Archive for the 'Sites' Category
Killing Sacred PM Stuff
The most interesting postings of this month can be attributed to Glen Alleman at Herding Cats. Although I don't always agree, these are provoking postings that trigger your brain, and helps you to become more aware of a question I asked earlier this month: "Why Do You Do What You Do in Project Management?"
Killing the Sacred Cows of Project Management
Three Simple Questions
Thermostatic Control
The BIG Question for any project management process
Sacred Cow: Teams
Read the links above and come back and think again: why do you do what you do?
No commentsProject Shrink Links 14-04-2008
State of Indiana Makes Using Waterfall SDLC’s a Criminal Offense
”Waterfall software development lifecycles have terrorized technology projects in this state for too long,” Governor Mitch Daniels said at a simple signing ceremony held at a meeting of the Central Indiana chapter of the Project Management Institute (PMI). “This bill will end the tyranny of big upfront planning, big upfront design, and litigation style change management.”
No commentsProject Managers Cannot Rely On Generalizations
My monthly column at Techtarget: Project managers cannot rely on generalizations:

Photography by Notariety.
No comments"The second reason was given to me by Nassim Taleb in his book The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable. It is the human need to categorize everything. We just have to put the world around is in neat boxes. Taleb coins the term "Platonicity" for this phenomenon — "the focus on those pure, well-defined, and easily discernible objects like triangles, or more social notions like friendship or love, at the cost of ignoring those objects of seemingly messier and less tractable structures." We put a label on an event and use that knowledge to reason about the future. We use this mechanism on everything, including people."
Project Shrink Links 30-03-2008
To Bet Or Not To Bet: How The Brain Learns To Estimate Risk
"Planning entails making predictions. In an uncertain environment, however, our predictions often don't pan out. And erroneous prediction of risk often leads to unusual behaviour: euphoria or excessive gambling when risk is underestimated, and panic attacks or depression when we predict that things are riskier than they really are."
Create your own version of this famous Project Management Cartoon.

Project Shrink Popular Posts
Below are the most popular posts on Project Shrink: The Blog (last 30 days - UPDATED 15th April 2008):
1. Introducing The Fish Pond
2. Management And Meditation
3. Proud Postings: Eric D Brown
4. Swimming Upstream The Information Flow
5. Fish And OODA Loops
6. What Is The Best Way To Motivate Team Members?
7. Project Management Code: Why Do You Do What You Do?
8. Stratification: Organizational Structures In A Pond
9. Proud Postings: Raven's Brain
10. Proud Postings: Undocumented Features
11. Social OODA Super Speedway
12. Driving On The OODA Highway
13. Filter And Drainage - Trust Running Through The Team
14. Bottoms Up: Leadership Style For A Better World
15. Way-New Collaboration: What I Meant To Say


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Bas de Baar, blogging as "The Project Shrink", is taking his message to the International Project Management community with a vengeance: "Projects Are About Humans. Now Deal With That!" ...