Archive for July, 2008
Project Shrink Birthday Party
This week Project Shrink is a year old. Yah! During this year (and actually in the 5 years before) I am obsessed with this Project Management riddle:

Photography by kk+.
- There is a large bucket of Project Management methods and techniques
- We face a world of infinite complexity
- A Project Manager only has one pair of eyes, one pair of ears, one large mouth and a small brain.
- How are you going to pull the right rabbit out of the bucket to take on the project world?
My answer so far:
- By having fabulous eyes and ears.
- By reducing the size of your mouth.
- By utilizing the full capacity of your brain.
Experimenting: We Have No Clue. So What To Do?
My monthly column at TechTarget.com is up: "Software project managers should allow for experimentation" (original title: We Have No Clue. So What To Do?).

Photography by Ctd 2005.
"The solution is so simple. But somehow, "experimenting" lost its appeal. Management (with a capital "M") doesn't allow uncertainties. The whole quality hype didn't help us either, with its "zero defects" and "doing it right the first time" crap. It just means we should think before we do something. It doesn't mean we should kill everyone that needs a second attempt! Heck, even Frederick Brooks wrote in his classic The Mythical Man Month "the management question, therefore, is not whether to build a pilot system and throw it away. You will do that." His advice? Plan to throw one away."
Read the entire article.
No commentsWhy You Need Stupid Users
[sarcasm]
The professionals enter the building, their suits, hair and shoes all shiny and stuff. They roll out their charts, the flashy binders, and difficult words. They are very expensive, so they must be good.

Photography by AnyJazz65.
They try to avoid too much contact with the users; the dinosaurs that perform the "normal" work, not the divine "project" tasks. When talking about the users, the professionals always lower their voices, they almost whisper. "They are all nice people, but not as smart as us."
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Change, Resilience And Acupuncture
Change is all around us. It always has been and it always will be. As a Project Manager you have to make sure your project team satisfies a defined business goal. Change within a project and its surroundings is a given. The PM should not question change, he should not resist change and he should not blame everything that doesn't go to plan on change. When change is all around us, this means within the project, the surroundings and also the Project Manager self. Change is not a separate entity. It's part of nature. And so are we.
3 commentsProud Postings: Never The Same River Twice
In this episode of my series "Proud Postings" not a Project Management specific blog, but a real exciting blog about handling change. I am talking about "Never The Same River Twice" by Maria Gajewski. The world is changing fast. What can you do about it? That is the fundamental question behind this blog. It is a place to "explore how we can act in our spheres of influence to deal with change in ways that are healthy, useful, and maybe even fun." I asked Maria The Question: "What are the 3 postings you are most proud of?"

Photography by Roger Butterfield.
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Bas de Baar discusses Project Management in a global, mobile, virtual and multi-cultural world. 

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