Looking at lessons learned from the current economic crisis, one that stands out pertains to how people are incentivized in business. Banks with risky loan portfolios somewhere along the line had incentivized their people to fill their portofolios with these loans. Somewhere along the line, the incentives did not incorporate some of the risks involved. How does this play out in project and program management?
Search Results for project+risk
Sensible Incentivizing
May 14th, 2009 · 46 Comments
Tags: Project Management Process
The Importance Of Deliverables
April 14th, 2009 · 1,898 Comments
Invariably, the same projects are defined later by people describing things that they worked on and activities that they did. What is missing many times are key deliverables.
Tags: Project Management Process
If Failure Is Not An Option, Don’t Talk About It
March 11th, 2009 · 73 Comments
In most situations on projects, failure simply is not an option. The project or program must succeed one way or another. We need to grapple with whether to do the project on one level; but once that decision has been made, it needs to be executed successfully.
Tags: Project Management Process
Communicating a Clear and Positive Way Ahead
March 10th, 2009 · 692 Comments
Project and program managers today are in a position of needing to grapple with many tough choices. We need to assess and re-assess our options and, in an almost tortuous way, develop a positive way ahead to communicate with our stakeholders. For us, the process of going through that struggle is important. But to our stakeholders, what is important is the positive way ahead that we have developed.
Tags: Project Management Process
Beware The Programmatics Trap
March 6th, 2009 · 895 Comments
Many project management positions are just that — positions managing projects. However, many other positions seemingly in project management are much more positions in programmatics. They involve tracking, reporting, working with metrics, and passing information on to decision makers. While, often, there is a need for these functions, there, often, also is not.
Tags: Project Management Process
3 Approaches for Project Management When Visibility Is Low
March 5th, 2009 · 1,102 Comments
These tough times are different from past recessions in that “visibility is low”. What I mean by that is that it is not just a matter of seeing that sales had declined a certain amount, or that certain costs had reached a certain amount; it is not just that there is a general slimming or pruning of weaker competitors across the board. The problem is that it is very hard to predict with any reasonable level of certainty what is going to happen next and, thus, we find ourselves driving through our challenges “with low visibility”.
Tags: Project Management Process
Right-Sizing 101
February 12th, 2009 · 1,428 Comments
In today’s economy, managers of all kinds are under pressure to right-size their businesses or business units. With the contraction of the economy, sales decreases trigger the need for rethinking, resizing, and reshaping throughout any organization. Projects and programs are no different. Let’s take a look.
Tags: Project Management Process
Measure Twice, Cut Once
January 20th, 2009 · 653 Comments
When thinking about stakeholder analysis, I am reminded of the old carpenter’s motto which is to “measure twice and cut once”. The idea here in project management is to make sure you have clearly laid out what is to be done before beginning a project. Now this being said, there are many shades of grey.
Tags: Project Management Process
Cooperating With the Inevitable In Your Projects And Programs
January 13th, 2009 · 469 Comments
Often times, in the day to day course of business, as well as life in general, we resist certain conditions if they are not favorable in some way to us. I would call this less resistance to change and more a matter of not accepting the inevitable.
Tags: Project Management Process
Check Your Assumptions
January 6th, 2009 · 423 Comments
In managing a project or program, we start with an objective, work in the details, get buying, put together a schedule, and implement. Of course, that is a very simplified version of what happens in project and program management but…





