Project Manager Career
IntroductionThe title of project manager (PM) is used to mean different things in different companies.  Fortunately there is a standards body called the Project Management Institute which provides excellent guidance around the role and function of a project manager.

Some will disagree, but I don’t care if your project manager is PMI certified or not.  You need to care about having a project manager with the skill to carry out the role as the Institute defines it.  It’s your change management strategy, and it’s your reputation on the line.

Finding a Project Manager

Do you need a certified Project Management Professional (PMP)?  As I said above, I don’t care.  There are newly certified PMP’s who have taken their tests and gotten the certification, but they may not be battle tested.  There are veteran project managers who never got the fancy title, but they know how to manage projects.  And there is everything in between.  The track record is what you need to care about.

Do you have a strong PM on your team now?  Is that person well respected, perhaps a key opinion leader in your organization?  Do they treat project management as a profession?  Then by all means use them.

If, on the other hand, project manager has been a title used by junior, untrained people who walk around with a task list and a clip board, it’s time to bring on stronger talent.

Your fastest route to a proven project manager will be a contract hire, either from a reputable firm or an independent.  There are many good ones out there.  Get and check references, and interview at least three.  Let your key opinion leaders and managers interview them as well.  Look for their track record and for good chemistry.

Set the Project Manager Up for Success

Simply put, everyone needs to understand that the project manager is your alter ego.  Everyone includes you.

Your managers and project leaders must understand that they are accountable to the PM for providing all of their tasks, their dependencies on other tasks and other work units, their schedule commitments, and their resource requirements.

They need to understand that the PM will review all of their information and look for problems.  These could include missed tasks, schedule inconsistencies, resource overloads, etc.  Often managers will tell the PM that they can handle some of these problems, by working people longer hours or by overlapping some tasks “by a day or two”.  A good project manager is going to challenge such claims, and you’ll need to stand behind the PM.

The PM is going to hold everyone accountable for milestone deliverables.  In most projects, especially those that are complex, milestones are missed and contingency plans must be activated.  Again, you as the leader need to support the PM as they hold people accountable.

Handling Conflicts

It’s entirely possible that the PM will have conflicts with managers, team leads or others in the organization.  Make it safe for people to discuss and bring up such conflicts.  Just because the PM is your alter ego doesn’t make them right — any more than you are always right.

Engage your key opinion leaders along with the project manager and others.  Find out the facts contributing to the conflict, and make the decisions necessary to get the change management strategy back on track.

Change management strategies that fail often do so because of poor project management.  Don’t let that happen to you.

delicious | digg | reddit | facebook | technorati | stumbleupon | savetheurl

Random Posts

  • Exhibitions Management Provides an Impressive Environment for Business
    Article Manager asked: The success of your exhibition and meeting much relies on your preparation, arrangements and management solutions. A well planned exhibition pulls the attention of your targeted audience and also increases the profitability to ...
  • Project Management Requires a Road Map
    Tim Bryce asked: "Having a Project Management system without a methodology is like attaching a speedometer to an orange crate; it measures nothing." - Bryce's LawThe principles of Project Management have been with us for a long time. There has also b...
  • Role and Responsibilities of Project Managers
    Project manager is a person appointed to manage a project from initiation to project approval. Actually, the role & responsibilities of a Project Manager is quite complex and needs to be explained elaborately in clear terms for each project. Brie...
  • Project Management Training- Step Leading To Effective And Successful Project Management
    Training is always an essential part in learning and so does Project management training. Learning Project Management fundamentals is a necessary step in a project management discipline, besides other critical factors for successful project manage...
  • Every Day Project Management Skills – Yes, You are a Project Manager
    I have used the term 'Project Management' without a real appreciation of what Project Management actually is. If you read the textbooks they will talk about projects as having a beginning, a middle and an end, which is the essential and obvious di...
  • Taking it Inventory –network Inventory Management
    SAManage IT Management asked: ng>Why Do I need to Inventory My Network?Network inventory management is a must for efficient control of your computer and software asset inventory. An automated inventory is the only way to be truly up to date -- IT sys...