Give an original response to the following statement, explain why the lack of support.
Most IT initiatives fail because they lack the total support of upper management.
Challenge @1 - Lack of Visibility of all Projects
A common reason why projects fail is related to visibility. All
three tiers of the project team,
executive management, project managers, and team members, need
access to the right level of information
at the right time.
Executive Management
Executives often complain that they do not have visibility into
all current enterprise projects.
They often do not have access to the project schedules in
real-time. Sometimes project managers
present the plan at the outset of the project, then become
gatekeepers of the schedule, claiming
to executives that the schedule has not been updated recently and
is not ready to be shared.
The sponsors of a project and the executives do not have access to
a schedule or reports until
it is too late to either re-direct the effort or to cancel the
project. The net result that management
cares about is the cost of the schedule overruns to the
company.
Project Managers
Project managers often put together a schedule and plan at the
outset of a project.
The schedule does not always get updated for a variety of reasons.
The project managers are so preoccupied
with managing issues and re-organizing resources that they do not
have time to update the tasks on the schedule and review their
impacts.
In fast paced environments, project managers are asked to work
on several projects at one time.
Many project managers attempt to keep pace with the task updates on
their project schedules.
Those that do, end up acting as 'glorified administrators,'
spending a lot of time asking resources about task progress.
Project managers often lack visibility into all of the projects
their resources are working on.
Many times they share team members with other project managers, so
they may not know exactly what tasks the resource is working on
that day.
Team Members
The most frequently heard complaint from team members is that
they lack visibility on a day to day basis about the
tasks that they are supposed to work on. If they are working on
multiple projects at one time, they are often confused about task
priority.
Solution @1 - Publish Projects to a Visible Location
The best solutions are a combination of tools, process, and
people-based changes. The tool portion of this solution
is to provide the team with a centralized location for publishing
all project schedules. The simplest way to share
project schedules is to post project files in a network folder,
setting permissions on the folders using Windows
folder and group permissions for access rights.
A better solution is to push projects and corresponding
documents to Share Point, or other intranet or extranet
solution,
again setting access rights. The best tool for the job is to
provide a complete enterprise project management solution
where
all projects are centralized in one database. If the team uses a
web based system, then project information may be accessed
from remote if team members travel, work from remotely, or need to
update information from client offices.
The process part of the solution is to empower team members to
update their own tasks in the centralized system. Obviously
there are some serious limitations to this if the team is simply
posting information on the network, versioning being the
biggest
issue. However, if an enterprise, web-based project management
solution is used, then team members may update their own tasks
and
the information is presented in real-time. This relieves the
project manager from the administrative aspect of getting
task
updates from team members. It also has the effect of pushing the
work to the appropriate level, that is, to the person
actually
performing the work. In addition, the executive management team has
real-time visibility into all projects, their percentage
complete,
actual hours spent and the financial impact.
The success of the implementation involves executive management.
Executives must communicate to all team members the
importance
of updating tasks and projects on a daily basis. The leadership of
top management cannot be minimized. With Project Insight
implementations, we have found through experience that the most
successful teams are those whose leadership team has reinforced
the
request for team member and project manager updates through
incorporating the behavior change in performance evaluations,
MBOs, and other measurement drivers. If the executive leadership is
lacking, then any attempt to change behavior through
implementing
process changes and software solutions will ultimately fail.
Challenge @2 - Unclear Project Objectives
Most organizations have more opportunities and project initiatives
than they can ever hope to fulfill. Many companies embark
upon more initiatives than they probably should, causing over
worked and often unhappy team members.
Executive Management
Executives play a key role in this issue. Some organizations
have not adequately defined their goals and strategies.
If top management is not clear on project priorities, then it
follows that the entire organization is also unclear about
which projects are the most important. Many organizations get so
busy that they forget a key component of success is taking
the time out to meet and discuss goals and strategies to reach
those goals. Once these elements are outlined, many projects
are eliminated for not matching up to those goals.
Project Managers
Many times, project managers are given so many projects that
they cannot realistically achieve them on time and on budget.
Some of the more experienced project managers may push back,
telling management that all efforts cannot be achieved.
However,.
many project managers do not, either in fear of losing their jobs,
or not wanting to 'rock the boat.' The lack of vision and
leadership at the top of the organization flows downward so that
project managers are managing more projects than they should.
Team Members
The natural result of this lack of prioritization is that team
members are often over worked. Eventually, some may leave the
organization seeking a less hectic environment.
Solution @2 – Rank Project Initiatives
It is the role of executive management to determine the
organization's long term goals and the strategies for attaining
those
goals. Once these goals are clearly defined, then project
initiatives may be weighed against these goals. So if a project
initiative
does not fit the long or short terms goals of an organization, it
should not be embarked upon. Then, the remaining projects may
be
ranked in order of priority.
Some of the largest and most sophisticated corporations have
risk assessment departments whose sole role is to evaluate all
the
possible opportunities of the organization and determine which
initiatives have the most revenue potential. However, not all
companies have risk assessment departments. In fact, mid-market
players do not have these separate risk organizations.
