There is a science to project management called the PMP exam. However, there is a true art to actually getting big projects done in government. Hear from young successful government leaders on how to get projects done in government – navigating the bureaucracy to building teams and alliances.
Project Management 101: Getting Things Done in Government
1. How to Win Friends and Influence People?
Relieve Their Pain
Douglas Brown
Vigilant Watch Integration
Douglas.Brown@vwi-inc.com
202-314-5199
2. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
All too often, PM (and other governance
functions) express value in terms of “increased
maturity” or “supposed to”
Even “alignment to business objective” is too
ethereal for all but top-level or executives
Inquiring minds want to know:
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3. Choose your target
Don’t aim at the wrong target Moving targets
Enterprise Architecture, EA-PMO tend to be viewed
portfolio management and as overhead and are under-
program management are resourced. One person must
intended to support strategic play several roles
(generally executive-level) Who is YOUR customer – at
decision-making this very moment ?
Project Management and IT Change your pitch if your
technical designs (even “EA” customer changes
patterns) support project-
level management of the
here and now
Tactical arguments won’t
convince real executives; far-
future visions are of little use
to the PM in the trenches
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4. Communications symptoms
EA/PMO value communications. Do they say:
EA/PMO is just adding layers of bureaucracy
The only reason the PMO talks to us is to fill out
their report
How is [EA-PMO] helping me [sell products, kill bad
guys, etc.]?
EA-PMO is an overhead function. It must
demonstrate value-add
What is that value? Relief, soon, for pain that is
being felt now.
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5. Listen, then deliver. Don’t lecture.
Customers do not care about Henry Gantt. They
just want to:
Get their projects started and finished
Get help from people who will help, not point out
what they already know
Reduce their burdens, not increase them
Don’t show how well you are following the book
Explain what specifically you can do to help
Don’t explain the doctrine or theory
Show that what you are doing works – for them
Then they’ll let you do whatever else you want
Then they still won’t care why it works, as long as it does
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6. If you hear … then …
Non-professionals cannot diagnose. They
describe symptoms (“pain points”)
Listen for the symptoms
Work out (for yourself) what helpful solution your
profession would offer
Work out (for yourself) what the solution would
look like
Describe what the solution looks like and how it
would work
“Back of the napkin” is usually sufficient
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7. About pain points
Pain point – something that is troubling me.
It is a symptom, not the disease itself.
Mostly, I don’t care about the disease, I care about the pain.
Use this deck as “food for thought”, to sharpen your ears
to real business needs that you can solve
Feel free to offer up more examples that gave you an entrée to offer
your solutions to the rest of the business ! Help your peers !
The following examples are not framed as “attacks on”
the PMO (although they can be).
Listen for any context in which these types of comments are heard.
Your value is in delivering a solution to the pain, not in “instituting”
PM as a discipline
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8. Mapping pain points to PM practices
PM service Typical Artifacts Sample Pain Point
addressed
Cost control Budgets Poor estimates, overruns
Scheduling Schedule chart Where/when questions
Scope Capability or requirements Everybody hates the system
document
Resource mgmt Resource loading charts Project approved, but nobody
working on it
Quality mgmt Test plans “Undocumented features”
Vendor mgmt RFPs, contractor reports Unhelpful vendors
Communications Status reports What is going on??
Risk mgmt Risk-loaded estimates Constant delays, overruns
Integration mgmt Cross-project dependencies Working at cross-purposes
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9. What do I do now?
Look at your EA/PMO briefings and turn your perspective
into customer perspective: WIIFM?
Listen to your sponsors and customers and hear what
their overall pain points are
Re-interview all stakeholders, if that’s what you need to do,
now that you are listening to them
Listen and note; don’t reinterpret to PM doctrine
You won’t be able to solve all problems ever, nor most
problems now. Just agree on 1 or 2 or 3 things you could
help solve now
Share with your professional peers ! You are not alone …
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