Cheetah
Your PMO!
By Michelle
LaBrosse
You are in the kitchen,
surrounded by ingredients, and are asked to prepare a meal. As you
look around, you notice that you have the usual: flour, sugar, eggs,
milk, butter, meat, veggies, and fruit. You think, “No problem, I
can whip something up in no time.” Then you take a second look
around and see that there is no stove. There are no pots, pans, or
utensils. No cookbook can be found
It takes more than
ingredients to create a meal, and it takes more than resources to
manage a project. You need to have standards (cooking temperature),
documentation (recipes), guidance (cooking shows), economies of
repetition (making meals every day), and metrics (your taste
testers). Your kitchen is the Project Management Office (PMO) of
your meals, ensuring that ingredients are put together in a way that
consistently and efficiently produces edible (if not delicious)
results.
Now that I’ve gotten you
hungry, let’s think about how this applies to a matter near and dear
to your heart—managing successful projects! History shows us that
companies that have PMOs perform consistently better that those
without PMOs. A study done by CIO and the Project Management
Institute (PMI) revealed that the longer a company has a PMO in
place, the better its project success rates become. In the study,
CIO and PMI discovered that 37 percent of companies with a PMO for
less than one year reported increases in project success rate, while
companies with a PMO for four or more years had a 65 percent
increase in project success. Like a good piece of steak, the longer
your PMO marinates the better your projects turn out.
So what are the first
steps that you need to take when you decide to establish a PMO?
Pick your flavor.
PMOs can come in all shapes and forms. Whether you are revamping
your current PMO or starting from scratch, it important that you set
up a PMO that reflects the need of your organization. Whether you
need a place that Project Managers (PMs) can go to for training,
best practices, and guidance, or you require a central unit of PMs
who are loaned out to business units to work on projects, ask
yourself and your coworkers these questions before organizing your
PMO.
Don’t forget to measure!
In order to quantify your project management success rates with a
PMO, you need to know where you are now. This is also true if you
already have a PMO and wish to revise it for greater project
success. What percent of projects in your organization are completed
on time and within budget? What percent are not, and how much are
they over budget or behind schedule? Keep careful records of your
project success rates, as this gives you a transparent view into how
changes in your PMO can affect your organization’s project success
rates.
Develop a recipe book and
share it.
We all have that friend that can make the most delicious (insert
mouth-watering and delectable item here) in the world, but he
refuses to share the recipe claiming it’s a “family secret.” While
this might fly in the food world, it cannot lead to project success
in Project Management. In the PM world, if someone has a secret
recipe for success, it’s your job to get that recipe. Make your PMO
the central hub for best practices (templates, procedures, project
plans, lessons learned, etc.) so that your company can save time on
its projects.
Taste test and improve as
you go.
It’s important to check on your PMO throughout its creation, as well
as when it is done, in order to ensure that it’s the kind of PMO
that your organization can effectively utilize. If you find that
your PMO is implementing too much red tape and slowing projects
down, revisit the processes you put in place and adapt to your
organization’s tastes and preferences.
Dig in!
Once your PMO is
set up—use it! Pretty cakes aren’t baked to look at, and PMOs aren’t
constructed for show. Make sure your PMO is not just a symbol of
organization in the company, but a functioning part of everyday
business and a true enhancement to the way that projects are done.
The best PMOs are the ones that are actionable, and not just
administrative.
Read other articles and learn more about
Michelle LaBrosse.
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