Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Customer Representation - A point to remember


Customer Representation
I found a good piece of information about customer representation onwww.projectsmart.com. In its clear and concise words, it is important to keep the whole process client motivated, and eventual possession of the project must rest with the business. You must guarantee you have enough user reserve to drive the project forward. If this is not available, you should stop the development. Follow a relaxed approach with the user group. This requires regular communication and ‘telling it like it is’.
Common Mistakes
  • Inadequate resources made available.
  • User representative made available part-time.
  • Underestimating the amount of user input needed during ALL stages of the project.
  • Business input does not end with a User Requirements Specification.
As the project moves into the design, development and user pilot stages, considerable and continuing business input is needed to define requirements at a much lower level of detail and to answer the many questions that arise.
It is a warning sign when users are not a willing part of the project team.

Is your team enthusiast?


Know your team
Team building and motivating employees are a process of inspiring and development of interest regarding interdependent goals, credibility, commitment and responsibility.
-          Keep your team posted- Setting goals which are attainable and involving your team for their input and keeping them informed about the work load, is the way to keeping the synchronization between you, the team and the ultimate goal.
-          Evaluate Performance -  Managers are there to keep an eye over the progress and performance of the goal. At the same time, he should be aware of the needs and requirements of the team to reach the goal. This improves the team building process up to a great extent.
-          Develop a habit of reward- Rejoice your success with your employees motivating them to achieve more in future. It is a way to improve their interest and encourage for a better performance. You can do this by adopting simple things in your attitude.
-          Be aware of your team! – You have to think more like a human than a manager here.  What does that mean ? Well, your team is a group of diversified individuals with different nature and inborn characteristics. In order to keep everyone motivated, the manager must know the team members by observing their performance, behaviors, nature on a personal basis. Call them with their names and keep a track of their perceptions and interests. These are all some key points for a manager to remember. Always!

Character First



Character Building for managers
Different situations reveal the true character of a person. So as with managers. Project adversaries and tough times also reveal the character of the manager and how he chooses his path even if something seemingly go wrong with the outcomes, but sticking to the decision which is ethically always right. The character building is the core value for not only managers, but in general as a human being as well.
Being a project manager requires a great deal to build your character and with time you will get to notice the importance of character as a precious asset.
I am going to highlight some points that are required to improve your character.
Some character building tips:
- Watch out for past behaviors – Get some flashback of your attitude, behavior or anything that had let people down or have hurt them Notice and ponder over it how to rectify those compromises.
-Identify your weaknesses- Look for any specific situations or thing which make you react in a certain way that is not likable. Recognizing those areas of your weakness may help you in future.
-Be generous in apologizing- Prepare your mind with all your heart to apologize to people whom you think you should. It is perhaps the first step to build your character and to face the reality with dignity.
-Plan for the future- When you have recognized your past mistakes and flaws, the next thing you have to do is to move ahead with new zeal and fresh mind and a clear heart.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Finding Tips on Successful Meeting?


Tips on successful meeting
Believe me it’s not easy to conduct a successful meeting in all the ways it has been destined. It is difficult to keep everyone to be on track and focused. Managers  need to make the meeting an overall success rather than a waste of precious time.  For this, you the managers, need to focus yourself first on the following points:
-          You should be well prepared about the meeting aim/purpose and what is going to be discussed. It gives a better opportunity to keep everyone else on the right track of the discussion. So you must plan before the meeting begins.
-          When the meeting starts, keep everyone engaged with a question and answer session. Involve everyone on the table.  Also the time keeper and record keeper  in the meetings, keep everyone in the correct attitude and active.
-          Managers must be capable of dealing any drift topic that occurs potentially in almost all meetings.  Follow an organized temperament and if the off topic discussion seems of some value too, make it a subject of the next meeting.
-          Feedback is the crux of the your meeting.  Get it from every participant and keep a record of every useful feedback that you receive.
Successful meting doesn’t just happen, you have to work to get the desired results always.  With all the professionalism and organized planning, you can assure to have positive outcomes.

Is your project getting a reality check?


Reality Check

There are times when every project manager needs to make sure that the project is getting ahead in the right direction. It’s status need to be checked so that the employees can stay informed and on track during the whole project.
It doesn’t a lot of resources or time to check your project’s reality, but the benefits are inevitable. It depends largely on the project’s scope. Manager’s can informally let everyone to know about the real goal of the project and to check the current performance according to that goal.
There are a few questions that a manager need to have answers for the reality check:
  1. How much the extent has changed? Managers need to recognize whether the capacity or the scope of the project has shifted and up to what extent. If there are things that have been integrated within the actual project scope, then these extra activities need to deal with accordingly or else your project might face failures.
  2. Is everyone still committed? Loss of commitment can be a dangerous aspect of our project to fail. Managers should pay attention that everyone is committed the way they should be. If not, then find the cause of exhaustion and resolve.
  3. What is the  likelihood of project completion on time? Time management is a crucial element of a manager’s job. If the answer of the question is “no” then managers should re-examine the performance with everyone on board. And check for the possible solutions that might help you in getting on track and completing on time.

