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Managing Global Projects

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Why is trust important? Project team members invariably have local priorities. ... Not all countries celebrate the 4th of July. Consider holidays in other countries ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Global Projects


1
Managing Global Projects
  • Patrick Corey
  • MSE, PMP, CCNP

2
Patrick Corey MSE, PMP, CCNP
  • With over 15 years of experience in Project
    Management and IT Infrastructure Services,
    Patrick Corey has managed several multi-national
    projects for a global pharmaceutical company and
    a nation-wide, multi-service migration for a
    financial services company headquartered in
    Cincinnati. His background includes a BS degree
    from the University of Notre Dame, MSE in Systems
    Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania,
    Project Management Professional Certification,
    Cisco Certification, as well as Gold Dolphins for
    qualifications as a Submarine Officer in the US
    Navy.

3
Education, Certification, Experience
  • Education and Certifications
  • University of Pennsylvania, 1995 MSE Computer
    and Network Systems
  • University of Notre Dame, 1982 BS Mechanical
    Engineering
  • Cisco Certified Network Professional, 2003 (CCNP)
  • Cisco Certified Network Associate, 2003 (CCNA)
  • Project Management Professional, 2003 (PMP)
  • Member, Project Management Institute (PMI)
  • Experience
  • Transatlantic Frame Relay France, UK, US
  • Multinational Network Migration to EQUANT North
    America, South America, Europe, East Asia, South
    Africa, Australia
  • Multinational Corporate Merger, Hoechst and Rhone
    Poulenc North America, South America, Europe,
    South Asia, East Asia, South Africa, Australia
  • Network, Internet, Remote Access, Extranet
    Migration to ATT North America, 10 Separate
    Business Units
  • US Submarine Officer and Naval Aviator, Gold
    Dolphins, Carrier Qualified

4
Challenges in Global Project Management
  • Global Project Management
  • Culture
  • Language
  • Task / Relationship Dimension
  • Trust
  • Other Challenges
  • Virtual Project Team Management
  • Communications
  • Meetings
  • Video vs. Voice vs. Face-to-face
  • Loss of Non-verbal Communications
  • Loss of Focus

5
  • Cultures cause members to see reality very
    differently.1

1 Global Teams, Marquardt, Horvath
6
  • Culture leads us to believe that our way of
    thinking, acting and doing things is the only
    rational way.1

1 Global Teams, Marquardt, Horvath
7
Culture Impacts
  • Leadership roles and expectations
  • Participative
  • Hierarchical
  • Individualism and groups
  • Rights of individuals
  • Group oriented
  • Communications
  • Expressive (style)
  • Goal-oriented (accuracy)
  • Problem solving
  • Linear, break it into chunks
  • Holistic

1 Global Teams, Marquardt, Horvath
8
Culture Impacts
  • Decision making
  • Delegated
  • Management
  • Dealing with disagreement and differences
  • Direct (US)
  • Indirect (no)
  • Perspective on time
  • Time is money
  • Relationships are more important
  • Flexibility and control
  • Tolerance of flexibility
  • Clear roles
  • Motivation
  • Competitive
  • Cooperative

1 Global Teams, Marquardt, Horvath
9
Global Project ManagementCulture Quiz Yourself
4
  • In which cultures are the following true
  • A meeting without a concrete result is a failure.
  • To question another participant's proposal is to
    question the competence of the person who put it
    forward.
  • Any process of open decision-making is an
    illusion. The purpose of the meeting is for
    decision-makers to evaluate the mood of others,
    to sense supporters and to test the waters.
  • The meeting is a forum for the dynamic expression
    of strong personal opinions, preferably contrary
    to everyone else's.
  • Meetings are for briefing and discussion. They
    are not considered an appropriate forum for
    decision-making or delegation, nor is a clear,
    decisive result anticipated.

4 http//www.global-excellence.com/
10
Global Project ManagementCulture Quiz Yourself
4
  • A meeting without a concrete result is a failure.
    UK
  • To question another participant's proposal is to
    question the competence of the person who put it
    forward. France
  • Any process of open decision-making is an
    illusion. The purpose of the meeting is for
    decision-makers to evaluate the mood of others,
    to sense supporters and to test the waters.
    Italy
  • The meeting is a forum for the dynamic expression
    of strong personal opinions, preferably contrary
    to everyone else's. Greece
  • Meetings are for briefing and discussion. They
    are not considered an appropriate forum for
    decision-making or delegation, nor is a clear,
    decisive result anticipated. Spain

4 http//www.global-excellence.com/
11
Global Project ManagementTask / Relationship 3
  • Which is more important of the two in any given
    culture?
  • The task - getting the job done
  • The relationship - building and maintaining the
    personal and professional connection and
    channeling the business through it
  • Cultures that give more weight to the task rather
    than the relationship are the Anglo-Saxon
    cultures (Germany - UK - USA - Holland - Austria
    - Canada - Australia - New Zealand - Switzerland
    - South Africa) and the Scandinavians (Norway -
    Sweden - Denmark)
  • Task cultures
  • less business entertaining
  • more focus on job description fulfillment and on
    the use of time in relation to results
  • Relationship cultures
  • more business entertaining
  • more use of strategic socializing and gift-giving
  • more focus on ability to create, build and
    maintain business relationships

3 Author Richard Cook first published in
Training Buyer December 1999.
12
Culture10 Most Costly Sins When Cultures Clash 2
  • You think the world plays by your rules
  • You do what you always did in the past
  • You take English for granted
  • You dont respect the cultural pathways for
    making things happen
  • You dont stand in your hosts shoes
  • You forget to invest in relationships
  • You jump from vision to action (relationship,
    vision, strategy, then action)
  • You take the village by storm (You are number
    one customer to us, bye!)
  • You select the wrong people
  • You forget that your advice is noise in their ear

