This question has been playing on my mind: If stories are the most effective tool of influence, but are an inefficient way to communicate facts, what kind of communication style is most effective in today’s “attention deficit” business world? So for an experiment, let me try out a communication style: The “reduced” story line.
Continue reading "Reductio Ad Absurdum?" »
Looking at Jason’s posting on Cognitive Bias, I find myself inspired to write about team decision making processes. Why? It seems to me that the people who are cerebral enough to internalize the implications of this list are also unlikely to be the talkative or assertive ones in meetings.
Here’s a summary of the categories of team decision processes:
Continue reading "Team Decision Making: There's No Good System!" »
The good people at MindJet have allowed me early access to their MindManager Project Management JetPack. As I read that sentence I realize that many readers won’t have a clue what I’m talking about, so let me explain:
MindJet is the company that produces the MindManager application.
MindManager is, at its heart, a brainstorming and mind mapping software tool.
Mind mapping is a knowledge management technique for generating, organizing and communicating ideas or concepts. (Go here for more info)
Continue reading "MindJet Project Management JetPack for MindManager 7" »
I admit it, I am a communications geek. I love seeing artful communicators bring stories to life, grab an audience, and change the world.
Compare business communications with ‘consumer’ communications, and you’ll see a gap like the grand canyon… but every once in a while you see a presenter that bridges that gap, and gives a business orientated presentation that you would probably enjoy even if you didn’t have to see it.
My two favourite examples? Funny you should ask!… read on dear reader..
Continue reading "Powerpoint woes..." »
A few years ago I worked on a project with a client (global, ~140,000 people) that had an in-house change management methodology. I expected that this would make the job easier – after all, they must recognise the value of change management and know how to use it, surely.
I was astounded to discover that very few people in the company knew how to apply the methodology – I found nobody who even knew where to start! After hours of studying the methodology I figured out why: There was no starting point. I was just a cluster of loosely connected tools.
Continue reading "Change Management Isn't a Methodology!" »
I believe that the vast majority of projects are not nearly visible enough, particularly among the extended stakeholder and customer groups, though I’m constantly under fire for holding this opinion.
The reason teams don’t like visibility, as far as I can tell, is that we humans – in general – like to hide what we perceive as risky behaviour. We do it as children, and the instinct doesn’t disappear. (Though once we’ve got the trick mastered, we’re quite happy to show it to the world to impress them with our daring – just watch the skaters on the South Bank in London).
Continue reading "How Visible Is Your Project?" »
Have you ever made the head of a programme manager spin around? I recently told a client that his team didn’t need anymore ‘creativity training’, and that what was holding them back was too much project management...Woah!
Aghast, (well I had just killed a sacred cow in his office)… he wanted to know more. Could the way he was brandishing PMBOK and PRINCE2 across his programme really be preventing his team from performing at their creative best?
Calming him down, I told him that his beloved methodologies were of course important in making sure this large and complex programme was well co-ordinated, managed, and monitored... but there were 6 changes he would have to make if he wanted the team to be creative as well!
Continue reading "6 ways to stop project management from killing creativity" »