Thursday, September 11, 2008

Organizing for Innovation

Here's an organizational model and mindset for innovation, which has produced results over the years. ...

... "Unbounded thinking is encouraged, failure is not punished, and thinking big is the norm, but at the same time there's an emphasis on producing a result. Program managers are selected for their technical excellence, their entrepreneurial spirit ... " ...


Via Baseline: DARPA Continue

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Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Loosely Coupled Business through SOA

If you're building a new business and focusing on your primary differentiators in the market, coupling-in non-core functions to your core business processes could be a valuable and efficient business model. ...

... "However, SOA is more than a single IT project or even a series of implementations. Rather, SOA represents a long-term change in thinking and management of all aspects of the enterprise. " ...


Via ENTERPRISE OPEN SOURCE: Where Are We With SOA?

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

M+A Integration Requires Technology Marriage

Here's some perspective on the Microsoft / Yahoo marriage. The integration of their cultures will be daunting. However, blending their technologies is likely to generate the most contention. This could be interesting to watch, if acquisition is consummated. Can the best of both companies survive? ...

... "A smooth integration also will not be a matter of simply swapping one set of software or hardware for another - though that is a daunting part of the task. It may hinge on changing deep-seated mindsets. " ...


Via New York Times: Merger View:

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Saturday, January 05, 2008

Mindset then Tools

Good advice for influencing innovation in your enterprise. Do more of this to innovate: experiment, invest resources, create burning platforms, and understand your customers' problems. ...

... "Do not train your employees on creativity techniques or bring in innovation software until you have addressed your underlying cultural issues (the mindset). " ...


Via Steve Shapiro: Innovation Mindset, Not Tools

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Sunday, November 18, 2007

Maverick Thinking from the History of Storage Systems

Historical perspective on the evolution of storage devices at IBM, where the maverick mindset was necessary to bring forth the innovation. ...






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Saturday, January 20, 2007

Company Culture: Simple Mindset

Philips Electronics needs some outside-in perspective to cut through the complexity and see the simplistic approach to design. ...

... "For Philips, the promise of simplicity isn't just about making products that are easier to use. The bigger challenge is rewiring the entire organization. " ...


Via Business Week: Philips

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Thursday, December 21, 2006

Influencing People: The Project Manager's Secret Weapon

I recently attended a presentation on self-awareness and influence by Dr. Charles Dwyer, Academic Director of the Aresty Institute’s Leading and Managing People program in the Wharton School. I was so impressed with the presentation that I bought his book, The Shifting Sources of Power and Influence.

This book was a real eye-opener, and a jewel for anyone in project management. In the book, Dwyer states three major challenges we all face:

  • Dissonant Value Systems (i.e. people’s conflicting value systems, made even more visible by the advent of the media, internet, etc.)
  • Diffused Power (i.e. power being spread around in a matrix fashion, with more and more decentralization and special interest groups, etc.)
  • Limited Resources (We all face a limited set of resources, made even more challenging by our lack of a mindset geared towards accepting tradeoffs, or a good mechanism to guide operational priorities)

Sound like any projects you know?

Dwyer goes on to caution that public statements, such as vision, mission, organizational values, etc. may be useful for articulating the values of the leadership or giving people a sense of structure, but do not in themselves change anyone’s value systems. Many leaders assume they can use these statements to change people’s value systems to match organizational values, but this is a myth.

What is needed instead is the ability to influence others by getting them to change their behavior to match your values. To do this, have a clear picture of what you want the unit to look like; set specific, measurable objectives; and insure that people have a way of achieving those objectives.

According to Dwyer, some tried and true methods include asking people for help, offering or implying something in return, or influencing indirectly (i.e. working through someone else who’s in a better position to influence).

Dwyer points out five guidelines for influencing people (I’ve paraphrased them):

  1. Insure they have adequate capability (Do they know what to do, have the competence and self-confidence to carry it out?)
  2. Address their perception of “Potential Value Satisfaction” (WIIFM or “what’s in it for me”)
  3. Address their perception of the probability of value satisfaction (i.e. Do they trust you? You must build trust through visible examples.)
  4. Address their perception of cost (Do this by giving them alternatives or a sense of options, and helping them understand the costs and implications.)
  5. Address their perception of risk (Try to assume or distribute some of the risk. Don’t ignore it.)

These are the five things everyone weighs in their mind when someone attempts to influence them. In essence, the five elements (four of which are perceptions) make up an equation for behavior. We can influence people’s behavior by addressing this equation (I’ve paraphrased for simplicity):

Behavior=Capability + (Perceived Value * Trust factor) – (Perceived cost and risk)

These are just some of the gems of wisdom in Dwyer's book. He offers reams of memorable examples, often with a humorous style. With 90% of a project manager's job being communication (including influence), I highly recommend Dwyer’s book for project managers, or anyone in a leadership position for that matter.

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Sunday, December 10, 2006

Critical Chain Insights

There's a good article on Projects@Work about Critical Chain Project Management, with some insights from the field.

Still, organizations are slow to adopt it. The biggest roadblock is getting management to change their mindset, especially when it regards avoidance of multi-tasking and not focusing on task completion dates.

It's not foolproof, and makes some generic assumptions (i.e. assuming everyone pads their estimates), but certainly there are some valid points of CCPM that should be considered. Even if an organization doesn't buy into all its philosophies, they shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

Here's the article...

http://www.projectsatwork.com/content/Articles/234283.cfm

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Thursday, March 16, 2006

Enable Creativity to Generate Ideas ...

Need to increase the flow of ideas in your enterprise, department, or work-group. Build a creative environment and innovative mindset through fun meetings. Bill Repp provides insight on enabling creative meeting practices - all simple, yet effective. ...

... "Ask one or two people in the group who can draw to mind-map meeting ideas on a flip chart. Cartoon figures like a clock, book, tree, or computer are sketched in quickly to highlight key ideas. Colors, arrows, dotted lines, circles, boxes and squiggles can show relationships and movement of thought. " ...

Enable Creativity to Generate Ideas: Via Commercial Appeal: Mix some fun into meetings for good ideas ...

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Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Project Portfolio Management: Don't Forget to Kill ...

Enjoyed Richard Jones' post about exploiting internal resource management to drive innovation rates, which requires killing low potential projects. One of the first steps is to improve visibility to resource utilization (knowing what resources are doing) and to improve visibility to active projects (increasing opportunity to see project kill candidates). This visibility combined with effective governance of the project portfolio (the killer mindset) could move the bar in performance. ...

... "Companies can be outstanding at generating new ideas - I mean really world-class and yet they struggle. The simple reason is they don't have the resources to exploit them. " ...

Project Portfolio Management: Don't Forget to Kill: Via Innovation to Products to Ventures :: Dead project walking -why you have to kill projects to be successful

Success Metric: Kill rate in the project portfolio ...

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