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

The summer is gone…

The summer is gone, the crops are under snow and we are stuck at home, no way to get out after a major blizzard.

There are many stories about preparing to the bad times while we are in the good ones.

Personally, I heard fewer stories of those who, during bad times, in spite of getting desperate, or even hibernating, and waiting for the good times to come again, spent that time preparing to speed up the come back.

Independently if there is a crisis or not, record every good idea you have, even if you don’t have time to put it in place due to all the daily activities, these would be our “standby bank”.

We know that everything will change even if we are part of the cause, or the consequence. When we are part of the cause, and we are driving change, the main effort is to face the inertia of the “status quo”.

What if this force gets into standby, and we are part of the consequence of a change?

This is the time for us to pick every idea we had in our “standby bank”, or even in those changes we were suffering to put in place in the good times, and use them as a contingency plan.

Then, the effect of our changes will become stronger, and when the blizzard is gone, and the sun is shining, we will feel like we are up to speed quicker, but in the the end, we didn’t even stop.

We have a problem!

After setting up a WhatsApp group with my neighbors, I found out that we were not as secure as we thought. Too many things were going on around us that we simply ignored, because we couldn’t know what was beyond our sight.

We got scared, even without having any real trouble happening directly with us. That fear was our motivation to gather around and solve the problem!

It was amazing! We created a strong relationship with our neighbors and solved our problem with a simple and effective solution. End of story!

No, it was not the end of the story, we “created” a new problem that became harder to solve.

We put in place monthly meetings to discuss the performance of the solution, shared the minutes of the meetings with everyone, created surveys to collect their opinion, and several other good initiatives risen. We had energy and enthusiasm to bring new ideas and make them happen!

But, with the solution of the greater problem – security – people started to feel comfortable. There was nothing else compelling them to be part of the meetings, or even to collaborate with their opinions in the WhatsApp group. It is easy to understand. Why to use your energy to solve a problem that doesn’t exist anymore?

What we discovered then was that our solution would be as good as the commitment of the neighbors to keep it. For when people got relaxed, we experienced some smaller security problems. Nothing to fear yet, but they were there.

We also known that we needed a minimal number of neighbors to sustain our solution, and if they were not concerned anymore, we wouldn’t be able to sustain the solution at its best.

This problem we created was not as big as the first one, but took much more effort to solve exactly because of the difficulty to prioritize it throughout the community. The monthly meetings were getting empty, and people didn’t care to answer our surveys.

After some time struggling, our best strategy to overcoming it was by accepting that we would only have full meetings and surveys answered if there was a real need for that, and we focused on specific meetings, with a tangible purpose, even though it sometimes was with a smaller audience.

The engagement risen with that, because we were adding value every time we met, and those who attend smaller meetings with their problem solved are prone to interact with bigger events.

Today I use that experiences lessons learned in the transformation project I’m involved. When the primary motivator for a project or a process is already gone for good, don’t be afraid to change your paradigms, remodel your ways, find new goals to keep moving forward.

Everything is working so well. Let’s change it!

I have developed an efficient process and an Excel tool to support it two years ago. The team is happy with it, and have been using it and showing results! Success!

Now they are calling me again to change it. Why?

If you have already used Excel, you will feel like me. In a nutshell, you are able to create whatever you want, ready in the speed of a cheetah, and available to everybody through a cloud server with versioning control.

Then changing may not be a feasible option, as everything is fine. If you think like this, you are right, no need to change, at all.

Two years ago, there was no structured process, it was an endeavor which the results were unknown, and Excel excels in that case.

Now, the process has settled, and it requires continuous improvement – side note, it was built to a CI team – and scalability, decentralization, accessibility and agility are the new requirements for this process.

Now the tool became the bottleneck of this process, and that’s change is required. Added to that, the company evolved their digital solutions, and have some pretty good tools broadly available now , why not use them?

Instead of choosing the tool blindly, and deploying it, we are taking a step back, and understanding the tools available and comparing them against the business requirements, putting weights to them.

We are aware that the perception of value for each requirement changes, and at this moment, the weights for the requirements are enabled to change, as the tests are run.

Again, everything is working so well, why change, and have all this work around it?

My current answer to this is because it is important to have structured decision, even if the decision is not to change.

Igniters and “slow-cookers”

I am starting this without a title, maybe in the end it doesn’t even become a post.

Just like this, I started today without a title, as I was not very excited about it. But I have discovered a great risk for my life e for my future.

“There is one thing that never changes, and that’s the change itself. “

Some important philosopher

Maybe that quotation is another thing that never changes.

For all of my life I have been the one who embraced change, and made sense of it. That is a fact, as much as I am not the one that pushes the change. Most of the times I do not cause it, as I have got in my life people who do it, and I can tell you, they do it very well!

They are good igniters, and that is the very best term for them, as they start fires, but they aren’t good to keep it burning, it is not of their nature. After some time, I found out I am this slow-cook kind of person, I just keep it burning.

I accepted this situation, and made it profitable to those around me. It set them free to have their crazy ideas and to change as much as they want. They have their back covered.

That was never a secret, and I was talking to some friends about it, when I realized this: what if they stop trying to change, and they settle down? Who is going fuel me with something different and amazing to solve?

That would be a life changer, not to have anybody to keep changing my life.

The danger I saw was that I was trying to stop my igniters to do their part, by not giving them space for that.

If you understand the importance of changes, and see them as positive, always remember to have around these 2 kinds of people, the igniters and the “slow-cookers”. It does not apply only for business, but for personal life also.

One step at a time, a dozen a day…

The best way to change, is by beginning it small.

Today it is easy to come to this conclusion, but it was not always like this. Actually I had to fail miserably to understand that.

I am going to put myself as a third person from now on, because I am not that guy anymore.

I am very proud of that guy! He accomplished many good things with such an ease that maybe I wouldn’t.

He was a young architecture student who had to produce a poster for a big company. A world map showing where they were making business.

He knew what to do, even at that young age he have already had produced several good things!

As he was adventurous, he made a plan! He was going to the next level using another tool that seemed to be the best at that time!

But he didn’t know how much effort he would have to put into doing both, making the job and learning the new tool.

His plans at that time were limited to the tools he would use, and the visual he would get, not planning as I see today.

Today I see that that was his biggest mistake, he tried to do it all, at once, without seeing the risks of changing.

I am also grateful for that fail today, as I keep using it to make my transformation decisions.

After that I still see as big and far as before, but now I do it one step at a time, a dozen a day.