Your team has finally pulled it offthe Holy Trinity of project management: a project that was done on time, within budget, and with good quality. But professionals arenâ²t satisfied with one-offs. For your organization to thrive, you need to do on a regular basis. You need project consistency. But how do you achieve that?
Post-mortems
This handy-dandy project management tactic is useful for good projects as well as bad (in fact, maybe a lot more). Pick your project apart and try to determine the elements that led to your success. What methodology did you follow/not follow? What tools did you use? How involved were the stakeholders?
And donâ²t forget to drill down to individual performance, too. Who was assigned to what task? What were their work arrangements like? What skills were they able to use the most?
Measure the Cost
Before you go and set your teamâ²s current process in stone, ask yourself: how much did the projectâ²s success cost? Did the team have to work unpaid overtime to make milestones? Did you have to slash the project scope in half? Did you cut corners on materials or equipment?
Success is great, but for consistent project success, you have to make sure that your project management methods are sustainable. Otherwise, youâ²ll just wind up burning your team out.
Set the Bar
Now that youâ²ve achieved your teamâ²s high-water mark, donâ²t let things sink back to the way they used to be. Use this successful momentum to motivate your team. Get enthusiasm going by recognizing effort and encouraging positive behavior. If you want, you can even introduce milestone rewards or chain rewards for consistently producing outstanding work.
Spread the Word
When you know the ingredients for the last projectâ²s success, spread it around to everyone.
Your team. Tell them the secret to their peers success and get them to adopt the same tactics. Some may work, some might not, but youâ²ll never find out if you donâ²t try.
Your peers. Compare notes and see what might work for your teams.
Management (especially management). Theyâ²ll be more inclined to help you make changes if they see that those changes work.
Management Support
No PMO can truly thrive unless it has management support. Not only does management provide the infrastructure for a successful PMOthe staff, equipment, and trainingit also sets the direction and tone for the PMOâ²s operations. Any changes the PMO needs to make must go through management, and if management is not forward-thinking or trusting enough, then the organization risks keeping a stagnant PMO with hit-or-miss deliverables.