Posts by s.galimore

Memory Lane: The Journey Starts

September 24, 2020 Posted by Personal Stories 0 thoughts on “Memory Lane: The Journey Starts”

As I worked to get Delivery Artistry started and pinpoint the message, vision, and driving purpose, I began to reminisce on how I even got started in technology services and project management and more importantly, what drew me to the field in the first place. During my undergraduate studies, I attempted to minor in computer science. After spending an entire weekend trying to find what turned out to be a misplaced period in hundreds of lines of code, I figured technology just wasn’t going to cut it for me. I decided to focus on financial services and help people manage their money.

It was about a year after I graduated when my career headed in a different direction. I was working as a portfolio administrator for a financial services company, involved in a project to start migrating to a new client account opening system or “CAOS.” Little did I know, this was a premonitory acronym for the type of work that would ultimately define my career. The new process was rife with issues and causing angst for the compliance team. Determined to make sure I was successful using the new system, I analyzed the process and created my own personal workflow and rule set to ensure the desired outcomes were met. I fell in love with process optimization, but didn’t even know that was a “thing.”

In my graduate program, they required a couple of IT electives and so I signed up for a class on IT management and strategy. There was no coding involved at all. We read and analyzed case studies that explored the various ways in which IT enabled and oftentimes disrupted organizations and entire markets. We ran simulations to test out various management decisions and the outcomes that followed. I was hooked. This aspect of technology, understanding and applying its strategic value, redefining operations, launching new products and services, it was all fascinating. I changed my concentration and began what has been an amazing journey in the world of information technology project delivery. I never once looked back.

My first job that really focused in this area of strategy and information technology delivery was with a boutique start-up consulting firm, Blue Slate Solutions. I’ve never been as happy in my career as I was with the Blue Slate team. They were a young company made up of seasoned professionals whose level of aptitude and capability was extremely intimidating and that was a new experience for me. There was so much to learn, people to learn from and no limits to what you could do and contribute to. Your position with the company wasn’t based on a job title, it was based on your aptitude, desire, and personal commitment. It wasn’t perfect by any means, but it was perfect enough.

I remember sitting in one of my first client meetings as a junior consultant, supporting in a business analysis capacity. The project lead was modeling business processes on the fly during the discussions asking all sorts of questions, diagramming information and with an ease and fluency that captivated me. The initial client meetings led to strategy development and implementation plans, the precision, organization and structure was actually inspiring and motivational. Order, organization, and planning was in my DNA and I had finally found a professional avenue that was the right fit. I dug in and set my sights on developing the skills and knowledge necessary to one day be that project lead.

More to come, as this was just the beginning! Stay tuned for my next vignette, as I walk down memory lane and share my journey, my story and what’s in store in the years to come.

 

Back to Basics: Part II

September 4, 2020 Posted by Project Management 0 thoughts on “Back to Basics: Part II”

As mentioned in the first post in the #backtobasics series, project management, product management, delivery management, release management, iteration management, whatever title is used, it’s often too complicated. For anyone working across the spectrum of delivery - product, service, technical or non - the work we do, the challenges we face, the changes we have to drive, are complex enough on their own. A plethora of methods, frameworks and tooling often only add to the complexity, yet they are relied upon for order, discipline, and structured delivery of organizational initiatives. I would be the first to caution against oversimplifying the practice of project delivery. It is not simple, but anything that makes the experience much more difficult than it needs to be, warrants careful consideration.

So if not the methods, what are the real drivers of project success?

The basic foundations of success start and end with people. Influencing, motivating, and guiding them. Unleashing the power, creativity, and capability only people can provide. The processes and systems are there to support them, but the focus has to be people-centered. When you understand what drives people, you understand and tap into the age-old secrets of success and not just in project delivery, but in many other aspects of life. I’ve witnessed different dimensions and incarnations of these foundational drivers, foundational because they serve as a base to build upon. In and of themselves I doubt they would fully yield the outcomes expected, but without them, I know for certain you’ll have a hot mess. Let’s start with foundational driver #1: Simplicity.

