By Shawn P. Quigley If you have read any of our blog post you know that Value Transformation bases itself in an Organizational Developmental and Learning Organizational model. If you have not read any of our posts then we would suggest that you take a few moments and look through a few: The Leadership Equation, […]
First of all, I hate the word human resources for our employees. This verbiage starts the discussion as if people were fungible. That people, their talents, aspirations, motivation and capability are identical. That is simply not true. I just got out of a discussion with a company that left me feeling hopeful. After working in […]
Recently I was talking with a company that has achieved the level 3 (defined) CMMI from the Software Engineering Institute that provides a measure of an organizations maturity and capability. During this conversation, I had a flash to another company that had aspirations of being a level 3 but could never make it beyond their […]
Risks and Communication Management A significant portion of successful project management is due to communication, so it should stand to reason that ineffective communications can be a significant source of project failures. Everything from evoking scope and requirements, prioritizing objectives, to team building requires effective communication. Communication is used in keeping the project team in […]
Risks and Risk Management We continue with our series on the taxonomy of failures in project knowledge areas looking at risk management. In this case turning our breakdown of the project failures toward risk management. Risk management is fundamental to project management as we reduce or navigate the potential impediments to the success of our […]
Scope Management and Risk I would like to thank all of those that attended last night’s experiment with PMChats a live broadcast that will be turned into a podcast. The topic was scope management and risk, and a brief look at the many areas in scope that can later come back to haunt, or as […]
Why Statistics and Control Are Important to the Project Manager More from the TQM and Project Management [1] One of the purposes of statistical analysis lies in its ability to discern random variation from non-random (or “controllable”) variation. Random variation is extremely difficult to control, although we have seen situations where variance could be […]
Introduction We continue our Total Quality Management for Project Management and the PMO. TQM can help us with the planning of the project giving us some measure of historical performance from which we can learn. However, it is not just the planning that can be aided by TQM, but also the strategy we intend to […]
Below is an excerpt from our book, Total Quality Management for Project Management[1] Progress, far from consisting in change, depends on retentiveness. When change is absolute there remains no being to improve and no direction is set for possible improvement: and when experience is not retained, as among savages, infancy is perpetual. Those who cannot […]
There are limits to the decomposition, and for conventional projects where monitoring may be less routine (meaning not every day), it is in our best interest to decompose as far as possible to make answering any question about the status simple, yes or no rather than some vague estimate of completion (30% complete based upon […]