April 2009

Articles

What’s So Special About Specialists?

For years, many project and functional managers have believed they need the “exact right person” in each role on a project. Those exact right people are specialists, and some of them have quite narrow specialties. Here’s the story of one specialist and her impact on several projects. Two project managers needed the same person, a […]

agile, MPD

A Beautiful Teams Evening

Last Tuesday, I had a blast at Boston SPIN. I led a roundtable about transitioning to agile, and discovered that not everyone takes the feedback the timebox gives them. In this case, people weren’t finishing what they “attempted to commit to” in the timebox, but they extended the timebox. I suggested that was not such

MPD

Why Do You Care About What "Everyone" Else Does?

Jurgen asked me to help publicize his survey. Ok, I’ve done it. Now, let me rant about explain why I think surveys like this are not useful, and may be harmful. A survey does not take your context into account. Surveys about any practices without considering the industry, the products, and the management don’t tell

MPD

Update on Agile 2009, as of April 21

I’ve been writing this post forever (for a month), and finally deleted that one and have started over again. We had over 1500 submissions, so the stage producers and review teams made the difficult decisions when they accepted about 20% for the program. (Difficult is not nearly descriptive enough. Complex, merciless, intricate, knotty are helpful

hiring strategy, HTP

Wading Through Applicants

It’s now a hiring manager’s market. That means hiring managers can be picky and try to find just the right person for the open req. But, it also means that many applicants exist for each open req, and all of those people are applying for your job. How does a hiring manager find the right

MPD, portfolio management

Which Kind of Project Are You Working On Now?

I’m trying to clean up the project portfolio management book for technical review, and I realized the other night (well, morning, when I woke up), that I’d missed explaining a key idea. We all work on several kinds of projects: Projects that maintain the organization, the kind we need to run. These projects “keep the

HTP, network

How to Network for Senior Job

A number of my friends of long standing and colleagues are looking for jobs. (Friends of long standing is another way to say old friends without calling them old 🙂 They all have over 20 years of experience. The way they used to find jobs–through recruiters–is not working. Sure, recruiters have some openings, but most

Scroll to Top