Why am I training experts?

On the last few months I have been into a very special challenge. I have been given the task to train experts around their own work.

This is strange, as soon as they are the experts, and even if I know the subject in depth, they know it better, because they are the ones who really perform the work.

Around 5 years ago this company came to us with the task to understand what were the best practices around their global operations, in this case, project management. Their objective was to standardize their processes globally based on them.

They had an enormous quantity of projects being planned and implemented, but each region had a different standard to be followed, and the documents provided, even though fulfilling the requirements to go through their tollgate process, were not standardized. Basically, each project was presented in a different way.

This allowed huge quality variation among the information delivered, therefore, it was getting harder to streamline the decision making around which project of the portfolio was more fit to the company strategy.

At that point, I was invited to support an initiative that would gather all those project documents which were successful, and presented good quality throughout all company’s regions.

With good communication and stakeholder engagement plans, we were able to understand what they had in common, and create a list of what should be the minimal information to be supplied, and how was the better way to present it according to the company’s values, culture and expectations.

After getting this done, we were able to define templates and guidance documents to create a standard to be followed globally.

As it’s been done for more than five years now, even if the main objective remained, the scope of work for each phase of this initiative changed. Here is a summary of what was done so far:

  • Formed a team able to gather the information needed
  • Select best practices and understand what added value or not
  • Create templates based on used and successful documents
  • Validate and deploy template and guidance documents, providing examples
  • Determine and structure a centralized repository of knowledge, methodology, information and documents
  • Engage teams on using the new framework

This incredible transformation process has been implemented using several good practices around business analysis, project management, requirements elicitation, stakeholders engagement, change and knowledge management. There are many other side initiatives and next steps to this new environment that were created.

Now, the challenge is to keep the teams engaged and adherent to the new procedures implemented. Even if they are the experts and they know it better. I am happy to being able to explain the reasons they are using the tools provided, how they would be better used and how they relate to the current company’s policies.

What’s worth doing something good, if that’s not expected?

Last week I have been confronted with a very interesting situation.

It was presented to me a simple yet powerful list of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) that was shared to a global team, regarding to transformational initiatives that are being deployed through all levels of their operations.

That, per se, is a big deal, and a FAQ is a must in these cases.

I received an email asking my thoughts around it in a table, right after receiving another notification of a news article mentioning the importance of this FAQ, and where to find it.

When I received both notifications and gone through the article and the file, an idea came to my mind. Why not use the same content using a better tool?

The table format is awesome to brainstorm, understand the problem and visualize the results at once, but it is not responsive enough to be used in every situation.

So I turned it into an online list that could provide different views of the same content at once, solving the responsiveness issue of the table.

Problem solved! Everything worked and I added one more ability to my skillset! Awesome, eh?

Not so much, I was so enthusiastic about what I did, that when I shared it with the person who provided the first table, I didn’t remember to send him a simple heads up mentioning what I was thinking, and asking what he really needed.

There were some next steps to this process, such as advertising this new formatted list to everyone, and settling that as a normal procedure when they need information about the transformation process.

Now I have this additional step: Understanding what was the expectation around it, and if what was done, as good as it is, matches this expectation.

We all go through this, we sometimes infer what’s to be done, and do it right away, without checking with our stakeholders what they think about it, to save some time.

Making it right the first time becomes a matter of luck in these cases. But it is uncommon, and we end up making it wrong, which makes us lose all the work done, or worse, work twice to correct it.

Doing something good is different than doing it right, because the right thing to do is what is expected, or even better, exceed expectations!