What do Six Sigma, ITIL, and Project Management have in common? These three disciplines all have associated business certifications, living largely in the ‘business’ versus technical realm, and all relate in some way to processes. But how can these disciplines relate to one another in such a way that greater value is created for the individual as well as the organization?
Search Results for project+management
Some Ideas on Six Sigma, ITIL, and Project Management
September 2nd, 2010 · No Comments
Tags: Project Management Process
Prioritize Using Theory of Constraints
June 23rd, 2010 · 1 Comment
Often it is hard to decide to what to do first, or what to do next. In fact, in my experience, it is often easier to make such decisions on large projects than smaller projects. The Theory of Constraints is a neat concept that can help.
Tags: Main
Performance Metrics – We Can Only Manage What We Measure Well
June 9th, 2010 · 4 Comments
“Performance metrics” is an especially popular topic in management today. The idea is to try to measure everything by some sort of metric that gives a true picture of our degree of success or effectiveness. But like many management techniques, it is subject to misuse. Here are my suggestions for identifying relevant metrics and using them effectively.
Tags: Project Management Process
Performance Metrics – We Can Only Manage What We Measure Well
June 9th, 2010 · No Comments
“Performance metrics” is an especially popular topic in management today. The idea is to try to measure everything by some sort of metric that gives a true picture of our degree of success or effectiveness. But like many management techniques, it is subject to misuse. Here are my suggestions for identifying relevant metrics and using them effectively.
Tags: Project Management Process
Sales Success Parallel for Effective Stakeholder Management
May 17th, 2010 · 2 Comments
Managing becomes so much easier when you build a foundation for what you are managing. In essence, this means getting intimate with the requirements, as well as the needs of the stakeholders. Stakeholder management and familiarity with requirements rank about as high as it gets as determinants of project success. The reason is simple: they form the basis upon which everything else is built. Building a strong foundation in these areas makes it easy to take any next steps toward managing the project.
Tags: Soft Skills
If you want to ‘lead the charge’ – become more valuable
May 1st, 2010 · 15 Comments
Earning your PMP certification can help you to better ‘lead the charge’. And, conversely, learning to ‘lead the charge’ will definitely help you to become a more effective project manager – whether you are a PMP, CAPM, or neither. But what comes first, the chicken or the egg?
Tags: Main
Is change the answer…or is it focus?
April 12th, 2010 · 1 Comment
I typically find change to be refreshing, but also find that it is not always possible. I also find that I have great admiration for those who can maintain a fresh and consistent outlook all of the time. They can be at the top of their games all of the time – and not necessarily incorporate that same type of change component that I do.
Tags: Soft Skills
Achieving Work/Life Balance
March 22nd, 2010 · 3 Comments
If you are at all like me, achieving work/life balance is a challenge. As I think about it, there are a few key things that present the greatest obstacles – and thus provide the starting point for managing the situation.
Tags: Soft Skills
Leadership skills: A Never Ending Quest
February 15th, 2010 · 3 Comments
We never really arrive at the end of the road in our quest to become leaders. We may achieve [tag-tec]leadership[/tag-tec] status in some way but it is always a moving target. Indeed, I believe it is our own movement on a continuous basis that can enable us to maintain ourselves as a leader. One way that we can do this is by continuously evaluating our own leadership capabilities.
Tags: Soft Skills
The Key to Performing an Effective Analysis of Alternatives
February 10th, 2010 · 1 Comment
Oftentimes, as[tag-dir]project managers[/tag-dir] and leaders, we are called upon to compare a variety of potential solutions and to either recommend or choose the best one for our situation. There are a variety of ways to do this. It is important for us to recognize that the answer we come up with is very closely related to the questions we ask and how we do the comparison. Many times—perhaps even most of the time—we do this comparisons in a relatively informal way, putting together our own structure. In other cases however, there is a much formalized organizational structure with a formal name such as [/tag-tec]“analysis of alternatives”[tag-dir] that is performed.




