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ISQA 410 Project Management

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Team Building: The PM's. PM structure & alignment critical ... Team building exercises for all members external facilitation may be required ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ISQA 410 Project Management


1
ISQA 410 Project Management
  • Chapter 12 Partnering Managing
    Inter-organizational Relations

2
Managing Inter-organizational Relations
  • Introduction to project partnering
  • Pre-project activities
  • Project implementation activities
  • Project completion activities
  • Why project partnering succeeds or fails
  • Negotiating
  • Managing customer relations

3
Intro. To Project Partnering
  • Increasingly rare to have significant project
    completed in-house
  • Examples
  • 9 states did not have resources to unify
    accounting of state agencies project teams
    formed to outsource S/W, H/W and accounting to
    firms
  • Contracting out project work is the norm in
    construction industry multiple subcontractors
  • Chunnel project - 250 organizations involved
  • Partnering working with people from other
    organizations (external internal managing
    intra-organizational relationships)

4
Intro. To Project Partnering
  • Partnering
  • Process for transforming contractual
    relationships into cohesive, collaborative teams
    that resolve issues/problems encountered in
    projects in a timely manner
  • Began in the 80s in construction industry due
    to delays, overruns, rising litigation, limited
    ability to compete overseas
  • Long-term commitment by 2 or more firms to
    achieve business objectives by maximizing
    effectiveness of each partner focus on a
    shared culture without organizational
    boundaries relationship based on trust,
    dedication too common goals understanding of
    each others expectation/values improved
    effectiveness/efficiency, continuous improvement
  • State of mind philosophy respect, trust,
    collaboration key ingredients commitment to
    continuous improvement

5
Intro. To Project Partnering
  • Drivers organizational downsizing,
    concentration on core competencies, use of
    virtual organizations
  • Advantages of Partnering
  • Reduced administrative costs bidding
    selection reduced contract administration costs
  • More efficient utilization of resources - focus
    on core business, avoid swings in project support
    costs
  • Improved communication develop common
    language/perspective which reduces
    misunderstanding
  • Improved innovation risks/rewards identified
    more openly and share more freely
  • Improved performance learn from each others
    practices standards apply lessons learned
    more efficiently

6
Intro. To Project Partnering
  • Traditional Practices
  • Suspicion/distrust
  • Mis-alignment of goals
  • Independent project teams
  • Structured/siloed communication
  • Single project contracts
  • Limited objectivity
  • Focus on procedures self-preservation vs. total
    optimization
  • Duplication of systems
  • Risk transference is dominant
  • Key Partnering Practices
  • Mutual trust
  • Shared goals/objectives
  • Joint project teams
  • Open communication
  • Long-term commitment
  • Objective critique
  • Access to each others resources
  • Total co. involvement
  • Integration of systems
  • Shared risks/rewards is dominant strategy

7
Pre-Project Activities Setting the Stage
  • Selecting a Partner
  • Track record technically but also as a partner
    (culture must be present)
  • Interest expertise
  • Senior management commitment
  • Shallow inducements, half-hearted commitments,
    intimidation or power-based approaches lead to
    failure

8
Pre-Project Activities Setting the Stage
  • Team Building The PMs
  • PM structure alignment critical
  • Clear understanding of roles responsibilities
  • Implementation plan for the partnering process
  • Review mutual/shared objectives
  • Training needs? teaming, collaboration,
    communication

9
Pre-Project Activities Setting the Stage
  • Team Building The Stakeholders
  • Team structure and staffing building the we
  • Team building exercises for all members
    external facilitation may be required or PMs can
    design lead effort
  • 3-Step approach sets stage for implementation
  • Ice-breaking rationale core teamwork, synergy,
    win/win constructive feedback
  • Examine problems barriers for us, for them,
    recommended improvements define common
    objectives/goals for the project typically the
    result of different cultures, habits, standards,
    priorities
  • Create project charter include agreements,
    common goals, procedures for partnering

10
Project Implementation
  • Sustaining Collaborative Relationships
  • Co-location can be critical
  • Emphasis on having mechanisms in place to deal
    with setbacks/problems
  • Fanatical support of senior management
    obsession with the process vs. results
  • Problem resolution
  • Continuous improvement
  • Joint evaluation
  • Persistent visible leadership

