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Do you find that you need to focus more on business benefits in your projects? Why do you think this is happening? Give us examples if you can.

Nick Woodward said:
I would say that on the projects I am involved with, it is not a case of focussing more, but focussing exclusively on the business benefits being sought - both within the company and for our external customers. I think that this is probably because a "traditional", time, cost, quality approach, would often leave a potential gap between the project outcomes and the business outcomes and, unfortunately, on many occasions that gap was not filled - so the project would declare itself successful, while the business failed to get the outcomes it required. By aligning the project and its community clearly with the business outcomes we are seeking, I believe the project team make different trade-offs than they would if just focussing on TCQ. We have had several recent examples, where programme teams have been able to significantly enhance the business outcomes (cost reductions in those particular cases) with far lower investment costs - because they focussed on developing a programme of work to meet business outcomes, as opposed to designing a particular solution that we believed would be lower cost. In so doing, we actually found the governance easier too, because our outcome parameters (timing and cost performance in the business) were aligned, so as long as the programme was not changing those, they were free to make intermediate timing and solution desicisions with those constraints.
Alison McQuater said:
This comment relates to the second 'shift' identified: "passive recipient of someone else’s project brief to proactive contributor". A key challenge here is achieving engagement of the IT professionals in the ‘shaping' process early enough to make a positive difference. Operational/business leaders need to have a real appreciation of the potential of IT to transform, shape and enhance business operations so that they can engage their IT colleagues early in exploring and shaping potential IT enablers. If engagement happens later opportunities for business benefits may be missed, or the project ends up in a situation of having to try to ‘bolt on’ beneficial additions later on.
Rodney said:
Yes, business benefits of projects are certainly of focus. What matters is not that you implemented a particular solution but that the chosen solution drives business value. As a result, PM's do get involved earlier in defining the value drivers for a project, attempting to try and quantify the value and then determine the best alternative to achieve that value. Business wants to ensure that it gets the best value for the $$ spent. Full articulation of the expected business benefits also helps prioritize amongst a portfolio of projects. It also may help validate a person's instincts for value in a particular area.
Sharon Hartung said:
I would absolutely agree with this statement specifically from a project communication and planning perspective. In the case of larger projects, my experience has been that as a Project Leader you must be able to communicate not only the progress of the project at a moment's notice, but the value or business benefit that the project is delivering on. In the past the expectation of a Project Leader was typically to communicate information such as the project is on schedule, on budget and what was going to be delivered when. Now the expectation appears to be understanding, highlighting or helping to develop the value statements and communication related to the benefit or value the project is providing. In terms of planning, I would say that in developing a project approach and associated plan for a larger project, selling the benefits of how the project is delivered appears to be required equally as well as traditional project status information. Let me give an example: If you had a project that was going to take a year to complete, you would likely phase the project or have deliverables along the year roadmap. These deliverables would likely represent the necessary steps to the final goal, as well as a potentially valuable milestones for representing progress and measuring earned value and other metrics to suggest that we are achieving what we are suppose to achieve in the necessary timeline. Here's the new element related to the 'business benefits'. I have been involved in many situations where the planning approach needs to be justified or 'sold' by the Project Leader in terms of what 'business benefits' that the individual or early milestones or deliverables along the delivery roadmap will provide.
R. Max Widema said:
Halleluiah! Is it because "There's a new mindset among IT business customers these days. Increasingly, they're banking on IT projects to yield investment returns" or was it always so and it is because the project management community has finally dug itself out of its institutionalized love affair with "On time, within budget"?
R. Max Widema said:
Re: ""They may not always have the organizational authority to deliver the change and harvest the benefits, but they [project managers] see it as their responsibility to ensure that those who have the power and authority do so." I don't see how a lowly project manager can "ensure" that line management of a business unit garners the benefits of the product of their project. That has to be the responsibility of a higher management, i.e. corporate management.
joan vincent said:
This is more of a reaction than a response, however, there seems to be an intense interest in combining the job of Project Manager and Business Analyst. Somehow, it is assumed, this combination would be able to serve both the deliverable side and the benefits side equally. In my opinion this is not doable. Considering the context of "temperment" the job of a PM and BA are not compatible. Certainly appropriate core competencies can be learned but "temperment" is innate. If a PM is expected to seek commercial applications for the Client the risk would sky rocket. I don't mean saving money, stream-lining systems, keeping costs down, I mean issues like ethics: how can the PM as a stakeholder make objective decisions if his/her future is connected to the product beyond the project? Ownership/copywrite issues: who owns what? Renumeration: how wouldl projects support the increased expense. How/at what point would he/she be evaluated? Legal implications: who is accountable for what and for how long? Joan Vincent

What methods have you used to assist the organization to achieve their business goals through your projects? Have they been successful?

