Kristofer Pierscieniak
Nov 02 2010
Project Team Health: a Casualty of Business-as-Usual
While trying to address the perennial SCRUM-versus-waterfall question by researching project success rates, I came upon an interesting article in Dr. Dobb's Journal. After surveying over 300 project management practitioners with expertise in both Agile and traditional methodologies, the Journal was able to quantify success for 71% of Agile projects and 61% “traditional” projects. Whether this implies that self-organization effectively mitigates at least some risks, or that Agile projects are more disciplined than is commonly perceived, remains open to interpretation [more on this in my next blog entry], but even more interesting were the trends about workplace health, as documented almost as an afterthought on the survey’s periphery[1].
Tagged: Agile, captech way, Dr. Dobb's Journal, project success / project team success, Project Success Criteria, SCRUM versus Waterfall, Team Health, trends
Sep 29 2010
Project Management Leadership (part 3)
Introduction:
This month’s blog entry explores the complex relationship between project success and project leadership. Risk of failure is potentially higher for IT projects than commonly acknowledged and, by all accounts, it would appear that success hinges less on strict adherence to methodology than on leadership. Leadership, of course, assumes manifold forms, but in the context of this discussion I narrow it down to its core: the moral/ethical responsibility of project managers to "tell it like it is," so that appropriate decision-makers can make effective decisions in a timely manner.
This is the third and final part of the Project Management Leadership series, the first of which was published on 8/18. Here we make the link between success, leadership, and ethics explicit. Ethics in project management elude rigid definition,but realism (rather than optimism) is critical to every organization's ability to think critically and to maximize the opportunities for effective and timely decisions at every organizational level.
Tagged: captech, CapTech Consulting, Chaos Report, ethical decision making, ethical responsibility, ethics, IT, leadership, PM, PM methodologies, PMBOK, PMI, PMP certification, Program Management, Project Management, project success/failure criteria
Sep 14 2010
Project Management Leadership (part 2)
Introduction:
This month’s blog entry explores the complex relationship between project success and project leadership. Risk of failure is potentially higher for IT projects than commonly acknowledged and, by all accounts, it would appear that success hinges less on strict adherence to methodology than on leadership. Leadership, of course, assumes manifold forms, but in the context of this discussion I narrow it down to its core: the moral/ethical responsibility of project managers to "tell it like it is," so that appropriate decision-makers can make effective decisions in a timely manner.
This is the second of three parts, the first of which was published on 8/18. Here we shine the spotlight on ethics in the context of project success. Ethics in project management elude rigid definition, particularly as the PM discipline has evolved to encompass truly global projects, but even so, project management success is not synonymous with project success.
Tagged: captech, CapTech Consulting, Chaos Report, ethical decision making, ethics, IT, leadership, PM, PM methodologies, PMBOK, PMI, PMP certification, Program Management, Project Management, project success/failure criteria, Standish Group
Aug 18 2010
Project Management Leadership
Introduction:
This month’s blog entry explores the complex relationship between project success and project leadership. Risk of failure is potentially higher for IT projects than commonly acknowledged and, by all accounts, it would appear that success hinges less on strict adherence to methodology than on leadership. Leadership, of course, assumes manifold forms, but in the context of this discussion I narrow it down to its core: the moral/ethical responsibility of project managers to "tell it like it is," so that appropriate decision-makers can make effective decisions in a timely manner.
This entry will be published in 3 parts:
- Part 1 will discusses some of the long-term trends in project management, that have been recorded over the last 15 years. Given the ever-growing emphasis on rigorous management of IT projects, the interpretation of these findings continues being debated, but the conclusions are unambiguous.
- Part 2 will shine the spotlight on ethics in the context of project success. Ethics in project management elude rigid definition, particularly as the PM discipline has evolved to encompass truly global projects, but even so, project management success is not synonymous with project success.
- Part 3 will make the link between success, leadership, and ethics explicit.
I’m curious what experience others have had in this regard. Are there other aspects of leadership that play a pivotal role in your projects? Are ethics a primary driver of decision-making in your organization… or an ancillary consideration? What effect have these played on the successful delivery of your projects?
Please feel free to comment below.
Tagged: captech, CapTech Ventures, Chaos Repor, ethical decision making, ethics, IT, leadership, PM, PM methodologies, PMI, PMP certification, Program Management, Project Management, Project Management Leadership, project success/failure criteria, Standish Group
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The words and opinions expressed here are those of each article's respective author, and do not necessarily represent the views of CapTech Ventures.