaders who have communication responsibilities. View more at: Communicating Projects System WINNING STAKEHOLDER SUPPORT Founder of Sweeney Communications Ltd Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 28. 28Sponsored by: “There is something wrong; the conversion does not balance. We might have to call it off.” These were the words my team member blurted out as I approached. Unfortunately, not far behind me was my boss, the chief information officer. My boss was trailing me from desk to desk, because this was a large conversion involving most of our major applications. If one failed, they all failed. We had been rehearsing this for months. I calmly asked my team member to tell me what had happened. He showed me the conversion report and the out-of-balance totals. On his face, I saw fatigue; at that moment, I could see that he thought the weight of the entire project was on his shoulders. I knew that he was smart and committed. He did not need me or my boss to jump in and start reviewing reports and issuing orders. He needed time to step back, take another look, tell me the nature of the situation, and offer a potential solution. I looked at him and said, “Okay, go take a quick break. Walk away from your computer and your desk. After your break, come back and revisit the report. I will check back with you in one hour.” Then, I walked away. My boss trailed me; in not-so-hushed tones, he barked, “Take a break? That’s how you solve a problem that could bring us to our knees? Take a break?” I looked at him and said, “Just trust us and give us an hour.” In less than an hour, my team member called me over to advise me that everything was in fact fine and that in his nervousness and fatigue, he had transposed two numbers. In this scenario, trust made all the difference. My boss grudgingly trusted me. I had to trust myself and stand firm in my approach, I had to trust that my team member could resolve the problem, and my team member had to trust in the fact that I believed in him. KEY LESSONS 1 2 DURING PROJECTS, TRUST MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE. TRUST YOURSELF, AND STAND FIRM IN YOUR APPROACH. “On his face, I saw fatigue; at that moment, I could see that he thought the weight of the entire project was on his shoulders.” MARGARET MELONI Margaret Meloni, MBA, PMP, is president of Meloni Coaching Solutions, Inc., a company devoted to helping clients successfully navigate the human side of the project world. Her background in IT project management and project management office leadership enables Margaret to understand the challenges clients face when managing projects. A recipient of the University of California, Los Angeles, Extension Distinguished Instructors Award, her wish is to see her students take on tough projects and emerge strong and sought-after project managers. LIGHTENING THE WEIGHT OF THE WORLD THROUGH TRUST President of Meloni Coaching Solutions, Inc. Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 29. 29Sponsored by: My boss called me into her office to assign the latest mandate from corporate IT. The scope, she said, was for our business unit to deliver a major upgrade of Windows to our 10,000 end users, who were spread across several countries and dozens of sites. The deadline was 12 months. Now, let’s talk about scope. The project had many unknowns. Before we could deploy the upgrade, we would need to test all of our business applications for compatibility. Because there was no authoritative inventory of applications, we would need to gather that first. There was some buzz about a new tool that would deploy the upgrade “auto- magically” over the network, but it was still in development at Microsoft. This meant that we might have to configure each of those 10,000 computers manually, one at a time. Budget, you ask? No one knew, yet, what would be funded by corporate IT versus the local business units. Still, we would need to prepare a funding proposal and get it approved in time to submit our deployment schedule to the chief information officer within 30 days. The optics and politics of this situation were so massive that failure, as they say, was not an option. I summoned an emergency workshop of representatives from our functions and sites to build a plan for application inventory, testing, remediation, and end-user deployment. I stood at the whiteboard with an eager smile, marker in hand. That’s where it got ugly. KEY LESSONS 1 2 DEVELOP A WHAT-IF SCENARIO TO BEGIN THE PLANNING PROCESS. USE THE SCENARIO TO BUILD A PROPOSAL AND DRIVE CONSENSUS. “Technical people make fact-based decisions and commit to plans grounded in data. What I was asking of them violated their very core.” PAM STANTON Born and raised in New Jersey and a graduate of Yale University, Pam Stanton is an author, speaker, coach, and consultant who has 25 years of experience in transformational leadership. She specializes in the impact of group dynamics on project outcomes—or, as she puts it, “The Human Part of the Gantt Chart.” Her book, The Project Whisperer, chronicles two decades of insight into the human element of successful projects. MOVING PROJECTS BEYOND “ANALYSIS PARALYSIS” Author, Speaker, and Consultant at The Project Whisperer Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 30. 