26 dic 2018

Your unique set of skills


As I am ready to start a new endeavor, and with it, to establish a new team, I started thinking on what skills I already have. Every person on a team has a particular set of skills that give value to a project. As a Manager, being able to recognize these skills and take advantage of them, will help immensely in delivering the project or process as planned.

But the skill starts with oneself, the ability to recognize our own personal unique skills, and measure them objectively is one of the most valuable trades or a good executive. Know thy self, they say.

At this stage of my life, I am reviewing my past experience, my core values and deciding what are the skills I will develop even further. What is the Project Manager and Executive I am? This is what I have come up with so far:

For good or worst, I am aware of how everybody in a team provides value (or problems) from their own perspective. I have a great difficulty to see people as their titles or status, I see people. Jerarquies mean little to me, in work environment, I see people as their role in the particular project or scenario but have no special distinction on how I treat anybody, according to rank. So I do well in organizations with more horizontal structures, where people speak their mind and a good debate is always welcome, where respect is shown equally to everyone.

I also like to learn and speak other people's language. Even though I have a technical background you will not see me talking in IT technical jargon unless I am sure everyone in the room has also a technical background. I do not assume all people know the same as me and don't expect them to know what I know. I do good in interdisciplinary and multicultural teams.

I am an introvert. I am not shy or insecure, just an introvert. I am constantly having so much inner dialogue that I need to spend time with myself just to think. I like having lunch on my own and spend most of the time in a meeting in silence, listening and analyzing. I am bad at small talk and will avoid office parties if I can, but will develop deep connections with each person in the team. I just need to talk to them one at a time, get to know them, really listen.

I am goal oriented. I need to see tasks finished, and even when I take on multiple tasks at the same time, I will naturally use the Kanban approach and stop taking new ones until I have finished the first ones. I like working smart instead of hard, so, eventually will have no problem with canceling a task if it no longer provides value to the project or the organization. The reason to finish the task is to add value, not just mere stubbornness.

I am always thinking of the new product, the new service, the new something. I can´t help imagining new solutions to the problems I see. I am a startup person and will find a way to create a new startup or innovation team in where ever I can. I am also good at the excitement and the risk, the constant moving and adapting, the need to "move fast and break things". I am a specialist in Startup Project Management (yes, this is a thing! check it out: https://www.toptal.com/project-managers/startup)

Many of the projects I have worked on where software development. Software Engineering is probably one of the Engineering disciplines in which you develop more respect for being methodical and keeping best practices in mind at all times. Software projects can go wrong in so many ways, that you do not skip steps on the way. I started my career when RUP was the best thing available, and have seen the Agile take over in many scenarios. Then you complete your view with PMI and, you have a PM Certified Profesional, able to identify what is the best methodology for a particular project and then, using it to produce value.

Having been an Entrepreneur and CEO on medium-sized companies, I am very much aware of how costs and cash flow can affect the results of a project. It's not all technical, or about the quality. Money issues will determine if you survive or not. Keeping a business perspective is as important as finishing the tasks.

Finally, I think I am old enough to not take things personally. Many ways conflict comes from taking too personally things that are not even about you. Took me years to understand it, and embrace it. Wish I knew it when I was younger, but I guess that is how we all feel, as we grow wise.

With this reflection done, I am now ready to take on new challenges. Knowing the unique skills I have already in my team. What are the skills you can bring to the team?


Photo on Foter.com