Why should we discuss that?

“Why would we discuss that, it will never happen? I have more important things to do now, that are actually happening…”

This was the phrase I heard in a meeting I created to start the risk management process. We were supporting a growing company to implement their Project Management Framework and PMO.

We have gone through all Project Management Knowledge Areas, and understood which good practices were fit to their size and culture. We knew at that time they were not mature enough in project management at that time to embrace all desired tools and techniques, and their business model also wouldn’t allow them to do so.

One of the biggest challenges we faced was around Risk Management. This is a tricky area, because on one hand it is easy to understand that something will go wrong, no matter how hard you try to avoid it. On the other hand, it is hard to turn that abstract concept into tangible issues and action plans.

We really looked at Risk Management with care. We created templates to help with risk identification, response plans and even contingency plans, and risk management meetings that were supposed to take place weekly, and they did for a while. After some weeks, we realized that these meetings were getting empty because there were no more risks to be identified, they said, and the evolution of those identified earlier was very uncertain.

Even though we were not the project execution team, we attended some of their meetings as support. On doing that we realized something remarkably interesting. They were discussing risks at their weekly status meetings. The real problem here was they were discussing risks, but not treating them as such.

After this finding, we suggested adding risk as a mandatory subject in the agenda of the execution status meetings. This way, risk tools, such as the risk identification sheet, or the risk response forms were brought as an asset to the meetings.

This approach streamlined their process, as there was no longer the need to transfer the notes from the minutes to another document. They were now bringing the appropriate template to help them make the right questions around the issues, or risks, they were foreseeing.

In the end, those intangible ideas were related to what was happening in the project. The perspective change helped them answer that question they asked in the beginning: “Why should we spend time on something that may not even happen?” because now they could correlate that to the real world.

You can hear this post here

Open Data equals Governmental Data?

Today I attended to an interesting event around open data. My expectations were around seeing how governments share their data, who is able to use it and at what extend.

My expectations were not wrong, but there was a plot twist in the end!

Overall, there is a pressure from the population to get good, reliable and current information.

We are not only talking about data analysts, scientists or these kind of people anymore, it is about the couples getting married and need to find a registered religious official (and yes, this is the most downloaded data from Ontario’s data service).

Now that the process of gathering data and providing open data is almost settled, the governmental open data sources are taking the next step by making all those raw data become something digestible, with charts, maps and even storytelling, directly from their source.

The challenges are big, and they worth it, as this is one of the ways to avoid governments to take unilateral decisions, and also promote individuals or companies to work with this data, and in this case, it doesn’t really matter if they are willing to have direct profit out of this.

If I stop my text here, it all makes sense, as we are talking about governments that do it all based on laws*.

Then there was this presentation of a vehicle tracking company, that has more than 3 million sensors installed, and they have a humongous set of information sitting idle there at their servers. They had this big idea, why not turning it a by-product** and open this to the great public, for free? It is not a new idea, and surely Google is the first, but not only, company that already does that successfully.

Why did I consider it as a plot twist? Because I was not expecting it and because they found a way to create value for their company through open data. That intangible asset was passive and now became active, growing their visibility to new and diverse markets that they wouldn’t be able to reach with their core business.

*The fact that it is something that governments must do, doesn’t decrease the value of the teams that perform it. It was amazing to see the excitement of the presenters around their work and around the new challenges they had ahead!

**All concerns regarding to privacy were answered during the presentation and can be explained by the company.