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Tools for Personal and Organizational Change

Weekend SmallChange: I Read a Book

August 25th, 2008 · No Comments

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I tried my lifestyle experiment. Listen to hear how it went.

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Weekend SmallChange: Read a Book

August 22nd, 2008 · 1 Comment


The weekend smallchange is back, but reborn. Listen in to hear about my lifestyle experiments.

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Alltop Listed My Blog? Seriously?!!

August 22nd, 2008 · 2 Comments

Alltop. Confirmation that NSRT kicks ass. The last two weeks have been absolutely crazy on this blog. First, I wrote a little rant that has been linked to by Problogger and about a dozen other awesome blogs (as well as some blatant Scrapers) and has gotten over 50 comments to date. Then, on a whim I submit the site to Alltop, and they decide to list it!

For those of you who don’t know the awesomeness that is Guy Kawasaki, Alltop is a new type of blog directory that aggregates the RSS feeds of many great blogs around the web. Never the Same River Twice is listed in the Lifehacks category with such amazing sites as:

  • Lifehacker (of course)
  • Zen Habits
  • The Growing Life
  • Steve Pavlina

Truly, I’m not worthy.

But I’ll take it :)

Everyone, click over to Alltop immediately, read the About Page, and see how this great service can help you find only the best stuff in the blogosphere.

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The Intersection of Project Management and Change Management: An Interview With Bas de Baar of Project Shrink

August 19th, 2008 · 2 Comments

Bas de Baar Have you ever wondered about the intersection of change management and project management? How do people come into play in these processes? How can we, as project managers, department leaders and Average Joe employees work within our own spheres of influence to make transitions as smooth as possible?

If you have any interest in these topics, you’re going to love this interview with Bas de Baar. Bas holds a masters degree in Business Informatics and currently is the editor of SoftwareProjects.org and author of Project Shrink. He is an expert in project management and we recently connected on the topic of the intersection of project management and change management. I hope you’ll find the interview as enlightening as I did.

Bas, thank you for agreeing to this interview. We’ve chatted briefly about the intersection of project management and change management and I’d like to use this opportunity to explore that relationship further.

First, I’d like to ask you to tell us a bit about your background as a project manager and how you came to the conclusion that “Projects Are About Humans, Now Deal With That!” It’s a great statement and it seems that you must have arrived at it based on some hard experience!

Everybody agrees on this statement. Everyone that has spent one minute on a project knows the truth of it. And somehow we just seem to forget, over and over again. So, I put this line on top of every page, just to remind me and my colleagues.

For me this conclusion came the first half of the nineties, I was studying Business Informatics at Vrije Universtiteit in Amsterdam.  As a final exam, I performed field research at a large financial institution. The department in which my study took place was a pool of Project Managers, both novice and experienced alike.  The projects they performed suffered from what they called “interventions”, which were changes triggered by the project environment. Being educated as a plan-driven-pro, I set out my checklist and searched for forgotten process components, only to find out after a couple of months that everything was neatly in place. From standard documents to procedures, they had it all. And still the project went from left to right.

Being the eager beaver that I was, I just kept on looking and looking for the missing ingredient but could not find a single clue to locating the feature or process that would help to solve the pressing problem. At one given moment, I had an “aha”-accident (a hit on the head), which turned out to be a life altering moment professionally. At the coffee corner, I overheard fellow project team members have a conversation about a procedure that they were not going to follow… My jaw dropped. Not following the official procedure? Not complying with company policies? If they didn’t follow procedure then all the changes implemented were going to be completed without the project manager’s knowledge… clonk. The penny dropped. It seems so simple now, but it really rocked my world at the time. They forgot to deal with the people.

On Never the Same River Twice, I write a lot about ways to increase mental and emotional flexibility. Your post, 3 Steps Toward Becoming an Agile Project Manager, you tell project managers that, “To cope with the environment you need a brain that can use many mental models to look at reality. You need to be able to throw away your pre-programmed belief and adopt a different mindset in the blink of an eye.” Why, in your view is this so important and what is one thing that we can do right now to increase our mental flexibility?

There are several reasons for the need of a flexible brain. It determines the way how you view the world. I often use the example of looking at a project as a war. Project Managers are using words like “marching orders” and “the troops”. With a mindset like that,  his mind is thinking in friends and foes, allies and enemies. You are either with him or against him. This view of the world will make it very difficult to collaborate with this person if you disagree. In the end, the war metaphor effects reality. If the model is powerful enough and wide spread among more people, the model will even become a reality. The project will end up as a war. By being able to switch to a different mindset, a more productive state of mind can be adopted.

