Archive for September, 2010

What is Management?

September 23rd, 2010


Management is different from leadership but just as important. To understand the nature of management, we need to be clear how it differs from leadership. The first step in answering the question: “What is management?” is to understand the basic tasks of all organizations. Like any other species, an organization needs to take care of its immediate business of survival but it also has to evolve to ensure its fitness to cope with changes in the environment and the actions of competing species.

Management is the function that organizes the execution of today’s business. Leadership is the evolutionary mechanism that changes organizations to prosper in tomorrow’s world. Whenever a species or individual animal runs into obstacles, variations occur and new forms are selected from those variations. Leadership is a risk taking type of action that explores new frontiers and promotes new ways of behaving. It follows that, in a stable environment, good management is all that is needed to prosper; leadership in this context isn’t required.

This portrayal is not the popular one where leadership means being the top dog in a group regardless of what’s going on in the environment. Also, management has been cast on the rubbish heap since the late 1970′s following the initial wave of Japanese commercial success in the West. We wanted a scapegoat for our failure to compete with the Japanese, and management was fingered for this role. Jack Welsh, Tom Peters and other gurus called for more leadership and an end to management, which they saw as stifling innovation. The reality was that a lack of competition created a complacent attitude AND lackluster management. It was the way management was practiced that was the problem, not anything to do with management as a function. We simply needed to upgrade management for a new reality.

Being hierarchical by nature and inclined to worship heroes, we tend to regard the person in charge of our group as a leader. But complexity demands specialization and executives need to perform multiple roles that depend on the unique demands of their situation. If their main function is to maintain quality, low cost and good customer service while motivating employees to perform to their potential, then they are performing the management function, not showing leadership.

Management is like investment. Managers have resources to invest – their own time and talent as well as human and financial resources. The goal or function of management is to get the best return on those resources by getting things done efficiently. This doesn’t entail being mechanical. The manager’s style is a contextual issue. With highly skilled and self-motivated knowledge workers, the manager can be very empowering. Where the workforce is less skilled or motivated, the manager may need to monitor output more closely. By saying that management is a function, not a type of person or role, we better account for self-managed work teams where no one is in charge. Managemenet simply makes the best use of all resources even when we manage ourselves. Hence management does not necessarily entail a dictatorial, controlling overseer. Skilled managers know how to coach and motivate diverse employees. Getting things done through people is what they do.

The aim of management is to deliver results cost effectively in line with customer expectations and profitably, in the case of commercial organizations. It is not only leaders who can be inspiring. Inspiring leaders move us to change direction while inspiring managers motivate us to work harder.

Management is a vital function thanks to the complexity of modern organizational life. The need to coordinate the input of so many diverse stakeholders, experts and customers requires enormous patience and highly developed facilitative skills. Excellent managers know how to bring the right people together and, by asking the right questions, draw the best solutions out of them. To facilitate well requires managers to work very closely with all relevant stakeholders.

By contrast, the leader can be a bit of an outsider. Like Martin Luther King, Jr. promoting desegregation on buses to the U.S. government from the sidelines, the leader can induce people to change even with no direct involvement or authority over the people who are needed to take the hoped for action.

Managers don’t just keep ongoing operations ticking over. They also manage complex projects like making a modern movie or putting the first man on the moon. Leadership is only required to sell the tickets for the journey or to resell it periodically if resistance develops, but management drives the bus to the destination.

By: Mitch McCrimmon

What is Organizational Change Management?

September 23rd, 2010


Wikipedia defines Organizational Change Management as follows: “Organizational Change Management aligns groups’ expectations, communicates, integrates teams and manages people training. It makes use of metrics, such as leader’s commitment, communication effectiveness, and the perceived need for change to design accurate strategies, in order to avoid change failures or solve troubled change projects.”

This is important for Agile Project Management because when we look at large enterprise projects this is most often the cause of failure. We have a stellar project manager, we have a superstar team of developers, a highly astute group of business analysts, and a core team of wizard architects, yet the project was still seen as a failure. Why?

Because the most talented project delivery team and the most sophisticated whiz bang technology doesn’t change the basics of human nature, and one of the basics of human nature is that people are resistant to change. OCM is a discipline that studies change in an organization (easy, right.)

Let me state it again: People hate change. When an engineer in 2010 looks at the DOS program that Mary has been using for the last 15 years to enter orders, then sees her print out the manifest, take it to Bob, who pulls the order from the shelf, writes the date, time and release on a piece of paper, then takes it over to Ned who gets it ready for shipping, he sees a Rube Goldberg machine that if properly digitized, optimized, and streamlined could unlock all kinds of value for an organization! Excelsior!

Not so fast Sparky. Mary knows how to do her job. Bob knows how to do his job, and Ned knows how to do his job. They have ingrained patterns of behavior that give them a certain level of comfort with the current system, warts and all. If you come in with a customized automatic digital sign-off and order routing system, the whole order to cash ecosystem could very well come to a screeching halt.

As Agile project managers and technologists, we cannot continue to look at software development and packaged software implementations in a bubble. We need to recognize that the cause of ‘perceived’ failure for many a project is the lack of understanding and respect for how and why people are prompted to change.

I have looked at many technology project plans and have seen no provisions for guiding the organization through the change curve. Zero understanding or respect paid to training the users (what do you mean, I’m a UI GURU…. IT’S INTUITIVE!!!). Try telling that to Mary when she says, “It just doesn’t work!” What she really means is “It just doesn’t work FOR ME. I didn’t buy into the idea, I wasn’t prepared, I wasn’t trained and dammit I don’t like it!”

The next time you are envisioning a project, don’t just think about the developers, DBAs, architects, testers, and business analysts. Think about a communication plan (early and often). Think about how you can get executive leadership to take a visible role in enabling change in the organization. Think about how you can expose the organization to the project progress, goals, and value. In short, think about your customer.

By: Tirrell Payton

Core Exercises of Effective Project Management

September 22nd, 2010


Effective project management can be done by two ways sequential and parallel activities. In sequential activities one step follows another. The first step must be done before the second can be started. The second step must be completed before the third can be started, and so on. These are also called dependent activities. One step depends on the successful completion of another. This is a main point to remember in managing a project of any size. Parallel or concurrent activities can be worked on at the same time, separate and apart from other activities. For example, if you are planning a new ERP system, you could be evaluating some vendor at the same time and also your ERP preparation simultaneously.

Once you have a target in mind and have listed or noted everything that you must do to active the target, and organized everything in terms of whether it is sequential or parallel, you are ready for the core exercise of effective project management. It is the main point to your future in the world of work. It is the process of selection and allocation. The bigger the project, the more people and the more specialists in different areas, will be required to carry it through to successful completion of the project. Here effective project management plays an important role.

Your capability to choose right people and then to delegate effectively to them will determine, as much as any other factor, your success or failure of the project. This core exercise of effective project management will decide your project success or failure. A mistake in choosing or a wrong delegation can be enough to derail the entire project or to set it back, or to have run in excess of budget.

Many people have been able to shoot ahead in their career by taking on a project and then performing in an excellent fashion. Others have found themselves bypassed for promotion because when they were given a project to carry out, they did not take it seriously, and their lack of results damaged the confidence of their superiors in their abilities and performance. Effective project management is serious stuff. Almost all problems in business are project management problems. To deal with this serious problem project manager should be careful in selecting the project team. He should do core exercises of effective project management mentioned in this article. These core exercises will help project managers to handle large project without difficulty or less difficulty.

By: Nick Mutt