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Friday, July 09, 2004
 
Tim Sanders Will Deliver Keynote Address At PMI's Congress

Best-Selling Author Tim Sanders to Deliver Keynote Address At Project Management Institute's North American Congress: This is the same guy delivering a keynote speech at the Coachville Annual Conference. Tim Sanders, Love Cat, is reason enough to attend!

Wednesday, July 07, 2004
 
Five Keys for Coordinating Action on Projects

We can all succeed at our projects. The secret is staying nimble to the ever-changing project circumstances and the interests of project participants. The key skill is coordinating action.

The Project Reformer's e-Tip of the Week
029: Coordinate Action for Project Success

Last week I wrote about Measure Plan Reliability as a first and necessary step for improving project performance. People regularly ask me, "Why do projects go bad?" and "What should we be on the watch for?" While project team members are quick to speak about the outside influences that derail their projects, my experience is teams are mostly responsible for the plight of their projects. In other words, the factors for succeeding and failing are within your control. The main issue is coordinating action.

I view a project as a network of commitments. One person makes a promise for completing a task that others depend on for starting their work, and so on, and so on, and... Many project teams never articulate and activate the network of commitment. Instead, they try to manage and take direction by a schedule. This is a recipe for failure. The future is uncertain. No schedule can possibly anticipate what the team members will be doing with each other or in their lives. Consequently, planning must continue on a weekly and even daily basis if the team is to stay on track.

Top 5 Ways to Elminate Miscoordination Variances

  1. Get reliable promises.
    Listen critically for the presence of all elements of reliability.

  2. Anticipate possible breakdowns.
    Prepare actions for circumvention.
  3. Stay engaged with the performers.
    Show interest inothers' success and provide help.
  4. Pay particular attention to those actions that make work ready.
    Minor interruptions can result in major task variances.
  5. Acknowledge performers for their success and their efforts.
    Timely appreciation makes the difference.

By honing your project team's skill at coordinating action they will be able to adust and stay on the desired overall project plan.

Next up: Securing reliable promises.

Based on lesson 23 of The First 30 Days on the Last Planner System™
©2004 Hal Macomber | weblog.halmacomber.com | e-Tip Archive | PDF | Submit Tip

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