30Sponsored by: The pushback was immediate and fierce. “Too many variables to build a plan!” “How can we build a plan before we know whether the deployment will be automated or manual?” “Our plan depends on what version of Windows they will use.” “Sorry, but we can’t possibly build a plan until we have all these questions answered first!” I was stumped. I mean, couldn’t we just throw ideas onto the whiteboard and work out some reasonable guesstimates? That’s when it hit me: Plan, plan, plan. The people around the table were hung up on the word plan! To this room full of highly analytical people, plan equaled commitment. Technical people make fact-based decisions and commit to plans grounded in data. What I was asking of them violated their very core. Immediately, I dropped the word plan. Drawing a large timeline on the whiteboard, I wrote, “What if . . . ?” When the exercise changed from building a plan to developing a what-if scenario, the floodgates opened and ideas poured out. We captured the “what-if’s” as assumptions that would need to be met for this scenario to work. Fantastic! That’s all I ever wanted in the first place. By the end of the workshop, we had a great plan for how this project could work, assuming that we could get certain commitments on resources, technology, funding, etc. It wasn’t a huge Gantt chart but rather a simple one-pager that included graphical boxes and stars showing major activities and decision points. I called it our Assumption-based Scenario and used it to build a proposal that drove consensus with leadership and articulated what decisions had to be made for us to proceed. I’ve reused this approach dozens of times since to move project teams out of analysis paralysis. It works like a charm as long as I never utter that four-letter word. KEY LESSONS 1 2 DEVELOP A WHAT-IF SCENARIO TO BEGIN THE PLANNING PROCESS. USE THE SCENARIO TO BUILD A PROPOSAL AND DRIVE CONSENSUS. “Technical people make fact-based decisions and commit to plans grounded in data. What I was asking of them violated their very core.” PAM STANTON Born and raised in New Jersey and a graduate of Yale University, Pam Stanton is an author, speaker, coach, and consultant who has 25 years of experience in transformational leadership. She specializes in the impact of group dynamics on project outcomes—or, as she puts it, “The Human Part of the Gantt Chart.” Her book, The Project Whisperer, chronicles two decades of insight into the human element of successful projects. MOVING PROJECTS BEYOND “ANALYSIS PARALYSIS” Author, Speaker, and Consultant at The Project Whisperer b Twitter I Website I Blog
  • 31. 31Sponsored by: When I hear that Gartner is predicting a major shift in the leadership role that project managers (PM) will take on over the next few months, I get excited. Although I am a fan of technology and systems, I have been tremendously frustrated by the “productization” of project management. Cloud-based portfolio management, turnkey program management office models, and magic methodologies have all been lauded as the key to success. When it comes down to it, though, for this shift to become a reality, PM’s must get down to raw, genuine leadership, especially when working with executives. I had this revelation several years ago while working on two enterprise projects whose teams consisted of multiple executives. On both engagements, I felt confident about the projects. I had executive support, firm budgets, and so on. The problem was that progress was hard fought every step of the way. Decisions weren’t being made, and the team was polluted with organizational politics. This is when I learned that project leadership often required being uncomfortable. When projects are running smoothly, you are managing them, and the other aspects of leadership (coaching, vision casting, etc.) are enjoyable, but calling out executives in front of their peers and subordinates is not a comfortable place to be. No methodology or tool was going to help me. I needed to dot my i’s and cross my t’s, then have a frank conversation with each of them about expectations and issues affecting the project. Although it was not an accusatory position—rather, collaboration on working together—it was unnerving. In the end, I was able to illustrate the issues and develop solutions to get the projects moving forward. Most gratifying was the increased confidence in my leadership abilities. KEY LESSONS 1 2 STRIVE TO BE A LEADER, NOT JUST A MANAGER. PROJECT LEADERSHIP OFTEN