Tag Archive for Project management

Tips to Blend Agile, Waterfall

Tips to Blend Agile, WaterfallThere is a battle waging for the hearts and minds of project managers. The battle is between Agile advocates and Waterfall supporters according to Eric Morgan, in a recent FierceCIO article. The CEO of AtTask explains that Agile loyalists see the benefit of empowering people and teams in a bottom-up approach that produces a faster, more responsive way of working.  Meanwhile, traditionalists prefer a top-down Waterfall approach that neatly outlines all the steps in the project and defines the scope, budget, and schedule upfront–minimizing risk and uncertainty.

use a mixed approach

So who is right? The article says neither. Rather the article says that organizations with successful development cycles seem to use a mixed approach, using both methodologies for different projects. They cite Amazon (AMZN), an Agile powerhouse, could not have built s core web services product without some top-down dictation of standards. According to the AtTask CEO, the real difficulty for organizations, therefore, lies not in choosing one methodology over the other, but in successfully mixing the two methodologies.

Whether your organization is already juggling multiple methodologies or is considering adding Agile into the project management mix, here are four tips from the AtTask CEO on how to hybridize without sacrificing the visibility and productivity you need:

1. Transition to agile slowly

ScrumThe biggest issue organizations face in adopting or expanding Agile is the cultural transition. Change is never easy, and moving from a top-down culture of command and control to a bottom-up approach where workers self-organize and self-prioritize will certainly test your leadership team. the article stresses it’s a cultural transition that many people in an organization feel is disruptive and too much of a challenge to the established culture. To make the transition smoother and improve adoption, you should try to slow down your process transition. Understand that onboarding a system like Agile is a long-term commitment and because only certain teams will benefit from its methodology, make sure that your organization takes the time to strategically consider where it would be most effective.

Define up front what you are trying to accomplish with Agile so everyone can understand the benefits. In addition, developing a culture of respect and appreciation for both methodologies within the organization is important. Acknowledge what works well with Waterfall and when it is most appropriate to use. This extra effort will build trust; make people more open and resilient to trying new methods; increase buy-in from management and team members; and ensure that everyone is on the same page and trying to accomplish the same goals.

2. Provide professional agile training

With dozens of different aspects and processes, Agile is complex. The AtTask CEO warns that one of the biggest strategic mistakes organizations make is not getting professional training at the start. In particular, it is crucial that middle management participates in training. “Middle management really holds the keys to the success of Agile adoption. They create all the procedures and policies. If the middle is not on board, the transformation will be shunned,” says Dean Leffingwell, author of “Agile Software Requirements: Lean Requirements Practices for Teams, Programs, and the Enterprise.” When middle management is properly trained, not only do they understand the value of Agile for themselves, but they can be influential in mentoring the team and in demonstrating the value of Agile to the leadership.

3. Allow teams to communicate

In Allow teams to communicatemany organizations, Agile teams often become insulated from the rest of the organization. According to Mr. Morgan, they work in a kind of bubble, rarely interfacing with other teams or departments. However, communication and collaboration are two of the most critical elements of an effective mixed-methodology enterprise. Finding a way to enable visibility and communication across distributed teams, such as developing standard processes for organizing requirements and cross-team development, ensuring comprehensive release visibility for both upstream and downstream stakeholders, and managing the entire work life-cycle within one tool, will make hybrid organizations much more productive.

4. Speak a language everyone understands

The nuanced terminology associated with Agile is often an area ripe for miscommunication according to the author. In addition to making sure everyone understands the terminology and is speaking the same language, it’s important to identify key data points, such as what the team is working on, where the team is along their work process, and when the team will complete the task. Then, translate the data points into either methodology. No matter what methodology your teams choose, the work being done ultimately must be visible to the organization’s management and executive teams. Because manager reports and dashboards tend to focus on Waterfall-centric metrics, Agile teams need to ensure they are able to translate their results and progress accordingly. Moving to a mixed management style will always present challenges.

The article concludes that adoption may happen in baby steps, and not leaps and bounds. Following these four tips, however, can make implementation much more successful and enable you to structure projects in a more productive way to meet your business goals.

rb-

I have talked to several grey-hair PM’s and they have basically told me that Agile/Scrum is the best tool when you don’t know what you want and use PMBOK when you know what you want?

