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14 Key Principles for PM Success
- Project managers must focus on three
dimensions of project success. Simply put, project success means completing all
project deliverables on time, within budget, and to a level of
quality that is acceptable to sponsors and stakeholders. The project manager
must keep the team's attention focused on achieving these broad goals.
- Planning is everything -- and ongoing.
On one thing all PM texts and authorities agree: The single most important activity that
project managers engage in is planning -- detailed, systematic, team-involved plans are
the only foundation for project success. And when real-world events conspire to change the
plan, project managers must make a new one to reflect the changes. So planning and
replanning must be a way of life for project managers.
- Project managers must feel, and transmit to
their team members, a sense of urgency. Because projects are finite endeavors with
limited time, money, and other resources available, they must be kept moving toward
completion. Since most team members have lots of other priorities, it's up to the project
manager to keep their attention on project deliverables and deadlines. Regular status
checks, meetings, and reminders are essential.
- Successful projects use a time-tested, proven
project life cycle. We know what works. Models such as the standard ISD model and
others described in this text can help ensure that professional standards and best
practices are built into our project plans. Not only do these models typically support
quality, they help to minimize rework. So when time or budget pressures seem to encourage
taking short cuts, it's up to the project manager to identify and defend the best project
life cycle for the job.
- All project deliverables and all project
activities must be visualized and communicated in vivid detail. In short, the
project manager and project team must early on create a tangible picture of the finished
deliverables in the minds of everyone involved so that all effort is focused in the same
direction. Avoid vague descriptions at all costs; spell it out, picture it, prototype it,
and make sure everyone agrees to it.
- Deliverables must evolve gradually, in
successive approximations. It simply costs too much and risks too much time spent
in rework to jump in with both feet and begin building all project deliverables. Build a
little at a time, obtain incremental reviews and approvals, and maintain a controlled
evolution.
- Projects require clear approvals and sign-off
by sponsors. Clear approval points, accompanied by formal sign-off by sponsors,
SMEs, and other key stakeholders, should be demarcation points in the evolution of project
deliverables. It's this simple: anyone who has the power to reject or to demand revision
of deliverables after they are complete must be required to examine and approve them as
they are being built.
- Project success is correlated with thorough
analyses of the need for project deliverables. Our research has shown that when a
project results in deliverables that are designed to meet a thoroughly documented need,
then there is a greater likelihood of project success. So managers should insist that
there is a documented business need for the project before they agree to consume
organizational resources in completing it.
- Project managers must fight for time to do
things right. In our work with project managers we often hear this complaint:
"We always seem to have time to do the project over; I just wish we had taken the
time to do it right in the first place!" Projects must have available enough time to
"do it right the first time." And project managers must fight for this time by
demonstrating to sponsors and top managers why it's necessary and how time spent will
result in quality deliverables.
- Project manager responsibility must be matched
by equivalent authority. It's not enough to be held responsible for project
outcomes; project managers must ask for and obtain enough authority to execute their
responsibilities. Specifically, managers must have the authority to acquire and coordinate
resources, request and receive SME cooperation, and make appropriate, binding decisions
which have an impact on the success of the project.
- Project sponsors and stakeholders must be
active participants, not passive customers. Most project sponsors and stakeholders
rightfully demand the authority to approve project deliverables, either wholly or in part.
Along with this authority comes the responsibility to be an active participant in the
early stages of the project (helping to define deliverables), to complete reviews of
interim deliverables in a timely fashion (keeping the project moving), and to help
expedite the project manager's access to SMEs, members of the target audience, and
essential documentation.
- Projects typically must be sold, and resold.
There are times when the project manager must function as salesperson to maintain the
commitment of stakeholders and sponsors. With project plans in hand, project managers may
need to periodically remind people about the business need that is being met and that
their contributions are essential to help meet this need.
- Project managers should acquire the best
people they can and then do whatever it takes to keep the garbage out of their way.
By acquiring the best people -- the most skilled, the most experienced, the best qualified
-- the project manager can often compensate for too little time or money or other project
constraints. Project managers should serve as an advocate for these valuable team members,
helping to protect them from outside interruptions and helping them acquire the tools and
working conditions necessary to apply their talents.
- Top management must actively set priorities.
In today's leaner, self-managing organizations, it is not uncommon for project team
members to be expected to play active roles on many project teams at the same time.
Ultimately, there comes a time when resources are stretched to their limits and there are
simply too many projects to be completed successfully. In response, some organizations
have established a Project Office comprised of top managers from all departments to act as
a clearinghouse for projects and project requests. The Project Office reviews the
organization's overall mission and strategies, establishes criteria for project selection
and funding, monitors resource workloads, and determines which projects are of high enough
priority to be approved. In this way top management provides the leadership necessary to
prevent multi-project log jams.
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