Reforming Project Management |
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Friday, December 20, 2002
Quick Lesson on Reliability
I have another writing project that readers may be interested in. John Satta and I are writing a weblog CoachBlog™. John was invited by Thomas Leonard, founder of Coachville, to explore the role of blogging for coaches. John also has his own weblog Yellow Sticky.
This week I set out to show syndicated learning to the coaching community by writing a five-day tutorial on reliable promising. While it is not very ambitious, the series shows most of the elements of syndicated learning. (I'll comment more on that at the end of the series.) Do the reliable promising tutorial for a boost in reliability on your project. Or, invite others to do so! In the coming weeks John and I will explore how one can coach through blogging. Should be fun. Stop by and subscribe. Please leave a comment if you do the exercises.
Thursday, December 19, 2002
Nothing Beats a Functioning Team
While going about my day, I recalled two other observations about the jobsite and project team I visited last week.
Wednesday, December 18, 2002
Driving Project Reliability
My friend Joe (Learning About Lean) asked me to offer more observations and assessments of my jobsite visit last week. I haven't discussed this with the project team, so out of courtesy I will offer some general comments based on my visits with them and with a number of projects in the last month.
Greg Howell and I regularly visit well-run projects. It seems that only people who are doing relatively well are sincere about their intentions to improve. There's a book that expresses that sentiment, Better Makes Us Best. The team I visited had that attitude. The members ask questions, invite assessments, and reach out to each other for help. I can't stress the importance of this enough. I'll take a rookie team who asks for help over a know-it-all experienced team any day. Well-organized jobsites and high project reliability go together. The site I visited was clean and organized. While I didn't inquire how long particular material had been on site, there wasn't much lying around. This is consistent with lean principles, specifically eight wastes. Now when I see a well-organized site I expect to see a project that is on time and on budget. Planning is an everyday practice. I was particularly struck by the negotiating underway last week. I am used to seeing people trying to reschedule today's activities based on what didn't get done or went wrong yesterday. The negotiating that was going on had to do with work to be performed in the coming weeks. There are two significant points to that:
One last observation...I noticed a wonderful mood among the project team. Some people might say, "Of course! The project is on schedule and on budget." Sure, that helps. Or, is their mood contributing to the good results? Time and again I see the project leaders of high performing teams taking the time to shape the mood of the team. The leaders do this in the stories they tell. One way of doing this is with a project k-log. I wrote about this October 8th Project Klogs: Changing Paradigms. An even better way is by being with the project team everyday. Not only are you in a position to tell the story, you are part of it.
Tuesday, December 17, 2002
Work is Completed More Quickly With Better Project Management
Builders Seek to Demolish Inefficiency:
Work is Completed More Quickly With Better Project Management The subtitle reminds me of those usual local newspaper articles, Stores Crowded before the Holidays and Dog Bites Man. In spite of the title, the article is quite well-written. The publication is available only by subscription. The article appeared in the December issue of Lean Manufacturing Advisor. The editors at Productivity Press interviewed leaders of companies adopting a lean approach to construction projects along with Greg Howell, my partner and Executive Director of the Center for Innovation in Project and Production Management, d.b.a. Lean Construction Institute. Instead of offering a summary, I'll provide some of Paul Reiser's quotes. Paul is Vice President for Production and Innovation at The Boldt Company. Take note of Paul's title. I rarely see construction company titles that refer to production, let alone innovation. It’s not uncommon for our best lean projects to be characterized by 20 percent schedule improvement, significant cost savings, and highly satisfied customers.Along with the article, Productivity included some of the planning documents Boldt uses and a mini-case study Lean is the Right Formula for Rice Chemistry Building detailing Linbeck Construction's early experience adopting lean project management -- another good read. Maybe we should get used to seeing the headline Work is Completed More Quickly With Better Project Management replacing the now usual Construction Project Delayed.
Monday, December 16, 2002
Reliable Promising and Lean Approach Gets the Job Done
Last week I observed the Last Planner™ System in operation at a good-sized construction project by The Neenan Company. After touring the jobsite I was able to sit-in on their weekly work planning meeting. The team was doing quite well keeping the project on schedule and on budget.
The meeting took the usual form:
At the end of the meeting I made the following suggestions to the project manager:
Sunday, December 15, 2002
Projects, Planning, and Promising (Back from Colorado)
Here's a synopsis of the Projects, Planning, and Promising lecture at CSU. I started, rather than finishing, with my recommendations for improving project performance. Later, we discussed the theory behind the recommendations.
Thank you all at CSU for the opportunity to share my thinking.
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