Value your Resources



Value your resources
Resources are the root of any organization’s success and thus hold a significant and crucial importance for the well-being. Managers have a great responsibility to utilize these resources up to an optimum level and for this they require collaboration with every employee, making it a part of the shared goal.
Managers can’t get their desired goals only by conveying orders and call for a meeting for briefing. It takes a lot much more to integrate the process of utilizing the precious resources without wasting them. For this, the manager needs to motivate employees so that they can give their best with dedication and enthusiasm. It would not be wrong to say that it is an art to influence individual’s behaviors towards a common goal. Here I am going to share some points for managers that can be a great help.
-          Inspire. Managers need to keep this in mind all the time that human being’s greatest motivator can be an act of appreciation and boosting their self-esteem. With many theories supporting this idea that employees with greater self-esteem performs much better than those who lacks. The reason is obvious. Having a higher self-esteem means higher satisfaction which eventually leads to a better performance.
-          Confidence. Trust your team and their abilities. Many managers lack confidence which ends in panic and wrong assumptions. You have got to believe your people as with every relation to sustain, trust is the most important factor of all.
-          Be understandable. Managers should make company’s goals m and precise in front of their teams. Vague and formless tasks confuse employees and they simply can’t coordinate with the manager’s perception. The project manager has the responsibility to make things clear to his team to avoid misconceptions.
-          Skill balance. Managers have to make a precise balance between the skills of the employees and the desired set of potentials for the job. Managers should assign tasks to people who he thinks is the best choice to carry out the task so that he can be sure about the result.
-          Don’t force! Yes, there is a very fine line between being cheered or forceful. Managers should not compel their employees to work against deadly deadlines! They will not achieve anything instead of its repercussions.
-          Resolve issues. Keep an eye on the problems occurring and try to resolve them as soon as they surface with a justified and reasonable attitude.
Don’t forget to comment your opinions!

Friday, November 16, 2012

Project Manager Skills



project management skills

Project Manager’s required skills
The project manager needs an expansive base of knowledge for a successful acceleration of the project. Including, business knowledge, technical expertise and individual and team leadership.
Very broad skills and a deal of experience are needed to manage a large project successfully. They include business knowledge, technical skills and individual and team leadership skills.
Individual Skills
The Project manager must be a good representative with strong persuasive skills. He should have a good command over written skills as well that relate to the goal and ultimately to higher performance and assurance. High energy doesn’t always mean there must have an extraordinary physical involvement, but rather a manager must show intellectual dexterity and dedication with high potentials and zeal.
Team Skills
Awareness of various types of teams and to be able to work well with them in different situations is the key to team leadership and a successful project completion.
Technical Skills
Selecting projects can be challenging for which the technical skills are a plus.  From setting objectives, planning tricky projects,  consulting resources, financial allotments and creative thinking to solving problems, all require a specialist technical approach.

Managing in hard times



Managing in hard times

How to manage in the hard times?


Recessions are the worst part considered for most managers. But the true skill test is when a manager turns a seemingly bad scenario into a profitable one. How? Well, this is what we are going to discuss in the next few lines.
Turning or I would better call it extracting the best from the worst happenings, is the art and science of management. A manager has to keep some key and crucial tricks in mind that can really help him go through the toughest of times. I am not going to write about those tricks, but rather those mistakes that lead to a definite disaster.
-Do not concentrate on the number, procedures and the same practices that you were following in the good times.
-Do not blame anybody. Managers are after all human beings and tend to react unjustly and emotionally in order to shield his status. Some managers start to blame the economy, marketing, procedures or even their own people for bad performance. Remember, it’s not the quality that suits a manager in any way so avoid this blaming mindset always.
-Some managers just lose hope and eventually their self-confidence which has to be the base of their sustenance in facing the hard times. Depression leads to frustration and frustration leads to overall loss. So better for managers keep themselves from this state.
-Don’t react relentlessly without focusing on your skills that are necessary to stay in the game.
Remember, the recession has something good to offer but only if  you are preparing for it and utilize the time in your favor.