Kathryn Bishop said:
In past projects, I have used two methods of ensuring that we continue to focus on the benefit of the work, rather than simply the deliverables - and one method is now much more common than it was. 1. Alongside the various project teams working on a large merger and transformation project, we set up a benefits realisation team, to focus on measuring our progress towards realising the predicted benefits. This involved more detailed measurement of the current operation in some key business areas, as the baseline against which we were working, as well as financial modelling of a range of possible effects on key number (e.g headcount, property space, operational budgets) to help us see clearly the impact of the projects deliverables. 2. I also employed a part-time accountant to work closely with me as overall Programme Director and the key Project Directors so that everytime we made what seemed to be a minor change in scope or sequence, we were made aware of the possible impact on the benefit. Nine times of out of ten, the impact was minor, but every so often the miniscule change in the project had a significant effect on the outcome - and that made it worth the cost of employing someone to work in this way.
Robin Hornby said:
A good PM has always asked the question “what’s the business goal” and at least kept his eye on that ball, while simultaneously ensuring that his own ball (the deliverables) is well controlled. Also, as project scope increases, the responsibility naturally creeps into the business (hence Program Managers). But the best way to get results is to follow the theory – get a PM to deliver the Goods and a Sponsor to deliver the Benefits. Now the PM can do much to ensure that happens, but again its best to put the responsibility with the experts and ensure a Business Analyst is assigned to the team. These are the trends I see, and the ones to be supported. Robin Hornby
Sharon Hartung said:
As many Project Leaders typically find we are often significantly constrained with budgetary limitations and find it challenging in addition to delivering the obligations of the project deliverables to also deal with the demands of helping the business achieve their business goals. There are several simple (tactical), techniques I often employ to try to assist the organization to achieve their business goals. First when developing the project approach or plan, I engage the business lead from the business or a business analyst on the project and try to create a value statement on the project approach or each of the key deliverables. This discussion will often influence the order of the deliverables so it should be done early in the planning process. Secondly, I leverage the project communication approach and/or plan to ensuring that the business stakeholders understand how the project is progressing, in terms of the business value being delivered along the roadmap. The third technique does require engagement of the business and necessary infusion of budget, which is the participation of or engagement of resources that support either the formal communication strategy, or are engaged in deliverables associated with demonstrating business value (i.e. business case or briefing documents or training / deployment packages).

What personal development have you done to be a successful leader? How difficult have these changes been?

Nick Woodward said:
I have found over my career that I have had to develop a much greater understanding of the financial aspects and operational business models of the businesses into which I deliver programmes of change. In theory, my transformation expertise coupled with financial and operational expertise from within the business should be sufficient to get to the business outcomes required. However, I have found that I am much better able to understand risk to outcomes, and implications of decisions, if I have a better understanding of the financial and operational aspects. I find that this learning is necessary each time I enter a new organisation - even if it is in an industry I am familiar with. I now tend to spend much more time with the financial managers and operational managers in an organisation in the early stages of a programme than I would have done at the start of my career - when my focus would have been on establishing a credible scope and schedule for the project. As a consequence of this approach I feel better able to judge and manage risk to business outcomes, and to facilitate new approaches when inevitably, things don't go quite to plan.
R. Max Widema said:
Re: "The balance of the role has swung away from administration and management towards leadership." This is another area of serious confusion amongst the project management community. Aside from the general problem of arriving at a consensus over the definition of "leadership", it is clear to me that what is required during the strategizing period(s) of the project life span, "leadership" is indeed required - to so configure the project to get the best possible product outcome. However, during the project's execution (implementation) phase what is needed is efficiency in production (especially if you want to be "On time and within budget"!) That calls for good managership - and that's not the same thing. It is for this reason it may well be desirable to have a different personality for each of the two different responsibilities in the two different parts of the project life span.
Do you find that you need to focus more on business benefits in your projects? Why do you think this is happening? Give us examples if you can.

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What methods have you used to assist the organization to achieve their business goals through your projects? Have they been successful?

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What personal development have you done to be a successful leader? How difficult have these changes been?

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