11 mar 2012

Just read the PMBok book! (or not)

I still find strange that Project Management Best Practices are uncommon or not known by companies working with Engineering Projects. 

Being common in the Engineering(or almost any) discipline, projects represent doing something specific, like creating a new product, in a predefined period of time. Since the idea is to do it efficiently, using developed techniques (even templates) would be an easy way, a natural shortcut. Yet, many people still think that Project Management happens magically if you put many people and give them requirements to fulfill. It doesn´t, and after some time, the team ends up frustrated and the requirements, if fulfilled are done with pour quality or triple budget or time.


The Project Management discipline has been around for 30 year or so. There are hundreds or books, blogs, websites on the subject. You can take courses, even post graduate programs, or get certifications that are recognized worldly (like the PMP). Yet, still, in some organizations it’s a completely new and novel approach.

If by fate or choice you end up in such organizations, you might spend much of your time struggling to get your boss to read the damned PMBok. But it might not happen. It they made it so far without it, why will they want to change their approach? According to their experience, projects are messy but somehow get done.


Do you want to give the fight and try to change your organization? If you do, my advice is not to battle but show how project management techniques can solve daily problems efficiently. Take little steps, don´t fight (creating more chaos into the chaos). Remember one of the most important responsibilities of a PM is communicating. Make sure all people have the information they need when they need it, and that issues are properly communicated to the involved before becoming an issue. This talking, is nothing else but coordination. If you are able to do this successfully, you have gained a lot, and made a big step in the right direction.

Then, start using planning techniques to eliminate the sense of  "no control" your team might be experiencing. Start by doing a simple work break down structure, a list of tasks and a Pert diagram. (Try not to call them that, you boss might think you are bringing those hippie PM things). Planning means nothing if a team is not committed to fulfilling it. Try doing that, but just talking to people. A Schedule should not be enforced, but sweet talked into people. If the team is convinced the planning is right and the due dates are required to make it all work, you will then have a very decent planning and will be able to follow it and see significant delays.

Budget will not be hard to include into the plans and follow ups. Next step, will be to plan for quality. Both can be done by slowly including into the plan control activities. If you do all this, probably the project is over and you had a lot of work in it. But you will have interesting data to show your boss and your bosses boss. You can show results of using project management techniques and have arguments to keep on the battle for introducing the best practices you know really work.