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Project Manager Shortage Predicted

Project Manager Shortage PredictedOrganizations may soon find themselves short of project managers. The shortage will put them at a great disadvantage as the economy continues to recover according to David Weldon at FierceCIO. The article cites the recent ESI International ESI 2013 Project Manager Salary and Development Survey.

Project managementThe project management training company surveyed 1,800 project managers in 12 different industries in the U.S. and found, “Budget constraints, an aging base of professionals and a looming talent war all contribute to a talent crisis that should be addressed from the highest levels of the organization,” Mark Bashrum, VP at ESI told CIO.com. The ESI VP continued, “The growing needs of businesses demand a more strategic view of the staffing, development, and promotion of their project managers since project execution impacts an organization’s bottom line and its ability to satisfy its customers.

CIO.com says the study, identified three primary factors for the project manager shortage:

  1. As the economy rebounds, many organizations are growing. In and of itself, growth is a good thing for businesses, but growth means more markets, more products, and more systems and that means more projects for which there aren’t enough PMs.
  2. Many project managers are reaching retirement age and leaving the workforce. According to the Project Management Institute (PMI), 60 percent of their members are over the age of 40. “This is a real problem because these are the people who understand the business,” says Mr. Bashrum. “Over the years they have not only acquired project management skills, but also an understanding of their industry and their organization; knowledge which is not easily replaced.
  3. Many organizations have stopped actively developing their existing project manager talent due to reductions in training budgets. “In many cases, this means they have very little in the way of ‘bench strength’ and do not have a qualified group of mid-level project managers ready to move up to the senior ranks as project demand increases,” he says.

Poor hiring praticesThe problem is especially severe for senior-level project managers, either because companies haven’t hired enough in the job market, or haven’t developed enough among internal staff.

Add to that the larger issues of shortsighted hiring practices, a lack of competency planning, and a reduced focus on training and development, and many company’s business objectives are at risk,” the article notes.

Mr. Bashrum says the survey found it can take up to 10 months to bring an otherwise experienced project manager up to speed in a new organization. He also told CIO.com the specifics are different for each organization, but in general, Bashrum says business acumen and communication skills are at the top of the list. He adds that negotiation skills, critical thinking, and problem-solving skills are also extremely important.

rb-

The study seems to say that demand has steadily been increasing while supply has been flat which should mean higher salaries for all PMs, but even more so for specific industries and for senior PMs. 

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

5 Tips To Make Meetings Less Painful

5 Tips To Make Meetings Less PainfulSalesCrunch has created a guide to “meetings that don’t suck.” The firm collected data from its management software, which tracks things like if people are really paying attention (looking at the screen or not), and if follow-up materials are opened. The BusinessInsider says the Web conferencing company crunched the numbers and came up with 5 good tips for the next time you call a meeting.

1. The 15-minute meeting. No meeting should last more than 30 minutes. After 30 minutes, they are giving one-quarter of their attention to something else.

2.  Everyone needs to talk.  If all participants talk, people will give the meeting 92% of their attention. If someone is yammering on, it gets only 78% of their attention.

3. Send follow-up materials within 5 minutes. Nearly two-thirds of attendees will read them within one day. A few more will be read the next day, but not many.

4. Shorter follow-up materials are better read. People will spend 52 seconds with a short follow-up. But they will spend only 10 seconds on a mega 100-slide deck.

5. Reach out via LinkedIn immediately. Nearly three-quarters of meeting attendees will accept a new LinkedIn connection after an online meeting.

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Some of these I do better than others. I like to keep my meeting simple while trying to engage everybody in the conversation. My follow-ups tend to be more formal meeting notes so they take longer to get them out. So my meetings are less painful than others.

Don't Such at Meetings

© 2012 SalesCrunch

 

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  • Study finds web conferencing popular but underutilized (shoretel.com)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Vendor Speak

Vendor SpeakAccording to CIO Magazine article (CIOInsight, May, 2005, p. 20) by David Weindenfled, counsel for McDonald’s.

They say

They mean

“usual and customary”

“Whatever the vendor has been getting away with”

“commercially reasonable”

“Whatever the vendor considers reasonable”

“for internal business use only”

“software may not necessarily be used by your business partners or companies that you merge with or acquire”

“the current or then in effect”

“vendor can change the fees and service levels whenever it wants”

“will perform in accordance with the published specifications”

“product performs according to the vendor’s technical specifications, but not your company’s business needs”

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.