REQUIRES BEING UNCOMFORTABLE. “When it comes down to it…PM’s must get down to raw, genuine leadership, especially when working with executives.” ROBERT KELLY Prior to starting KPS, Robert Kelly successfully led enterprise projects for 15 years, with a portfolio that spans IT, marketing, procurement, and sales initiatives and project results in more than 40 countries. Robert is a sought-after expert, with speaking and print contributions to the Project Management Institutes’ PMNetwork, Fast Company’s 30 Second MBA, and Triangle Technical Recruiters Association. In addition, Robert is the co-founder of #PMChat, a global community of project managers sharing best practices. GETTING DOWN TO GENUINE LEADERSHIP Managing Partner at Kelly Project Solutions, LLC Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 32. 32Sponsored by: “The program is going really well, probably because we have an exceptional team working on it,” said the chief executive officer (CEO). I was more than a little confused to hear this. “So, why do you need me?” I asked. “Well, I just get this feeling I could be missing something important,” said the CEO. He wasn’t wrong. The Global Program was in fact in total disarray. There was no plan, no budget, no requirements—in fact, no documentation at all. The three “milestones” were all more than four months late, and no one had any idea what, if any, work had been done on them. In fact, the only concrete documentation was the contracts the business had signed with various clients promising delivery of a new infrastructure with stringent penalty clauses for non-delivery. Sadly, this situation is not unusual in my world. As a troubleshooter, I am invariably brought in to turn around failing programs or to ensure that the impossible is delivered. In such cases, leadership skills are paramount. But leadership doesn’t mean shouting and banging heads together. Well, not initially anyway. In these projects, having the confidence to take a step back, calmly assess the situation, and devise a plan of action demonstrates true leadership. After all, the old adage of “keep your head while all others are losing theirs” still holds true, especially in such chaotic political situations. And that is exactly what I did. The result? I was able to determine where the real problems lay and get them fixed. I also renegotiated the client contracts with zero penalties and ensured that the new delivery dates were met. Meanwhile, the CEO and board learned a valuable lesson—namely, to bring in a project management professional from the outset rather than trying to “wing it.” KEY LESSONS 1 2 LEADERSHIP SKILLS ARE PARAMOUNT WHEN TRYING TO SAVE A FAILING PROJECT. HAVE THE CONFIDENCE TO STEP BACK, ASSESS THE SITUATION, AND DEVISE A PLAN. “Meanwhile, the CEO and board learned a valuable lesson— namely, to bring in a project management professional from the outset rather than trying to “wing it.” SUSAN DE SOUSA Susan de Sousa is MyPMExpert and runs the industry-leading website of the same name. She is internationally a recognized expert in project management theory, practice, and delivery, having successfully managed some of Europe’s highest- profile programs. Many of these deliveries were “firsts” and had been deemed impossible to deliver in the designated timeframes and budgets. Susan is also a frequent media contributor and sought-after conference speaker as well as a published author. She is in the process of writing a book entitled How to Deliver Impossible Projects Successfully. NO MORE “WINGING IT”: DEVISING A PLAN TO SAVE A PROJECT Director at Interzone Services Ltd Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 33. 33Sponsored by: Trust and recognition. These two actions transform a rag-tag group of individuals into a team. Trust and recognition implicitly build pride, boost morale, and increase performance. Evaluating your project team by their capabilities, not their titles or tenure, breaks down the artificial walls established in organizations and creates energy that cannot be surpassed. About six years ago, when called into a client to rescue a project that was months behind schedule and projected to exceed its budget by more than 100%, I was challenged with a senior accounting manager who was the lead for one of the three tracks on the project—a track responsible for integrating online payment functionality from a financial institution. He was arrogant, cocky, and not a team player. One member of his team was a junior analyst new to the organization. During the project assessment interviews, the junior analyst—let’s call her Michelle—showed an amazing ability to organize information and understand the complexities of third-party integration, and she had a calming demeanor that is so critical in the high-stress environment of a project turnaround. After three weeks of working with the senior manager to no avail, I turned to Michelle and asked her to be the lead of that track. Her immediate response was that she was unqualified. After 20 minutes of her justifying her position and me explaining why she was fully capable, I simply told her, “Michelle, I have more confidence in your capabilities than you do. I will check in on you daily to answer any questions, but you do not need to change anything you are doing. You have the skills.” This concluded our meeting, and she apprehensively left my cubicle. I did as I promised, checking in with her daily. After a week or so she agreed this was unnecessary, and she came to me when she needed help. Needless to say, she succeeded. The benefits, however, went far beyond her. