What to Know, Do and Think About

blog-check-listI rarely make resolutions for the New Year.  I broke the practice of listing too many lofty goals with unrealistic deadlines and little moral support years ago.  Now, I maintain a continuous checklist of What to Know, Do, and Think About in support of my success.  You can do the same when launching a Project Management Office.

Here’s a list of things to consider when starting a PMO:

Power:  Understand the power/organizational structure/decision-making ways and means.  Why?  To understand who the PMO is serving and to develop an infrastructure that works.

Problem Solving:  Be clear about the problem(s) to be tackled through project management; be clear about what it is not.  Why?  To develop the appropriate tools and methods and to understand the PMO’s focus and deliverables.

Launch:  Take advantage of the power of a new approach and the new organizational structure of the PMO.  Why?  To make it clear that it really matters and to creates “magic star dust” of Executive support for the PMO.

Infrastructure:  Build the basic PMO infrastructure.  Why?  It’s all about smart infrastructure.  Clear executive support, great staff, sensible approach and the mountains will move…

Roles & Responsibilities:  Understand the different roles and responsibilities of all involved in project management.  Why?  While individual stars can pull off a project, it takes a village to move an entire project agenda.

Tools:  Provide both Executive reporting tools and tools/methods to manage projects.  Why?  Simple, effective reporting and meaningful review of the report almost by itself creates the incentive for behavioral/cultural change to move the entire agenda.

Project Start-up:  Provide direction, support, education, and tools on successful project start-up.  Why?  This is one of the base core value-adds of a PMO.

Priorities:  Require Executive decision-making to prioritize the project agenda.  Why?  Less is more.  Focus means success.  Moving a few key projects hard and fast will create momentum and results.

Post-Launch:  Provide post-PMO launch services and activities that add value.  Why?  Be creative with building the common understanding of the project agenda and the work involved.  Communicate, communicate, communicate – you just can’t do it enough.

I’ll talk about a few of these in more detail over the next few days.  In the meantime, keep your goals focused, your requirements simple and your activities methodical.  Shout out each and every accomplishment – with volume and pride. 

Lisa DiTullio, Principal, Lisa DiTullio & Associates, LLC, www.lisaditullio.com

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About the Author

Lisa DiTullio

Lisa is a leading force in project and business management. She is the principal of Lisa DiTullio & Associates,LLC, dedicated to introducing project management as a business competency. She is the editor of ProjectBestPractices, a quarterly newsletter from ProjectWorld, and a contributor to PM Network Magazine. She's also the author of Simple Solutions: How "Enterprise Project Management" Supported Harvard Pilgrim Health Care's Journey from Near Collapse to #1. Her second book, Project Team Dynamics: Increased Speed, Enhanced Performance is due out early 2010. Scores of organizations – from college campuses to governmental agencies to Fortune 100 companies have gained from Lisa's insights and tell-it-like-it-is keynotes and programs. She offers a variety of topics, ranging from technical project management practices to teambuilding and business leadership. Audience members and workshop participants leave educated, engaged, and energized – armed with actionable practices for immediate success. www.lisaditullio.com, e-mail info@lisaditullio.com
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