As a project manager, leading a project to success provides a feeling of
accomplishment. Having been successful at several projects, project managers
could see becoming a program manager a likely career move.
But when PMO
managers were asked about the most critical factors for success, developing the
skill sets of project and program managers were an area of concern, according to
PMI's 2012 Pulse of the Profession. As a result, many organizations will
renew their focus on talent development, formalizing processes to develop
competency.
In my opinion, developing a program management mindset is a
key first step to successfully transitioning to a program management role. For
example, moving from the linear world of a single project to the molecular world
of programs can be daunting. Plus, you'll face the new experience of leading
other project managers.
Here are some practices I have found valuable to
adopting a program management mindset:
1. Think big picture
A common misperception about programs is when they are viewed as one
big project. Keep in mind that a program is an interconnected set of projects
that also has links to business stakeholders and other projects. Adopt a 'big
picture' attitude to the overall program and avoid fixating on a single
project's details.
2. Create a project manager trust model
As a project manager, you develop trust with individual contributors
performing delivery activities. As a program manager, you have to develop trust
with project managers. Create a common interaction framework with every project
manager for progress reporting, resource management, etc.
3.
Encourage project managers to say "so what?"
As a program manager, you
will deal with additional reports, metrics and other information that you didn't
experience as a project manager. Encourage your project managers to start
dialogs with "so what" outcomes. This will get right to the direct impact on the
program. Have them support these outcomes with relevant information from their
reports, dashboards and metrics.
4. Establish credibility with
business leaders
With programs, customers are typically in business
functions. Immerse yourself and your project managers in their business.
Training, site visits and status meetings held at business locations are good
ways to immerse your team in the customer's business.
5. Develop
long-distance forecasting skills
Forecasting several weeks in the future
is satisfactory with a project. However, a program with projects moving at
different speeds and directions requires a longer forecast horizon. Set your
forecast precision in terms of months, not weeks. In addition, look for
multi-project forecasting considerations such as holiday blackout periods and
external project dependencies.
Article by Kevin Korterud for Voices on Project Management .
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