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 TRUST AND RECOGNITION TRANSFORM A GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS INTO A TEAM. CHOOSE THE PROPER PERSON FOR THE JOB RATHER THAN THE ONE WHO HAS SENIORITY. TRUSTING THE RIGHT PEOPLE GAINS YOU THE RESPECT OF YOUR EXTENDED TEAM. “Evaluating your project team by their capabilities, not their titles or tenure, breaks down the artificial walls established in organizations and creates energy that cannot be surpassed.” TODD C. WILLIAMS Todd C. Williams is an expert witness, executive consultant, published author, blogger for four sites, and president of eCameron Inc. He has spent the past 25 years rescuing failed projects and teaching companies how to turn their vision into profit by creating initiative-ready organizations. In his book, Rescue the Problem Project, A Complete Guide to Identifying, Preventing, and Recovering from Project Failure, he defines a people approach to rescuing and preventing project failure. TRUST AND RESPECT: THE KEYS TO SUCCESSFUL PROJECTS President of eCameron, Inc. Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 34. 34Sponsored by: Most people on a team know who is capable. It was no exception with this crew. The other members watched Michelle with excitement, because they knew she would excel. Executives saw a new face in meetings and heard how she was reining in the problems on the payment-processing track. The result was contagious enthusiasm spreading within and beyond the team. The proper person was doing the job rather than the one who had seniority. Furthermore, it was transformational for the accounting manager, who became more humble; contributed to the team; and, after four weeks of having Michelle working as the lead, apologized for his arrogance and complemented the decision to place Michelle at the helm. She had a better demeanor for working with the service provider, and he was happier providing the systems knowledge for the integration. Trusting the right people, recognizing their skills, challenging them to question their abilities, and placing them in successful situations gains the respect of your extended team—your superiors, subordinates, and your customer. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 TRUST AND RECOGNITION TRANSFORM A GROUP OF INDIVIDUALS INTO A TEAM. CHOOSE THE PROPER PERSON FOR THE JOB RATHER THAN THE ONE WHO HAS SENIORITY. TRUSTING THE RIGHT PEOPLE GAINS YOU THE RESPECT OF YOUR EXTENDED TEAM. “Evaluating your project team by their capabilities, not their titles or tenure, breaks down the artificial walls established in organizations and creates energy that cannot be surpassed.” TODD C. WILLIAMS Todd C. Williams is an expert witness, executive consultant, published author, blogger for four sites, and president of eCameron Inc. He has spent the past 25 years rescuing failed projects and teaching companies how to turn their vision into profit by creating initiative-ready organizations. In his book, Rescue the Problem Project, A Complete Guide to Identifying, Preventing, and Recovering from Project Failure, he defines a people approach to rescuing and preventing project failure. TRUST AND RESPECT: THE KEYS TO SUCCESSFUL PROJECTS President of eCameron, Inc. b Twitter I Website I Blog
  • 35. 35Sponsored by: Iwas told the chief executive officer (CEO) would be difficult to get along with. He was “old school.” He pushed too hard, had unreasonable expectations, and was relentless. He smoked and he growled. All of this I was told. A picture began to form in my head, and it was not a pretty one. My project had to get through this CEO. He had his hands on everything. Despite being at the top of a successful organization with more than $1 billion in revenue, he still approved expense reports, training room layouts, and other details. Without his explicit support, our project would die. As I prepared for the meeting, I realized I had not packed my business cards. He always asked for business cards, and it could make or break a meeting, I had been informed earlier in the day. I quickly called my office and had a few cards overnighted to the hotel. The next day, I walked into the CEO’s office. I