It also allows you  to understand other people’s behavior and ways of thinking. As projects are nothing more than groups of people working together, being able to be empathic with your team and stakeholders is essential.

Finally, the world is getting very complex. It is impossible to determine the precise causes to certain effects. By looking at reality from different points of view, you get a more complete sense of the problem, increasing your chance of attacking the “correct” cause of a problem.

The key for a flexible brain lies in the usual suspects: tolerance, knowledge, health. I recommend a good read on the history of politics in the middle east, starting at least 200 years ago. Very good for creating a flexible brain.

In your Updated Model of Projects and Project Management, you explain that project teams need to be resilient to cope with change. There are many different methodologies promoted to increase team and individual resiliance. In your experience, how can a project manager help his or her team increase their resiliance?

On the individual level, make sure people are motivated, are relaxed, rest and are not stressed out. For the project itself, the project manager has a lot of tools at his disposal: slack in schedule and budget, having resources double available, but also iterative processes that allow you to adapt in every cycle. 

Your post, Projects as Social Interactions, challenges the reader to think of projects as “…a localized energy field comprising a set of thoughts, emotions, and interactions continually expressing themselves in physical form.” In this context, you suggest that the project manager should attempt to steer the project team toward a goal. This seems a bit different from the traditional command and control model of management. How do you feel project management is evolving to move beyond command and control?

Actually, I think we are  moving too slow. Within software development we have agile processes that are very light in command and control, but these techniques are not mainstream yet. Within the larger companies I still see a focus on traditional ways of PM, ways that are completely in line with how these companies themselves are run. Without changing the general management style, the Project Management style will not change. Running some projects without a tight command and control structure to show the benefits will speed up that process. But in the meantime, we have a hard time convincing the dinosaurs to leave the tar pit.

What’s next in your continuing exploration of the intersections of change management and project management? And what do we have to look forward to at ProjectShrink?

In the next couple of months I am looking for ways to help us analyze complex situations; focus on dealing with offshoring within your project; how to create resilience in your project by using resources, materials, equipment and everything else on demand only. And everything else I might find interesting, as keeping a focus is my biggest challenge.

As I promised, Bas shared some great insights. If you are interested in continuing to explore these ideas, please share your questions, insights and experiences in the comments.

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→ 2 CommentsTags: change management · innovation · mindset

The Authentic Blogging Manifesto

August 13th, 2008 · 45 Comments

I’ve taken over a month off from blogging. This was completely unplanned, but it has led me to rethink everything about how I have blogged in the past and what kind of blogger I want to be going forward - and even IF I want to be a blogger at all. I guess you could say I’ve been having an existential blogging crisis. Let me explain…

In the Beginning

A long, long time ago - I think it was around 2002 - some of my friends started to write these online journals on a site called Blogger. They called these journals blogs and they were simple little web pages that they would update with scintillating details about their dinners and how fat they felt on a particular day. (Some of my friends still haven’t outgrown this phase of their life.) But regardless of the subject matter, blogs were social media. People used them to keep in touch with old friends and find new ones that shared their interests.

Then, as was inevitable, somebody, somewhere figured out how to make money from a blog and the problogging revolution was born. Within 2 or 3 years of the birth of this media sites like Lifehacker, TechCrunch, and the Huffington Post started to pop up, generating huge traffic and the revenues to match. All of the “little people” saw this (and saw posts at Shoemoney and Problogger showing off 5-figure monthly Adsense earnings) and suddenly everyone started trying to make money from their blogs about their cats.

Well, that didn’t work out so well, so anyone who wanted to try to make money with a blog went out in search of a “niche” like personal development, field hockey, or underwater basket weaving and started trying to attract a “niche” audience and “niche” advertisers. They started writing lots of posts in list formats with lots of keywords targeted to their “niche.” And of course they plastered their sites with Adsense and text link ads and most people made about $0.10 a day. All of the sudden blogging wasn’t really about communication, it was about page views, RSS counts, and click-thrus. And it was into this jungle, that I decided to jump. [Read more →]

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→ 45 CommentsTags: change management · personal change · rant