2 Culture Clash Thomas D. Zweifel, PhD
13
Culture Building Multicultural Skills 2
  • Guidelines for Global Citizens
  • Decoding a Culture
  • Global Results Pyramid
  • Global Integrator Graph

2 Culture Clash Thomas D. Zweifel, PhD
14
Building Multicultural Skills 2
  • Guidelines for Global Citizens
  • Never take English for granted
  • Respect, listen, and be open
  • Interact with people as individuals, not as
    culture. Resist the urge to generalize
  • Resist the urge to immediately solve the issues
    hearing them is often enough.
  • How do you decode a culture?
  • Understand the economy, history, geography,
    religions, govt, media, attitude to outsiders,
    education, language, myths
  • Understand the ideology and values of the
    founders
  • Who are the outcasts
  • Identify defining moments, i.e., crisis, wars

2 Culture Clash Thomas D. Zweifel, PhD
15
Building Multicultural Skills 2 Global Results
Pyramid
Typical American
2 Culture Clash Thomas D. Zweifel, PhD
16
Building Multicultural Skills 2 Global
Integrator Graph
2 Culture Clash Thomas D. Zweifel, PhD
17
Global Project Management
  • Culture - Whose rules apply?
  • Focus on understanding the other culture
  • You do not need to concede to them
  • They do not need to concede to you
  • Draw benefits from the diversity

18
Global Project ManagementLanguage
  • English is the international business language
  • But
  • Not all participants have the same fluency in
    English, speaking or understanding.
  • What challenges your audience more, speaking or
    understanding?
  • When speaking one can limit the words to those
    they are familiar with.
  • When listening native-speakers often use
    expanded vocabulary, speak fast, and use
    unfamiliar enunciation.
  • Speed and clarity of speech, in meetings and on
    the phone
  • Contrast between multi-country projects and those
    with one other non-English speaking country
  • Caution on software translators
  • Learning the native tongue helps to sooth
    relationship and build trust. Meetings will
    invariably revert to English

19
Global Project ManagementLanguage
  • Use of slang and idioms 1
  • "Se fendre la pêche
  • to split one's peach (literal)
  • to laugh one's head off (American idiom with same
    meaning)
  • Not all countries understand the use of baseball
    and American-football terminology. Use of these
    terms is common in the American business
    environment.
  • Blocking and tackling
  • Hit a home run, coming in from left field,
    batting a thousand, has two strikes against him,
    and the need to cover all the bases

1 http//www.uwosh.edu/french/idiom.html
20
Global Project ManagementTrust
  • Why is trust important?
  • Project team members invariably have local
    priorities.
  • Global projects may not always the highest
    priority -- management is out of sight, out of
    mind.
  • Project team members support the project resolve
    the unknown. Global projects have more
    unknown.
  • How to build trust?
  • Build relationships
  • Introductions are required in many cultures.
    Blind calls are often rejected
  • Business entertaining
  • Face-to-face, one-on-one sessions build trust
  • Respect for the culture and LANGUAGE

21
Global Project ManagementOther Issues
  • Time Zone Impact
  • Many meetings will be conducted by phone
  • Time zone differences impair the ability to
    conduct unified meetings. (US EU Asia)
  • Daylight savings time shift is not universal!
    Sometimes the shift is on a different week and
    some countries do not even shift.
  • Most time zones are on the hour, few are on the ½
    hour.
  • Vacation
  • Plan for vacation in your projects. Dont assume
    all have 2 weeks per year and taking this time
    off is optional
  • Some (European) countries take August off! Check
    the local country for their unique environment
  • Many cultures allow for 6 weeks vacation
  • Not all countries celebrate the 4th of July.
    Consider holidays in other countries

22
Global Project Management Other Issues
  • Currency
  • Currency of the contract can have greater impact
    than the cost of the service
  • Originally the contract was signed with a fixed
    currency exchange rate and prices were set in
    French Francs.
  • Legal
  • Country in which the contract is signed can have
    significant impact on legal rights.
  • Select law firms with international experience in
    contracts related to the project.
  • Contract length varies significantly from country
    to country. Typical Swiss contract can be 2
    pages.
  • Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA)

23
Managing Global Teams More Effectively 5
  • Meet face-to-face at the beginning of the project
  • Team development
  • Team ownership of the project
  • Set goals, develop project plans and define roles
  • Meet for a minimum of three days at beginning of
    project
  • Take the time needed to build relationships
  • Learn how to communicate to your team members
    remotely
  • Work will need to be done independently and trust
    is critical
  • Increase quantity of communications
  • Remote team members have local responsibilities
    that may have higher priority
  • Rotate location of meeting. Encourage greater
    ownership from remote team members
  • Hold project progress meetings
  • Keep team focused, maintain commitment, enhance
    motivation,
  • Maintain relationships

5 Managing Global NPD Teams, Gloria Barczak,
Edward F. McDonough III
24
Effective Global Meetings 2
  • Prior
  • Co-create the agenda. Send draft and solicit
    input
  • Pay attention to time zones and holidays
  • During
  • Lead from your vision.
  • Speak and listen to every person
  • Be considerate of fluency differences. This
    impacts contribution
  • Traditional vs. Virtual
  • Traditional Body Language can be read by all
  • Traditional Meeting can be more relaxed
  • Virtual Most effective when all are familiar
    with each other
  • Create a plan for project meetings with
    appropriate mix. Rotate meeting leadership and
    location.

2 Culture Clash Thomas D. Zweifel, PhD
25
Challenges in Global Project Management
  • Virtual Project Team Management
  • Communications
  • Meetings
  • Video vs. Voice vs. Face-to-face
  • Loss of Non-verbal Communications
  • Loss of Focus
  • Maintaining Teamness
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