was wearing my best suit and holding a fresh business card. We sat down, and I braced myself. What followed surprised me. The CEO was cordial, asked questions, and was introspective. He explained his challenges and his desire to be more “hands off.” He wanted the team to do more and wanted our project, which was to improve organizational project management maturity, to liberate him to focus more on the big picture. Could it be that this “difficult” CEO was actually just a real person with hopes and fears like the rest of us? Was it possible that he was doing what he felt was best to lead the organization to the next level? I walked out of his office, well past our scheduled finish time, with a pat on the back and his strong support. The project would live to see another day. I walked down the hallway and smiled to myself as I was reminded that strong leadership sometimes means being unpopular. Others may see it negatively as pushing and prodding, just as we don’t like our personal trainers when they ask for one more push-up, but those seemingly stubborn demands from leaders encourage us to be our best. KEY LESSONS 1 2 RISK UNPOPULARITY TO BE A GOOD LEADER. SEEMINGLY STUBBORN DEMANDS FROM LEADERS ENCOURAGE US TO BE OUR BEST. “Strong leadership sometimes means being unpopular.” TRES ROEDER Tres Roeder, PMP, is a recognized global expert on project management and organizational change. He is the author of two Amazon best sellers, A Sixth Sense for Project Management and Managing Project Stakeholders. Tres has been quoted by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, MSN Money, and others. He holds a B.A. in Economics from the University of Illinois and an MBA from the Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University. RISKING YOUR POPULARITY TO BE A STRONG LEADER President of Roeder Consulting Twitter I Website
  • 36. 36Sponsored by: With the increasing emphasis on sustainability in the “C-Suite,” it becomes more and more necessary to be able to connect that emphasis to the fundamental workings of the enterprise. The question becomes, where is the best place to make that connection? Projects are the lifeblood of any enterprise. Projects are “where the rubber meets the road,” where ideas are made real. The project charter therefore should be where the connection between the C-Suite and the fundamental workings of the enterprise is made apparent and strong. But who is responsible for insuring that the project charter includes an accurate portrayal of the message being communicated from the C-Suite, and what is that message? Answering the second question is much easier than answering the first. The answer to the second question is that the “message” is part of the enterprise’s mission/vision statement. As a PM, would you want to undertake a project that was not specifically aligned with one of your organization’s stated missions, say for example, sustainability? Maybe. But your answer may also be: “Sorry, I don’t really think about that. I’m too busy managing my project.” That answer is perfectly legitimate if the sustainability message has not been brought—with emphasis—to the project managers. So where does the project manager get his or her marching orders? Sometimes it comes from a project sponsor. Other times it may come from program management. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 WITH AN INCREASING EMPHASIS ON SUSTAINABILITY, IT IS NECESSARY TO BE ABLE TO CONNECT THAT EMPHASIS TO THE FUNDAMENTAL WORKINGS OF THE ENTERPRISE. THE PROJECT CHARTER IS WHERE THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE C-SUITE AND THE WORKINGS OF THE ENTERPRISE IS MADE APPARENT AND STRONG. THE MESSAGE COMING FROM “ABOVE” SHOULD BE CONSISTENT AND DIRECTLY CONNECTED FROM THE ENTERPRISE MISSION/VISION TO THE PROJECT CHARTER. “It takes true project leadership (i.e. more than project management) to communicate a consistent message to the project charters so that all of them reflect the enterprise’s mission, vision, and values.” RICH MALTZMAN AND DAVE SHIRLEY Rich Maltzman, PMP, has been an engineer since 1978 and a project management supervisor since 1988. As a second, but intertwined career, Rich has also focused on consulting and teaching. Currently Rich is a Director, Learning and Professional Advancement, at the Global Program Management Office of a major telecom concern. Dave Shirley, PMP, has been an instructor and consultant, with more than 30 years’ experience in management and project management, in the corporate, public, and small business arenas. EarthPM, LLC is the collaboration of Rich Maltzman, PMP and Dave Shirley, PMP. CONNECTING SUSTAINABILITY TO THE ENTERPRISE Co-Founders of EarthPM, LLC Twitter I Website
