People Pusher
"The project
manager first has to be tough, second place has to be flexible. A motto I
consider important is “Never uncertain; always open.”
I saw that in Latin (Numquam incertus; semper apertus) on the ceiling of a
German fraternity in Heidelberg. It's important to always have a direction and
be going there. You can't steer a ship that's not underway. But it's also
important to be open to changes in circumstance and direction and not just to
be completely bullheaded. A project manager also has to be a people person.
Project management is a people function and most of the problems are people
problems."- Fred Brooks author
of the Mythical Man Month
I manage people and projects for a living. My goal is to always to get the project done
ahead of schedule and under budget. There
is science and art to getting this done.
The science part consists of having the knowledge of the
project management framework that your organization follows. This is very different from one organization
to another. Sometimes it is well spelled
out in manuals and training. Other organizations
do not follow a formal system and simply respond to the flow.
What Fred is talking about is the art piece. As he wisely tells us, most problems are
people problems. You have to be tough to
protect your organization's goal for the project but flexible enough with
people to allow for reasonable changes.
It is a fine line. The line,
never uncertain, always open is the secret sauce.
Many project mangers tend to fall into one or the other
camp. I love both equally because I see them as
complimentary and not as excluding the other.
Just because I know the flow does not can be effective on getting people
to follow me. One without the other makes
one a very incomplete project manager.
Today's question is:
"On your path
are you certain but open?"
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