Top 10 procedures for Project Managers


Top 10 procedures for Project Managers

Project Management procedures
Attention all the managers! Follow these highly crucial factors and add to your routine.
10. Get acquainted with actions to explore new visions – Our thoughts are based largely on what we actually see or perceive. Managers have to be aware what other people are observing.
9.  Build relationships with your customers -  Keeping your client posted on your progress and activities is a great idea to build rapport.
8. Look after your team – Remember you can’t cater the client’s need unless you don’t take care of your own team.
7. Keep yourself updated with project goals. – It can be tough to stay on track while managing so many things at a time. Keep emphasizing your team that what your project goals are.
6. Deliberately create relationships – You have to be a relationship manager among  your team in order to motivate them.
5. Keep venturing – Learning is the source for success. Make habit to learn from adversaries. You, your team and your customers will benefit from this.
4. Organize carefully – Very crucial to fulfill the commitment and so is networking. Keep coordinating cautiously or else your project will drift.
3. Work together! – Be a team leader and collaborate with your team well integrated.
2. Pay attention to everything – Keep an eye over every single detail related to your team, listen their views and opinions and give them importance.
1. Expect the unexpected ! Managers need to follow this rule very carefully.  Anticipate events and be well prepared with your team and always keep the place empty for the uncertainty factor.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Six Sigma and Project Management


six sigma, project management


Every manager’s ultimate dream is to improve, to excel and to foster it s team, obviously by overcoming all the toughest situations that he may encounter for himself or for his team.  Understanding niche techniques and procedures help a lot in this venture of managers. I believe all the endeavors a  manager does depend largely on the saying “When there is will, there is a way.”
Business managers often speak to project managers for the difficult methods to build teams in order to resolve issues.
Six Sigma is actually an improvement program that helps project managers  with various tools and methods by focusing on key issues related to improvement and efficiency.  The enhancement of process and work is the major area of Six Sigma training methods.  Project management and Six Sigma are one integrated, they are not same but harmonizing each other.

The connections between project management and Six Sigma consist of:
·         Projects are utilized as the way to excel.
·         Project Management techniques are used both to enhance team work and management,
·         The involvement of project supporters to ascertain project ‘s victory.
·         Stages and life cycles are also similar in both
·         A highly skilled project leader is a must for both.
Six Sigma adds further extensible to project management as follows:
·         The set of influential tools and tricks for the improvement.
·         Arithmetical and Procedure thinking, to make the results better.
·         Variable factors understood to avoid hasty reactions.
·         Decisions are based on factual data with scientific methods.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Douglas McGregor's Theory X and Theory Y


Douglas McGregor, an American social psychologist, proposed his famous X-Y theory in his 1960 book 'The Human Side Of Enterprise'. Theory x and theory y are still referred to commonly in the field of management and motivation, and whilst more recent studies have questioned the rigidity of the model, Mcgregor's X-Y Theory remains a valid basic principle from which to develop positive management style and techniques.

McGregor's XY Theory remains central to organizational development, and to improving organizational culture.

McGregor's X-Y theory is a salutary and simple reminder of the natural rules for managing people, which under the pressure of day-to-day business are all too easily forgotten.

McGregor maintained that there are two fundamental approaches to managing people. Many managers tend towards theory x, and generally get poor results. Enlightened managers use theory y, which produces better performance and results, and allows people to grow and develop.
  
Theory x ('authoritarian management' style)
  • The average person dislikes work and will avoid it he/she can.
  • Therefore most people must be forced with the threat of punishment to work towards organisational objectives.
  • The average person prefers to be directed; to avoid responsibility; is relatively unambitious, and wants security above all else.
Theory y ('participative management' style)
  • Effort in work is as natural as work and play.
  • People will apply self-control and self-direction in the pursuit of organisational objectives, without external control or the threat of punishment.
  • Commitment to objectives is a function of rewards associated with their achievement.
  • People usually accept and often seek responsibility.
  • The capacity to use a high degree of imagination, ingenuity and creativity in solving organisational problems is widely, not narrowly, distributed in the population.
  • In industry the intellectual potential of the average person is only partly utilised.

