I scanned my Twitter feed on Monday May 16th and found a post by Todd Williams called The Progressive CIO’s Model for Project Success.  After the last couple of months of having to put our IT Services PMO team in place to rescue “business” led projects, I am compelled to question approach proposed by Todd.

Todd makes the point that IT organizations have been unsuccessful in building systems that meet their customer’s needs and fail in schedule, usability and scope.  This is a true statement as long as it is taken in context.  These symptoms of project failure (note: I did not say IT failure!) represent organizations that have a low levels of IT and Project Governance in their IT departments and in the rest of their organization.  Todd suggests that “progressive CIOs” need a new approach which is opposite to today’s practices.

I disagree … progressive CIOs need to recognize that IT touches all parts of the organization and that IT is one of the only places in a company where a broad enterprise view can be well understood and supported. Growing and maturing a PMO (project,program,portfolio mgmt) in IT is the first step.  Then moving that mature PMO out of IT to serve the entire organization should be the mission of a progressive CIO.

Next Todd suggests that because a business unit can use MS Office tools like Excel and Access to build small departmental applications on time, schedule and budget that we in IT should consider handing this work back to the business and concentrate on infrastructure.

If the user is better at creating useful applications and IT builds better infrastructure, then create an organization to mimic that model.

This is a huge generalization and does not come close to the complexity and scope of what an enterprise system project can entail. I will have to write a different post about the massive technical debt that our organizations carry due to all these departmental systems built with Microsoft Office tools!

There is a reason for having specific departments in organizations and that is to deliver on their specialized services.  Human Resources should deliver HR services.  Finance should deliver financial services.  IT should deliver IT services.  PMOs should deliver project services.  Creating redundant Project Management services and IT implementation services in multiple departments adds cost, complexity and creates silos within organizations.  Another big problem is this approach causes issues in departments that end up relying on individual experts who get sick, go on vacation, on training or leave the company.  This makes the department vulnerable to not being able to deliver on service commitments to the organization.  The level of risk of not being able to deliver a key departmental service is not something any senior leader should accept for their organization.

 

I found two great articles in my Twitter feed this week that really struck home for me.

Over the past decade, I have prided myself on how busy I am multi-tasking and having a calendar booked solid. My hard work has paid off as I successfully progressed in my career, learned many new things and served my team and customers to the best of my ability.

But … with this self imposed hectic/chaotic pace, I have seen my commitment to fitness deteriorate, my personal and family life being compromised all for the sake of working harder (not necessarily smarter).

The first article I came across was retweeted by the American Management Association (@AMAnet):

#Leadership & White Space. (RT @mikemyatt) #Management | http://ow.ly/4Rn8i

Mike Myatt (@MikeMyatt) started the article Leadership and Whitespace with a great quote:

I don’t care how busy you are, but I do care about what you accomplish – the former doesn’t always lead to the latter.

After reading the article about creating “white space” in my calendar, I took some time to think about how I could go about doing this. It’s not easy when you have grown up in a management culture of “do more with less” and “deliver, deliver, deliver”.  When I started the management role of my team of 22 analysts, I deliberately chose to take a “servant leadership” approach that focused on setting direction, empowering my team and then managing the inevitable roadblocks, politics and priority changes that come along the way. So do I have an answer today … no but I am committed to work on it.

The first reader comment on Mike’s post was from Tanveer Naseer (@TanveerNaseer) who wrote the second article I mentioned – Learning to Appreciate the White Spaces.  Tanveer provided four reasons to create white spaces:

  1. Provides opportunities for contemplation and review
  2. Shifts our decision making from reflexive reactions to measured, deliberate responses
  3. Allows you to address those unanticipated issues without penalizing other tasks
  4. Even machines need maintenance/repair

These are great guides and really challenge me to rethink my approach to work.  Thank you @MikeMyatt and @TanveerNaseer, you both have given me new insights on how to be a better leader and manager.

ps: For the social media naysayers, this is yet another powerful reason that I believe Twitter is an essential part of my professional and personal development!

 

This is a paper I wrote for a course I took as part of my Masters of Science program at Syracuse University.  I believe that the only way we can succeed as leaders is to empower and motivate the people we work with.  This paper describes a process that I use with my team … I look forward to your comments and feedback.

Abstract

This paper explores an approach to build intrinsic motivation in High Technology Workers which motivates them to work on their personal learning plans to earn rewards in their personal, educational and career objectives in a work environment governed by a Collective Bargaining Agreement.  Topics covered are (a) Definition of Key Terms, (b), Background, (c) An Approach for Motivating Unionized Employees, (d) Review of Supporting Motivational Theories and (e) Conclusions.  After reading this paper, the reader should have a clear understanding of the key terms, background, discussion of motivational theories and an approach to develop intrinsic motivation for employees to work towards rewards in their personal, educational and career objectives.

Definitions

Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA): A written contract between an employer and a labor union, for a definitive period of time, spelling out conditions of employment, wages, hours of work, rights of employees and the union, and procedures to be followed in settling disputes.

Personal Learning Plan (PLP): A structured and collaborative process between an employee and their manager with goal of creating a plan for the employee’s personal, educational and career development.

SMART Objectives: A mnemonic used in performance management to describe the goals and targets set for employees.  SMART stands for :  Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time Bound.

Total Compensation: A Human Resources term used to describe the complete compensation an employer provides to employee including salary, benefits, pension, health care and government benefits.

Background

I lead a team of 22 unionized, Systems Analysts in the Information Technology Services department at the British Columbia Institute of Technology (BCIT) (www.bcit.ca).  BCIT is a provincially chartered and publically funded higher education institution.  My team has responsibility for all the applications delivered centrally to our community.  My team members’ total compensation is governed by the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) between the BCIT Faculty and Staff Association (FSA) (www.bcitfsa.ca) and BCIT.   The CBA (BCIT FSA, 2007) prescribes the specifics of the employee compensation items:

  • Holidays, Vacations and Leaves
  • Professional Development
  • Placement and Advancement
  • Salary, Hourly Rates and Allowances
  • Insurance/Benefit Plans
  • Administrative Allowances
© 2007-2012 Enterprise Architecture in Higher Education - Leo de Sousa Creative Commons License
Enterprise Architecture in Higher Education by Leo de Sousa is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at leodesousa.ca.
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