Perhaps it is partly due to the fact that a number of projects I’ve led focused on process analysis and optimization, often in the form of workflow automation system implementations. There is a real beauty in taking highly complex, routine, time-consuming, labor intensive processes and delivering solutions that dramatically simplify them. Empowering end-users with capabilities that allow them to operate much more efficiently and focus on other, more value-added activities rather than inane, boring and rote tasks. It’s ironic how we’ve struggled to do that for project management more specifically and professional services more broadly, at least not yet. I learned early on that simplicity is a game changer when it comes to driving success on projects.
The other profoundly beautiful thing about simplicity is that it provides visibility and clarity. When you have clarity, it eliminates confusion and circular conversations. You empower teams to move forward with confidence. I am often brought onto in-flight projects that are in distress and highly at risk. They are failing, defense mechanisms in full gear, and morale low. There is so much confusion and complexity, rarely can anyone answer two simple questions: why is the project failing and how do you know? The project devolves into the blame-game, finger-pointing, no one can explain anything scenario. Time is running out. The backlog might as well be Mt. Everest and we’re not even at base camp.

Simplicity is where we start the journey of project recovery. Simplify the workload, simplify the reporting, simplify whatever project delivery processes you can. In some cases, simplifying the workload meant stopping all new feature development sprints. The development teams would only work on resolving critical production incidents if they emerged. This allowed the teams to focus on articulating where the pain points, impediments and frustrations lay and more importantly, suggestions for solutions.  Simplifying the reporting often meant prioritizing the top one or two metrics that were important to the customer and modifying reporting structures accordingly. Simplifying delivery processes can run the gamut and should be tailored to context. In one case, we modified how user stories were written and reviewed, as well as the process to green-light them during grooming. It was a top priority to ensure quality expectations were met every time going forward. We didn’t follow the standard prescriptions of any project framework. We figured out as a team, an effective way to ensure quality as defined by the client.

Simplicity, put simply, works. Stay tuned for the next post in this series, a closer look at the impact of ingenuity in project management.

For a more in-depth look into the power of simplicity, read more at Medium.com.

Back to Basics: Part I

August 21, 2020 Posted by Project Management 0 thoughts on “Back to Basics: Part I”

Project management, product management, delivery management, release management, iteration management, whatever title is used, it’s often too complicated. For anyone working across the spectrum of delivery - product, service, technical or non - the work we do, the challenges we face, the changes we have to drive, are complex enough on their own. A plethora of methods, frameworks and tooling often only add to the complexity, yet they are relied upon for order, discipline, and structured delivery of organizational initiatives. I would be the first to caution against oversimplifying the practice of project delivery. It is not simple, but anything that makes the experience much more difficult than it needs to be, warrants careful consideration.

For some time now, I’ve had this picture forming in my mind. At first, it was just a cacophony of images that represented thoughts and insights on my experiences in project management. As a visual and reading/writing type of learner, I often try to visualize my musings and solutions while scribbling various notes on whatever medium is handy. It took a while, years actually, but the meaning did emerge and this summer, I decided it was time to formalize. A brave illustrator took a rough storyboard emerging in my mind and created this illustration. It depicts what project management often feels like these days - a perplexing Rube Goldberg with stages and steps that frustrate and often don’t make sense.

I often wonder how many project management methodologies or frameworks now exist? I’ve lost track. In an article written by Steve Denning, there is an eye-opening graphic that depicts how many variants of “Agile” are out there now - about 40. Add to that all of the more traditional project management methods embodied in PMBoK, PRINCE2, IPMA ICB, international and national standards, and the tooling available, I feel it prudent to reiterate what others have said before but seems to often fall on deaf ears. When it comes to success in project delivery, the methods don’t seem to matter.

Methods, frameworks, philosophies and tools emerge and evolve; they form part of the support system for success but they aren’t the real drivers of success. The basic foundations of success start and end with people. Influencing, motivating, and guiding them. Unleashing the power, creativity, and capability only people can provide. The processes and systems are there to support them, but the focus has to be people-centered.

When you understand what drives people, you understand and tap into the age-old secrets of success and not just in project delivery, but in many other aspects of life. I’ve witnessed different dimensions and incarnations of these foundational drivers, foundational because they serve as a base to build upon. In and of themselves I doubt they would fully yield the outcomes expected, but without them, I know for certain you’ll have a hot mess. Rather than trying to expound on them all at once, I’ve attempted to pinpoint the three drivers that have proved the most impactful over the course of my experience leading projects. They served as guiding principles, reliable in every situation: simplicity, ingenuity, and accountability.

If any of this resonates and you’re interested in learning more, be sure to look for Part II of the #backtobasics series, where I start to delve into each of these areas. Thanks!

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