Thursday, May 28, 2009

Bookmarx 05/28/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Bookmarx 05/27/2009

  • CEO's need to understand how and why CIO's act they way they do in order to effectively navigate human behaviour and maximize their value from IT.

    tags: PMIT, PM, Management, CIO, Leadership

  • Whoda thunkit? 5 Simple Steps to controlling your project:

    1. Define what will be measured and/or tested and how often.
    2. Monitor progress and evaluate deviations from the plan.
    3. Report progress.
    4. Analyze the report.
    5. Take action where necessary.

    Not rocket science at all. The only problem is that people just don't do it. So, do it.

    tags: PM, ProjectManagement, Control

      • Define what will be measured and/or tested and how often. This should incorporate business requirements, cost constraints, technical specifications, and deadlines, along with a preliminary schedule for monitoring that includes who is responsible for it.

      • Monitor progress and evaluate deviations from the plan. During each reporting period, two kinds of information are collected:  (1) Actual project data, which include time, budget, and resources used, along with completion status of current tasks.  (2) Unanticipated changes, which include changes to budget, schedule, or scope that are not results of project performance. For example, heavy rain may delay the completion of a housing project.  Earned value analysis, described later in this chapter, is a useful method for evaluating cost and schedule deviations.

      • Report progress. Keep reports succinct and timely. Do not delay a report until after a problem is “fixed” to make the report look better. Likewise, avoid lengthy reports that delay the dissemination of important information to others in the organization.

      • Analyze the report. Look for trends in the data. Avoid trying to “fix” every deviation. If there is no trend to the deviation, it likely does not require corrective action at this time.

      • Take action where necessary. This includes updating the project plan and notifying any stakeholders who are affected by the changes. If the changes are big enough, they will require stakeholder approval in advance.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Bookmarx 05/21/2009

  • THE FIVE PHASES OF PROJECT MANAGEMENT
    1. Initial enthusiasm
    2. Inevitable problems
    3. Search for someone to blame
    4. Punishment of those who are innocent
    5. Praise and reward for the non-participants

    tags: PM, ProjectManagement, Top5

      • THE FIVE PHASES OF PROJECT MANAGEMENT




        1. Initial enthusiasm

        2. Inevitable problems

        3. Search for someone to blame

        4. Punishment of those who are innocent

        5. Praise and reward for the non-participants
  • Businesses embark on thousands of projects every year. Unfortunately, most projects are doomed to fail because the original success criteria were not met. The bottom line is that businesses talks a good game but they are not ready or willing to make the real investments necessary to deliver on time, on budget, and with high quality near 100 percent of the time. There are eight steps that, if followed as a single unit provide the roadmap to project management perfection.

    tags: PM, ProjectManagement, Steps, HowTo

  • A common concept in fundamental macroeconomics -- the capital projects are still out there. The needs for infrastructure are still there. We're just going to wait until the market shows us that it's a good time to actually move forward with it.

    tags: PM, ProjectManagement, IT

    • We were surprised to find that IT managers find that postponement is better than canceling projects,

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Bookmarx 05/20/2009

  • 1. Be an innovative leader.
    2. Be reliable.
    3. Energize yourself.
    4. Delegate.
    5. Be precise, focused and communicate effectively.
    6. Building a sustainable team.
    7. Build a continuous improvement culture.
    8. Stop procrastinating and start getting things done.

    tags: PM, Leadership, Management, Manager

    • communicate effective
      • There's a whole lot of irony going on right here. - post by stevewilheir

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Bookmarx 05/19/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Bookmarx 05/16/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Bookmarx 05/15/2009

  • Some of the most common management mistakes -

    1. Not communicating with the team. - Almost always a problem.
    2. Continually focusing on the negative.
    3. Changing policy due to one person. - This is a BIGGIE.
    4. Not understanding the needs and concerns of your team.
    5. Never admitting you’re wrong or never taking responsibility.

    tags: ProjectManagement, PM, Leadership, Management, Mistakes, Top5

    • don’t take across-the-board measures to correct it just because you’re afraid of confronting that one team member
      • I don't know HOW many times I see otherwise capable leaders trying to make process changes to correct a single person's statistically anomalous behavior problem. Words of absolute wisdom. - post by stevewilheir

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Bookmarx 05/14/2009

  • It’s common to hear the all-purpose methodology nullifier from the client or salesperson, “But this is a small project!” The inside project manager hears this phrase when he tries to convince the project sponsor that a project plan, a materials list, and a written scope are necessary. The external IT service provider hears it from the salesperson when she tells him that the new engagement he’s selling should include an additional 15% estimate for project manager duties.

    tags: PM, ProjectManagement


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Bookmarx 05/13/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Bookmarx 05/07/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.