11
Project Implementation
  • Sustaining Collaborative Relationships
  • Problem resolution lowest level preferable
    24-hour resolution before escalation no
    delaying
  • Continuous improvement eliminate waste, pursue
    joint cost savings, risk/reward sharing (50/50),
    fast-track reviews to avoid setbacks
  • Joint Evaluation regular reviews to evaluate
    process, develop specific effectiveness criteria,
    set specific improvement activities (projectize)
  • Communication between owner/contractor personnel
  • Top management support of partnering process
  • Dealing with problems, issues or concerns
  • Cooperation between owner and contractor
    personnel
  • Response to issues/problems becomes personnel
  • Persistent leadership walk the talk,
    consistent emphasis on collaboration for problem
    solving, reward initial disagreements, reward
    adhering to principles of problem-solving,
    everyone celebrates in successes

12
Partnering Success Factors
  • Senior management (owner/contractor)
  • Compelling business reasons must be present to
    make partnering work
  • Good intentions not enough approach cant be ad
    hoc
  • Commitment and ongoing oversight
  • Focus on fixing problems, not on why it wont
    work
  • Minor problems are escalated, not fixed at the
    lowest level
  • Senior management does not return problem to
    first level
  • Problems (whether escalate or not) are not fixed
    within time limits
  • Must send consistent and unambiguous signals that
    people are empowered and encourage to make
    decisions at the lowest possible level

13
Partnering Success Factors
  • Failure to deal with cultural differences
  • Management style, operating procedure,
    terminology, perspectives culture shock
    frustrates development of rapport
  • Must build a common culture based on successful
    project completion team-building is critical to
    getting off on the the right foot
  • Selection/placement of key positions with savvy
    professionals who can forge relationships with
    personnel who do not necessarily share the same
    priorities, time orientation, work habits
  • Example BPA and Duke/EDS

14
Partnering Success Factors
  • Lack of a formal evaluation procedure
  • Fewer that 20 of partnering projects have
    formal, effective procedure/criteria for
    evaluating the partnering process
  • Consequences
  • Problems/deterioration cant be recognized in
    time to correct
  • Permit problems to snowball
  • Lack of resolution becomes a standard practice
  • Report card must measure team performance,
    encourage team accountability, identify problems
    at the operating level, and measure whether
    relationship is improving or degenerating (award
    fee contracts not the same as formal partnering
    evaluation)
  • Lip service to continuous improvement
    expectations verbalized but no process,
    incentives or procedures established to enable CI

15
Negotiating
  • Perhaps the critical success factor to
    partnering
  • MUST be win/win cannot be a contest
  • Partners must be allies at worst, a temporary
    alliance
  • Success of project must bind both sides must be
    committed, cannot permit negotiations to
    breakdown
  • Recognition that all parties must continue to
    work together cannot cut your nose off to
    spite your face (e.g., long-term relationship
    cannot be sacrificed for short-term advantages)
    approach to problems must be proactive,
    solution-based, the benefit both parties.

16
Negotiating
  • Critical Success Factors
  • Separate people form the problem
  • Be hard on the problem, soft on the people
  • Seek first to understand, then be understood
    empathize first listen, ask question, reflect
    first
  • Defining, re-direct re-framing avoid
    personalizing and approaching it as a contest
  • Focus on shared interests (objectives), not
    positions
  • What are you trying to achieve separate ego from
    objectives understand consequences (whys)
  • Invent options for mutual gain (collaborative
    brainstorming separate inventing from deciding)
    requires listening open communication

17
Negotiating
  • Critical Success Factors
  • Use objective criteria (when possible)
  • External criteria/standards can be useful in
    finding common ground to address problems
  • Dealing with unreasonable people
  • Position focused neither accept/reject,
    consider it as one option (of many) and try to
    understand the interests behind it
  • Invite suggestions, criticisms for your ideas
    ask why its a bad idea to understand interests
  • Ask questions vs. making statements permit
    interests to surface
  • Silence forces other person to answer the
    question or identify other alternatives
  • BATNA (best alternative to a negotiated
    agreement) benchmark for determining whether to
    accept an agreement
  • Reflects dependency upon other party (one vs.
    many vendors)

18
Managing Customer Relations
  • Bottom line customer satisfaction
  • Reputation long-term success
  • 81 ratio between customer satisfaction and
    dissatisfaction
  • Met-Expectation Model
  • Ratio between perceived performance and expected
    performance
  • Ratio
  • Ratio 1 satisfied
  • Ratio 1 very satisfaction
  • Given competing definitions of success, better to
    strive for ratio of 1.05 vs. 1.5
  • Definitions of satisfied are multi-layered and
    include multiple variables
  • Satisfaction begins at inception runs
    throughout
  • Speak with one voice speak the customers
    language
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