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David Harris

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Stakeholders have preconceived perceptions & expectations ... But best idea backed by credible evidence won't fly unless those controlling ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: David Harris


1
MGMT631 IS Project Management
  • Slides Three

2
Overview
  • Delighting customers
  • Translating needs into requirements
  • Organizational issues
  • Non-cooperative customers
  • Stakeholders
  • Organizational commitment
  • Customer-developer gap

3
Overview (cont.)
Bohac on Politics
  • Politics
  • control of outcomes via control of people.
  • Use political tools in conjunction with
    product-oriented tools
  • Use of political tools NOT inherently bad
  • Ignoring politics can result in unnecessary
    losing outcomes

4
Delighting Customers
  • Delight not just satisfy
  • Knowing who they are, what they want, when they
    are right wrong
  • Obsession with customer satisfaction is part of
    the new project management
  • Nothing obvious/trivial about identifying
    customers
  • (Frame)

5
Delighting Customers (cont.)
  • High-value organizations are in business of
    selling solutions, not hardware, and customer
    satisfaction achieved through partnering between
    buyers sellers
  • (Frame)

6
Meeting Customer Expectations
  • Product/service usable
  • Promises kept
  • competent/gracious service
  • needs understood addressed effectively

7
Customers - Needs/Requirements
  • Must work tirelessly to understand them
  • Its a translation process twixt ill-defined
    languages

8
Requirements?
9
Customers - Needs/Requirements
  • Needs analyst traits
  • strong ability to deal with customers
  • political skills
  • technically competent
  • open-minded imaginative
  • high tolerance for ambiguity
  • articulate
  • Technicians tend to produce Mercedes not the
    Hyundai thats wanted

10
Improving Needs Definition
  • Understand present system in full context
  • Identify multiple customers, prioritize their
    needs
  • Needs defining task force involving customers
  • Educate customers in rudiments of project
    management
  • must realize its an exercise in compromise
  • multiple customers, conflicting needs, budget
    schedule constraints

11
Needs Analysis
12
Organizational Issues
  • You are PM not CEO/COO
  • Yet you need organizations commitment, so
  • focus organizations culture on customer value
    (culture change!)
  • unbridled change so organize into short,
    achievable deliverables
  • total life cycle (?)
  • improve processes for customer delight
  • strengthen project staff capabilities, e.g.
    business non-technical skills

13
Changing Corporate Culture
  • BPR (project oriented) not TQM (process
    oriented), so
  • Focus on value
  • Encourage upside-down thinking
  • Power sharing
  • Long term view
  • Total customer focus

14
Business Reengineering Quality Management
15
Stakeholder Concept
  • In projects stakeholders are the movers shakers
  • Stakeholder roles
  • Customers/users
  • Sponsor(s)
  • Line (functional) management
  • Project manager
  • Project team
  • Anyone/everyone else with a stake
  • Verzuh

16
Stakeholders
  • First identify all stakeholders
  • Must delight not just direct customers, but also
    stakeholders
  • This is tough!
  • Customers, management, project team must all
    agree on project goals
  • Project manager must coordinate, guide, lead this
    diverse group through the project stages

17
Organizational Commitment
  • Organization committed to PM
  • organization has project management system
    defining processes practices
  • system disseminated to employees via education
    training
  • management instills the discipline necessary to
    ensure system followed
  • system is living document not collecting dust

18
Bridging Customer-Developer Gap
  • Partnering youre partners
  • If fail to get needs/requirements right both
    sides at fault
  • Communications barriers
  • cultural, vocabulary, medium, feedback
  • Tips be up front, cautious (Murphys Law),
    realistic, clear, dont jump to solutions,
    communicate/educate
  • Joint Sessions (JPP, JAD)

19
Bohac on Politics
20
Politics vs Product
Product
Ethics
Politics
  • product/service provided to customer
  • function-quality-service
  • Success if meets specs, on time, under budget
  • perception of what we provided
  • perception-expectation
  • success defined by positive surprises

21
Perceptions Expectations
  • Stakeholders have preconceived perceptions
    expectations
  • Perhaps unrealistic, in hope of solving major
    problems
  • These perceptions/expectations are reality to
    them
  • If discrepancy, surprise will occur

