Cardiovascular Business - March/April 2008 - (Page 40) The › MiCHELLE L ABrOssE, PMP back Page Top Five Project Management Bottom-Line Boosters not only get your project back on track, but save your organization time and money. UNEARTH THE HIDDEN GEMS IN YOUR PROJECT AGREEMENT AND DOCUMENTATION. Too many people mistake documentation as busy work instead of using it to get at its real value. When you close out a project, don’t literally put it to bed. Instead, wake up and unearth all the gems inside it. Did you have enough resources allocated to this project? At what points did this project falter and why? What was behind the cost variance between your original budget and actual budget? If you don’t capture the intelligence in your documentation, as well as understand it and share it, then you’ve missed a huge opportunity to make you and your team more productive, effective and efficient. he next time you hear the words “bottom-line” when you’re sitting in the weekly departmental meeting, don’t roll your eyes. Instead, think about all the ways that you as a leader who often spearheads projects can help to boost that bottom-line. Following are five proven ways to do so. T DEVELOP CLEAR AND QUANTIFIABLE GOALS. If a goal is murky and indistinguishable, how does anyone know when and if it’s done? Don’t hide behind a curtain of vagueness. Be clear and make it measurable because a wise woman once said, “What gets measured, gets done!” CREATE A CONSISTENT AND STANDARDIZED APPROACH TO PROJECT MANAGEMENT. I know this seems like a no-brainer, but I see companies every day that expect their people to learn project management by osmosis. I know you’ve seen this too: “Let the new people shadow Gloria for a few days because she’s a great project manager.” This is a good start, but you can’t have enterprise-wide impact from project management unless you have a consistent way of approaching project management. Many organizations have started to see the value of having whole teams and whole departments—and even entire companies—working from the same body of knowledge. TRACK TIME AND DOLLARS SPENT. When you can show your boss and your team exactly where you are both in terms of time allocated and actual dollars spent, you’re speaking their language. Nothing makes upper management quiver more than not knowing where they are on a mission-critical project. Embrace the bottom-line. So, now you know what many project managers already use as their “secret sauce.” The bottom-line is not just for accountants and executives. It’s a sure fire way for all project leaders to show their value and make themselves a valuable player in financial discussion. MEET DEADLINES AND MILESTONES. If your team is missing every single deadline and project milestone, there’s generally a reason why. Don’t accept this as normal. Do you have too many false deadlines in your company culture, so people no longer accept them as real? When you understand what impedes meeting deadlines, you can get answers that When you understand what impedes meeting deadlines, you save your organization time and money.” Michelle LaBrosse is the founder of Cheetah Learning at www.cheetahlearning.com. PMP is a registered trademark of the Project Management Institute. 40 Cardiovascular Business March/April 2008 http://www.cheetahlearning.com
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