  • 37. 37Sponsored by: Where does the project sponsor or program manager get their marching orders? Hopefully, there is portfolio management. That could be either a formal function in larger organizations that may have a portfolio management organization, or a smaller company where one person makes the decision about which projects to pursue. Whatever the structure, the message coming from “above” should be consistent and directly connected from the enterprise mission/vision to the project charter. It takes true project leadership (i.e. more than project management) to communicate a consistent message to the project charters so that all of them reflect the enterprise’s mission, vision, and values. And this leadership will pay off in the short, medium, and long term. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 WITH AN INCREASING EMPHASIS ON SUSTAINABILITY, IT IS NECESSARY TO BE ABLE TO CONNECT THAT EMPHASIS TO THE FUNDAMENTAL WORKINGS OF THE ENTERPRISE. THE PROJECT CHARTER IS WHERE THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THE C-SUITE AND THE WORKINGS OF THE ENTERPRISE IS MADE APPARENT AND STRONG. RICH MALTZMAN AND DAVE SHIRLEY Rich Maltzman, PMP, has been an engineer since 1978 and a project management supervisor since 1988. As a second, but intertwined career, Rich has also focused on consulting and teaching. Currently Rich is a Director, Learning and Professional Advancement, at the Global Program Management Office of a major telecom concern. Dave Shirley, PMP, has been an instructor and consultant, with more than 30 years experience in management and project management, in the corporate, public, and small business arenas. EarthPM, LLC is the collaboration of Rich Maltzman, PMP and Dave Shirley, PMP. CONNECTING SUSTAINABILITY TO THE ENTERPRISE Co-Founders of EarthPM, LLC THE MESSAGE COMING FROM “ABOVE” SHOULD BE CONSISTENT AND DIRECTLY CONNECTED FROM THE ENTERPRISE MISSION/VISION TO THE PROJECT CHARTER. “It takes true project leadership (i.e. more than project management) to communicate a consistent message to the project charters so that all of them reflect the enterprise’s mission, vision, and values.”Twitter I Website
  • 38. 38Sponsored by: It’s no secret that Agile is the most remarkable of all leadership secrets. Yes, that’s right: Agile! I learned this first hand in 2011, when I led the Agile transformation of Valpak based on nothing more than a gut feeling that there must be a better way. I quickly went from the rules of the Project Management Body of Knowledge and the flaws of Waterfall to the values and principles of The Agile Manifesto and the magic of self- organizing teams. It was probably the most enlightening moment of my career, and over the next couple of years, I had the pleasure of inspiring that same truth across the entire organization. As a result of our Agile transformation, we are not only achieving greater results and delivering more value more quickly than ever before, but we are also enjoying our work, our teams, and our company more than ever before. Other outcomes of our Agile transformation include: • Our Agile transformation case study contributing to a book by Charles G. Cobb, entitled Managed Agile Development: Making Agile Work for Your Business; and • Becoming the community poster child for all things Agile. We organize The Tampa Bay Agile Meetup group and have grown membership by almost 300% this past year. In addition, we regularly give Agile tours of our process to companies looking to go Agile and offer advice and mentorship upon request. Unlike a project, our Agile journey will never be complete, but we continue to make progress each and every day. Our progress is evident in the ways in which we are truly being Agile, not just doing Agile. In such a short time, my company went from being behind the times to being a role model for Agile transformation. I couldn’t be more proud of how far we have come. KEY LESSONS 1 2 UNLIKE A PROJECT, UNDERTAKING AN AGILE TRANSFORMATION WILL NEVER BE COMPLETE. TO MAKE PROGRESS, ORGANIZATIONS MUST BE AGILE, NOT JUST DO AGILE. “I quickly went from the rules of the Project Management Body of Knowledge and the flaws of Waterfall to the values and princi- ples of The Agile Mani- festo and the magic of self-organizing teams.” STEPHANIE STEWART Stephanie Stewart is director of Agile Leadership at Valpak, a Cox Target Media company. Stephanie is a career project leader who has more than 16 years in the field, including past positions with ATT Business and IBM Global Services, and has maintained the project management professional certification since early in her career. More recently, she earned the PMI-Agile Certified Practitioner credential. Her academic credentials include a B.S. in Marketing from the University of South Florida and an MBA in International Business from the University of Bristol in England. COMMITTING TO AN AGILE TRANSFORMATION Director of Agile Leadership at Cox Target Media Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 39. 