22
First Law of Politics
  • Rule 1 surprise will always happen
  • Rule 2 managing surprises is key to customer
    satisfaction
  • First Law
  • Perception Expectation Surprise
  • Perception view of product/service actually
    observed
  • Expectation view what should be able to do

23
Reality is a Myth
  • Imagined
  • Map
  • Truth
  • . . what you believe
  • . . . . subjective
  • Real
  • Territory
  • Fact
  • . . . . what is true
  • . . . objective reality

24
Second Law of Politics
  • Second Law
  • Perception Reality
  • Doesnt matter what you do, only what people
    think you do
  • As many truths (realities) as there are people
    no-one better than any other

25
Third Law of Politics
  • There are trade-offs twixt wants and needs
  • Also gap twixt wants/needs can create negative
    surprise later
  • hence poor stakeholder satisfaction
  • Third Law
  • Wants Needs Surprise

26
Fourth Law of Politics
  • Fourth Law
  • Perception today Expectation tomorrow
  • This is law of political momentum
  • More effort required as time goes on to create
    positive surprises

27
Political Definition of Success
  • Notes
  • Success exists in minds of stakeholders
  • Success varies over time
  • Our task is to control surprises
  • This takes precedence over product/services !!!

28
Equation for Success
  • Success Sum of surprises as perceived by all
    customers over time
  • in
  • Success ( ? S i ) t
  • i1
  • n of stakeholders
  • t time

29
Equation for Success II
  • in
  • Success ( ?s i w i ) t
  • i1
  • w weight associated with each
  • stakeholder

30
Political Credibility
  • Every person/organizational component has a stack
    of political chips
  • There is price when we try to control an
    outcome
  • If we dont have enough chips at the time we fail
    to control
  • So vital to maintain sufficient pile of chips

31
Political Credibility
  • Chips go away when
  • we spend in political process
  • we create negative surprises
  • they evaporate over time
  • We gain chips when
  • we create positive surprises
  • we join
  • via our business/technical abilities

32
Attaining Political Credibility
  • Establish mission
  • what products/services we provide
  • Identify stakeholders
  • functional (direct)
  • political (indirect)
  • Survey stakeholders
  • what expectations/perceptions exist?
  • criteria for measuring them?
  • triggers for them?

33
Attainment (continued)
  • Survey stakeholders (cont.)
  • stakeholders wants/needs?
  • contradictions twixt them?
  • wall erected?
  • Establish vehicles
  • For each stakeholder, what vehicle exists to
    control expectations/perceptions in the criteria
    for that user?

34
Stakeholder Analysis Chart
35
Leverage Techniques
  • Leverage
  • to be effective must apply political credibility
    at right point
  • this is principle of leverage
  • target chips toward specific owners (we may be
    credible with one person not another)
  • not enough to have chips, we must have them in
    right place at right time

36
Leverage Techniques
  • Leverage principles
  • target chips to be where when needed
  • Identify winners/losers winners work for you
    losers against
  • Use someone elses chips get one of winners to
    attempt control

37
Persuasion
  • Common mistake among technicians
  • assume sufficient evidence/logical argument will
    convince people
  • that reason logic rule the day
  • But best idea backed by credible evidence wont
    fly unless those controlling outcome agree to it
  • We must sway the decision/outcome

38
Persuasion Process
  • Define decision we want
  • List every major player who can affect decision
  • people, groups, organizations
  • i.e. the stakeholders
  • Assess
  • position of each player -- for or against
  • power of each player
  • priority each player places on outcome

39
Persuasion Process (cont.)
  • What can we do to cause the power, position,
    priority of each player to change so the outcome
    we want will occur?

40
Persuasion (cont.)
Person Power Position Priority Score
A 4 4 1 16 B 2 -5 5
-50 C 1 0 2 0 (assign value, 1-5,
5 high)
41
Technical Competence is insufficient
  • Embrace Politics

42
NIBCO Big Bang Case Study
  • Manufacturing Co. info poor
  • Consultants propose long phased ERP
    implementation
  • NIBCO goes for big bang
  • SAP plus IBM as consultants
  • Key management players
  • Championed by CEO Martin
  • Tiger Triad of Wilson, Beutler, Davis
  • Exec leadership team
  • Implemented within 30 days grace period
  • Initial production problems, then success
  • Success factors?

43
Summary
  • Requirements Usability
  • Politics
  • Customers Stakeholders

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