Therefore,
it is even more important that executives step up to evaluate and
rank project priorities. Then management must clearly
communicate
these priorities to project managers and team members. A simple
numeric ordering system may be used.
Project managers should be consulted when weighing these
initiatives, as project managers have insight into the risks
involved with
different projects. This is particularly important for mid market
companies which do not have separate risk assessment
managers.
They must use the resources at hand. Project managers must then
embark upon the projects with the highest priority levels.
At a minimum, the project priorities must be communicated in
status meetings and reiterated frequently. If a project
management
solution is utilized, then the project priority should also be
designated in that solution as a visible reminder all team
members.
Challenge @3 - No Visibility into Resource Workload
Following the lack of project prioritization are usually overloaded
resources. It is a circular problem as well. That is, because
executive management has no visibility into all of the projects and
tasks the team is performing, they are often laboring under
the belief that the organization can achieve more than it is
capable of in terms of sheer workload.
Executive Management
Executive managers often delegate the assignment or allocation
of resources to resource managers and project managers.
If project priorities are not clearly established, then it is
highly likely that the organization will embark upon too
many projects at one time. The result is that the average team
member will have more work than time in the work day to complete
that work.
Project Managers
Project managers often state that executive management has no
idea how much work their resources actually have assigned to
them.
Unless the project managers are willing to stand up to executive
management, or have a way to show that their resources are
overloaded.
They are in trouble.
Team Members
The average team member is the most impacted by the lack of
visibility into the workload, as he or she is asked to work
extended
hours in order to attempt to fulfill the many projects, tasks, and
objectives. However, the result is an over worked, burned out
employee that may ultimately look for work elsewhere.
Solution @3 – Create a Resource Management Grid
Project Management Institute, Inc. (PMI) holds that if an employee
works an eight hour work day, then the resource should not be
assigned more than six hours of work. This allows the employee two
hours for the administrative aspects of his or her position.
So,
the first part of the solution has to be executive management
understanding this concept and committing to invoke a corporate
culture
of planning and managing resources effectively. If the organization
is simply committed to 'working on whatever is on fire,'
then nothing will change.
There are many ways to uncover what resources are working on and
when. The simplest tool is to use a white board with a daily
grid displaying the task being performed and the team member that
is working on that task. For some fast paced environments,
this solution may work well. Of course, there has to be a point
person to manage the white board.
Many project teams use Excel spreadsheets to outline the tasks
and the team members working on those tasks. Again, usually
there is one point person, as Excel is not a collaborative solution
and should have an owner. This can be cumbersome for
organizations with multiple projects.
More sophisticated teams benefit from using a centralized
resource management and allocation software solution. These
solutions
allow projects, tasks, and resources to be input while in planning
stage. Then the workload of each resource may be viewed in
a graphical report, giving resource managers, project managers, and
executives the ability to see the total workload. Once the
total workload is assessed, choices may be made about which
projects to delay, or which projects to assign additional resources
to,
and the like. Without insight into the actual workload of the
entire team, chaos is likely to reign, rather than a
thoughtful,
planning culture.
Challenge@4 - Gaps in Communication
Once a project is in full swing, a common issue is communication.
Most project teams use email to communicate about their
projects
and tasks. The biggest complaint here is that project communication
resides in each individual's email box. So, if a new resource
joins the project, there is no centralized view of the project
history.
Executive Management
Executive managers usually rely on weekly or monthly status
reports from project managers for project status. This leaves
the
information about the projects in the hands of the project manager.
Some executives have complained that project managers hold
the communication 'hostage.' As project sponsors, there is no
reason why executives should not have access to the project
dialogue.
Project Managers
The use of groups in email is very common. Project managers may
email an entire group a communication about a project.
The issue comes up with the responses when some team members forget
to click on 'reply to all' and some team members do
not receive the email or communication, yet the assumption is that
all team members have been looped in.
Team Members
Team members complain about the volume of emails they receive
and the burden of sorting through the emails, finding those
that are most relevant to them. This practice wastes a lot of
valuable time that they could be working on tasks, instead
they are sifting through emails.
Solution@4 – Provide a Centralized Location for
Communication
At a bare minimum, communication should be posted in a centralized
location. The lowest common denominator seems to be the
organization's network. The purpose of centralizing the project
communication is so that if new resources join the effort
mid stream, they can get up to speed rapidly by reviewing the
entire project history.
The better solutions are the web based collaborative and project
systems that provide a centralized location for project and
task communication. This software solves the issue by posting all
relevant project information in one place.
For project teams with client facing projects, centralized
communication helps to resolve questions and issues that
arise
on projects and tasks. The communication may be referred to for
clarification of scope, goals, and other key decisions
made during the project. For teams that must comply with FDA or
other regulatory bodies, maintaining all of the project
communication in one place is imperative. Project teams might as
well get serious about providing a solution to this issue.
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