Alumbo! Self-Help Supersite - Tools for inspiration, motivation, success, and spiritual & mental health.
Navigation Bar
  Tools for Inspiration, Motivation and Success
Search: Alumbo the Web          Site Map
myAlumbo Page  Discussion Page  Resources Page  Shopping Page  Magazine Page  Community Directory Alumbo Home

Quick Links
 •  Members Login
 •  Free Membership
 •  Submit Content Try It!

 •  About Alumbo!
 •  Get Involved
 •  Link To Us
 •  Recommend Alumbo
 
Resource Centers
 •  Authors / Contributors
 •  Community Leaders
 •  Advertise With Us

Get Our Free Newsletter!
Email:
(view our privacy pledge).
 
Explore a Community

 •  Arts, Creativity & Fun
 •  Body
 •  Business & Career
 •  Community & Society
 •  Ecology & Environment
 •  Family Relationships
 •  Love Relationships
 •  Mind
 •  Paranormal / Divination
 •  Personal Finance
 •  Spirituality

(view entire directory)

 
Recent Articles

Why people ignore their inner needs at mid-life and what YOU can do differently

Be Worry-Free

Stuck In a Loveless Marriage? Wondering If This Is As Good As It Gets?

Praying For Your Children

Towers Perrin Study Discounts Workplace Myths;

Triangles

Managing Child Behaviour

14 Things Everyone Should Know About Signs of Infidelity

A Buddha for The Pepsi Generation?

Learn To Change Old Reaction Patterns

(view more articles)

 
   
Thursday, July 3, 2008

You are here: Alumbo! Self-Help Supersite > Item Detail Page
Free content for your website!

Come on you senior managers. Play your project roles effectively.

Your role is key to project sucess!
print, email or bookmark this page Print Version Email this article Bookmark site A feature article by Ron Rosenhead, Apr 19, 2008          Not rated (click to add your own rating)

Summary:
Projects are delivered by project managers and their teams and key stakeholders. However; senior managers are essential to project success. Research points to poor involvement by senior managers and this article gives some pointers as to what they can and should be doing.
 

Running training events is often a dumping ground for people's frustrations. I guess we have all done it thinking this guru will help us solve all our problems. However, some of our problems are deeply ingrained and take a lot of shifting.

One such problem is the role that senior manager’s play or should play in projects. The terminology does get in the way however we believe that all projects need a sponsor someone who gives executive support to the project manager and project. This is a person who among other things:

  1. Commissions (asks, tells, informs discusses) others to undertake the project
  2. Briefs the project manager about the project, its history and any ‘political issues’ surrounding it
  3. Agrees the level of accountability and responsibility the project manager will have
  4. Sign off the business case and other project management documents
  5. Actively review the project with the project manager at agreed dates

We have surveyed over a 1000 project managers and the report makes poor reading. When asked whether roles, responsibilities, and levels of authority are always clear in projects we received the following results:

Strongly agree: 2.8% 32 people Agree 34.3% 394 people Disagree 51.0% 586 people Strongly disagree 9.7% 111 people Don’t know 2.3% 23 people

People feed back to us that the role of the sponsor is often missing. In one organisation sponsors earned the unenviable title of sleeping sponsors. Sponsorship is an active process and one of the keys to project success. Without active participation by senior managers projects are contributing to poor project performance e.g.

 
ADVERTISEMENT:
 
  • giving a project an impossible delivery date without approving extra resources
  • not giving the project manager the authority to carry out the project e.g. having to go through various decision making processes to get approval for spending a small sum of money
  • not approving project changes in a timely way delaying progress

Sponsors need to be trained and developed to ensure that the sponsor role is carried out effectively. They got to a senior management role through their expertise and training and when they take on board a senior role sponsorship comes along with it. It is not a criticism of senior managers more a plea for them to take their sponsorship role seriously.

But senior managers beware! Project managers are starting to bite back! They are using risk management as a tool to explain that the project is in danger. They are quite clear they are not hiding behind delivery; but to deliver they need the active involvement of senior managers.

When a project starts to fall behind the project manager directs the sponsor to the risk log. They also identify the sponsor had received a copy of it before but failed to act on their lack of involvement. Now it takes a brave project manager to do this but it has had some positive impact with senior managers realising that if the project is to be delivered and if the overall strategy of the company is to be met they had better be more involved.

So come on you senior managers, reduce project risk and get more involved.




Free content for your website!





Email page to a friendEmail this page to a friend
Display printer-friendly versionDisplay printer-friendly version
Rate this item / View member commentsRate this item / View member comments
Report irrelevant / inappropriate contentReport irrelevant / inappropriate content
Return to Alumbo! home pageReturn to the Alumbo! home page
 
   


ADVERTISEMENT:


Place your ad here for as little as $19. Click for more information.
 













Directory  | Member Login  |  Free Membership  |  Advertise With Us
About Us  |  Get Involved  |  Submit Content  |  Privacy Pledge  |  Site Map
Copyright © 1999-, Alumbo Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Important Note: Material on this website is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended as
a substitute for professional advice (medical, legal, financial or otherwise). Please see our Terms Of Service.
 
Home Page: Alumbo! - Self Help Supersite - Tools for inspiration, motivation, success, and personal growth.
 

Advertisement