39Sponsored by: My leadership secret? Tell people the results you want to achieve. Remove their impediments. Create an environment that helps the team see where they are and provides feedback. Keep other people out of their hair. Make sure they don’t multitask. Encourage the team to collaborate and explore together. They will make magic. Of course, this is not easy. You can tell people the results you want to achieve by creating a project charter together. Doing so helps a team jell. Sometimes, the biggest impediment I’ve removed was to get a senior developer a new desk, so his back didn’t hurt. Sometimes, I had to take on the facilities department and tell them that, “Yes, we need to remove those cube walls. I know you think it’s strange, but the people have agreed to it. You have the emails. The testers and developers want to work together.” Sometimes, the challenges are at the senior management level. “You can have everyone busy, or you can have projects out the door. If you have everyone busy, you won’t make this quarter’s revenue. If you have projects out the door, you will. You do not want ‘busyness,’ you want throughput. That will allow us to ship and to recognize revenue.” That one was a tough sell. In contrast, when a team works together, collaborating and exploring to complete the product with me facilitating them, as needed, we are all in flow. We maintain a visual board of work in progress and what’s complete, so that everyone can see status. Project management is not project control. We don’t need hierarchy. We need to know the results we’re supposed to deliver. We need the autonomy to deliver those results so that we can collaborate and explore together. It sounds simple, but it’s magic when it happens. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 TELL PEOPLE THE RESULTS YOU WANT TO ACHIEVE, AND REMOVE IMPEDIMENTS. CREATE AN ENVIRONMENT THAT HELPS THE TEAM SEE WHERE THEY ARE AND PROVIDES FEEDBACK. ENCOURAGE THE TEAM TO COLLABORATE AND EXPLORE TOGETHER. “Project management is not project control. We don’t need hierarchy. We need to know the results we’re supposed to deliver.” JOHANNA ROTHMAN Johanna Rothman, known as the Pragmatic Manager, provides frank advice to clients’ tough problems. She helps organizational leaders recognize potential risks, seize opportunities, and remove impediments. Johanna is the author of several books and more than 200 articles. She writes two blogs on her website, jrothman.com, as well as a blog on createadaptablelife.com. ENCOURAGE AUTONOMY, COLLABORATION, EXPLORATION President of Rothman Consulting Group, Inc. Twitter I Website I Blog b
  • 40. 40Sponsored by: When you read about project management methodology, you will see the ideal scenario: A project is initiated, planned, executed, and closed. A successful project will be well defined, well planned, have the proper resources, and be successfully managed. At the end of a project, lessons learned can be used to improve the approach for future, similar projects and create better project managers (PM’s). However, life as a PM is not always as simple. Sometimes, project gets into trouble. It can then be abandoned or rescued. Rescuing a project is also different from managing issues. There will always be issues on a project, but a project that needs to be rescued has reached the point of “there is no hope.” Rescue project management is a specialty of its own in project management, just like the emergency room is a specialty for medical doctors. Rescuing projects requires a unique mindset from the PM and the project team. It is different from the usual project management. If you have to work on a project that needs to be rescued, here are some key considerations to remember. Identify Key Success Factors It is essential to identify the key success factors of the project and manage them closely. It will help to gain some key successes and ensure that they don’t become points of failure. Review Project Plans It is also important to review the project plans and challenge the assumptions in it. A project plan will have dependencies that are based on best practices or just past experience. Often, the dependencies were just added to make the Gantt chart look good. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 IDENTIFY KEY SUCCESS FACTORS FOR THE PROJECT. REVIEW PROJECT PLANS AND CHALLENGE THEIR ASSUMPTIONS. BE CREATIVE, AND FOCUS ON ACTION, MAKING DECISIONS QUICKLY. “It is essential to identify the key success factors of the project and manage them closely.” MICHEL DION Michel Dion is a certified public accountant and project management professional in Canada. He also holds the internal auditor and risk management assurance certifications. Michel has managed various projects in the past decade, including audits, financial analysis, application development, data analysis, business transitions, and special initiatives. He is also the author and developer of the blog Project-Aria, a website featuring thoughts on project management, leadership, and productivity. RESCUING FAILING PROJECTS Project Manager at Project-Aria Twitter I Blog b