Characteristics of The x Theory Manager
  • What are the characteristics of a Theory X manager? Typically some, most or all of these:
  • results-driven and deadline-driven, to the exclusion of everything else
  • intolerant
  • issues deadlines and ultimatums
  • distant and detached
  • aloof and arrogant
  • elitist
  • short temper
  • shouts
  • issues instructions, directions, edicts
  • issues threats to make people follow instructions
  • demands, never asks
  • does not participate
  • does not team-build
  • unconcerned about staff welfare, or morale
  • proud, sometimes to the point of self-destruction
  • one-way communicator
  • poor listener
  • fundamentally insecure and possibly neurotic
  • anti-social
  • vengeful and recriminatory
  • does not thank or praise
  • withholds rewards, and suppresses pay and remunerations levels
  • scrutinises expenditure to the point of false economy
  • seeks culprits for failures or shortfalls
  • seeks to apportion blame instead of focusing on learning from the experience and preventing recurrence
  • does not invite or welcome suggestions
  • takes criticism badly and likely to retaliate if from below or peer group
  • poor at proper delegating - but believes they delegate well
  • thinks giving orders is delegating
  • holds on to responsibility but shifts accountability to subordinates
  • relatively unconcerned with investing in anything to gain future improvements
  • unhappy
How you can manage upwards your X theory boss:
Working for an X theory boss isn't easy - some extreme X theory managers make extremely unpleasant managers, but there are ways of managing these people upwards. Avoiding confrontation (unless you are genuinely being bullied, which is a different matter) and delivering results are the key tactics.
  • Theory X managers (or indeed theory Y managers displaying theory X behaviour) are primarily results oriented - so orientate your your own discussions and dealings with them around results - ie what you can deliver and when.
  • Theory X managers are facts and figures oriented - so cut out the incidentals, be able to measure and substantiate anything you say and do for them, especially reporting on results and activities.
  • Theory X managers generally don't understand or have an interest in the human issues, so don't try to appeal to their sense of humanity or morality. Set your own objectives to meet their organisational aims and agree these with the managers; be seen to be self-starting, self-motivating, self-disciplined and well-organised - the more the X theory manager sees you are managing yourself and producing results, the less they'll feel the need to do it for you.
  • Always deliver your commitments and promises. If you are given an unrealistic task and/or deadline state the reasons why it's not realistic, but be very sure of your ground, don't be negative; be constructive as to how the overall aim can be achieved in a way that you know you can deliver.
  • Stand up for yourself, but constructively - avoid confrontation. Never threaten or go over their heads if you are dissatisfied or you'll be in big trouble afterwards and life will be a lot more difficult.
  • If an X theory boss tells you how to do things in ways that are not comfortable or right for you, then don't questioning the process, simply confirm the end-result that is required, and check that it's okay to 'streamline the process' or 'get things done more efficiently' if the chance arises - they'll normally agree to this, which effectively gives you control over the 'how', provided you deliver the 'what' and 'when'.
And this is really the essence of managing upwards X theory managers - focus and get agreement on the results and deadlines - if you consistently deliver, you'll increasingly be given more leeway on how you go about the tasks, which amounts to more freedom. Be aware also that many X theory managers are forced to be X theory by the short-term demands of the organisation and their own superiors - an X theory manager is usually someone with their own problems, so try not to give them any more.

Comments on Theory X and Theory Y Assumptions

These assumptions are based on social science research which has been carried out, and demonstrate the potential which is present in man and which organizations should recognize in order to become more effective.
McGregor sees these two theories as two quite separate attitudes. Theory Y is difficult to put into practice on the shop floor in large mass production operations, but it can be used initially in the managing of managers and professionals.

In "The Human Side of Enterprise" McGregor shows how Theory Y affects the management of promotions and salaries and the development of effective managers. McGregor also sees Theory Y as conducive to participative problem solving.

It is part of the manager's job to exercise authority, and there are cases in which this is the only method of achieving the desired results because subordinates do not agree that the ends are desirable.

However, in situations where it is possible to obtain commitment to objectives, it is better to explain the matter fully so that employees grasp the purpose of an action. They will then exert self-direction and control to do better work - quite possibly by better methods - than if they had simply been carrying out an order which the y did not fully understand.

The situation in which employees can be consulted is one where the individuals are emotionally mature, and positively motivated towards their work; where the work is sufficiently responsible to allow for flexibility and where the employee can see her or his own position in the management hierarchy. If these conditions are present, managers will find that the participative approach to problem solving leads to much improved results compared with the alternative approach of handing out authoritarian orders.

Once management becomes persuaded that it is under estimating the potential of its human resources, and accepts the knowledge given by social science researchers and displayed in Theory Y assumptions, then it can invest time, money and effort in developing improved applications of the theory.

McGregor realizes that some of the theories he has put forward are unrealizable in practice, but wants managers to put into operation the basic assumption that:

    * Staff will contribute more to the organization if they are treated as responsible and valued employees.

Theory z - William Ouchi
First things first - Theory Z is not a Mcgregor idea and as such is not Mcgregor's extension of his XY theory.
Theory Z was developed not by McGregor, but by William Ouchi, in his book 1981 'Theory Z: How American management can Meet the Japanese Challenge'. William Ouchi is professor of management at UCLA, Los Angeles, and a board member of several large US organisations.
Theory Z is often referred to as the 'Japanese' management style, which is essentially what it is. It's interesting that Ouchi chose to name his model 'Theory Z', which apart from anything else tends to give the impression that it's a Mcgregor idea. One wonders if the idea was not considered strong enough to stand alone with a completely new name... Nevertheless, Theory Z essentially advocates a combination of all that's best about theory Y and modern Japanese management, which places a large amount of freedom and trust with workers, and assumes that workers have a strong loyalty and interest in team-working and the organisation.