  • 41. 41Sponsored by: Be Creative If you step back from the original plan, you can often be creative and find new ways of doing things. Here are two examples. A project team on a difficult project used some innovative data-analysis methods to complete a research task faster. Another team was able to reduce the time required for an analytical report by breaking it into smaller parts and performing the quality assurance activities on each part more quickly. Focus on Action Finally, you have to focus on action and make decisions quickly. The project is already in trouble, so a leader must be able to decide—not recklessly, but there is no time for indecision and confusion. As such, it is important to focus on results, and perfection. Sometimes, the project may just need to be abandoned, but rescuing projects can often be surprising. The experience can be stressful, even discouraging, but if the project team are focused on finding solutions and achieving results, such rescues can be rewarding. It is also a powerful way to improve project management skills. KEY LESSONS 1 2 3 IDENTIFY KEY SUCCESS FACTORS FOR THE PROJECT. REVIEW PROJECT PLANS AND CHALLENGE THEIR ASSUMPTIONS. BE CREATIVE, AND FOCUS ON ACTION, MAKING DECISIONS QUICKLY. “It is essential to identify the key success factors of the project and manage them closely.” MICHEL DION Michel Dion is a certified public accountant and project management professional in Canada. He also holds the internal auditor and risk management assurance certifications. Michel has managed various projects in the past decade, including audits, financial analysis, application development, data analysis, business transitions, and special initiatives. He is also the author and developer of the blog Project-Aria, a website featuring thoughts on project management, leadership, and productivity. RESCUING FAILING PROJECTS Project Manager at Project-Aria b Twitter I Blog
  • 42. 42Sponsored by: Trust is a key leadership skill. Without trust, you could find obstacles throughout your projects and discover that teams will not optimally perform for you within the execution phase of your project. Gaining trust from your senior stakeholders ensures that your project has the appropriate level of support from the business and provides you with a level of authorization for any political issues. A few years ago, I accepted an assignment with a large UK supermarket chain. The project was already in flight, and the project team was already established, but the project manager had departed. When I arrived, the thoughts from the main stakeholders were that this project was doomed and would continue to fail. I needed to gain trust from the stakeholders to continue with the project and from the team to improve their morale and organize them to complete the project. I found that two members of the development team were leading the others, so these were the people with whom I needed to establish a mutual trust. I set about by asking questions and listening to their opinions, guiding them into making decisions that I could follow through with. This gave the team a sense of empowerment, as the actions of their decisions delivered results. I made it feel as if the decision had come from the team, which provided self-belief, pride, and a sense that they mattered. This, in turn, encouraged them to deliver. In addition, it secured the trust of management, as they could start to see the project delivering the business benefits. Without obtaining the trust of the team, we would not have been able to deliver. The updated project plan set smaller deliverables; therefore, I was quickly able to gain the trust of the project sponsor and senior stakeholders by delivering results. KEY LESSONS 1 2 GAIN THE TRUST OF SENIOR STAKEHOLDERS BY DELIVERING RESULTS. GAIN THE TRUST OF TEAM MEMBERS GIVING THEM A STAKE IN THE PROJECT’S SUCCESS. “Gaining trust from your senior stakeholders ensures that your project has the appropriate level of support from the business and provides you with a level of authorization for any political issues.” PAUL CABLE Paul Cable is a certified project management professional and risk management professional in addition to a Prince2 Practitioner. Working in the IT industry for more than 15 years in a leadership role, Paul has a wealth of experience influencing stakeholders from all levels in different industries, most recently in banking, telecommunications, oil, and retail. He has worked with a variety of clients, such as Bank of Tokyo, Daiwa Capital Markets, HSBC, Waitrose, Orange, Ricoh, and Statoil. TRUST: THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL LEADERSHIP Consultant Project Manager at Empachal Solutions Limited Twitter I Website I Blog b