Post details: Why do Most Project Management tools Not Inculde Collaboration?

10/02/07

Permalink 04:21:33 pm, Categories: general, 1269 words   English (US)

Why do Most Project Management tools Not Inculde Collaboration?

This is Posted by: David Coleman

Product Management tools were originally meant for professionals. The first tools I learned about in the 70’s and 80’s were mainframe-based with names like Scitor and Primavera. These tools were mostly focused on resources and scheduling for projects, and had the ability to support large, complex and even multiple projects. What was interesting about these mainframe-based tools was that you could access them from any terminal connected to the mainframe. There was one project plan, and usually only one version of project documents stored in the project space. We used “Profs” for e-mail and notifications of changes in project status. However, even though these tools consolidated project objects, they were complex and often required not only a professional project manager to run the project, but the project team often needed a week or more of training.

[More:]

Then in the early 80’s the PC revolution happened. By the 1990’s, with a reasonable amount of computing power on the desktop, project management, through Microsoft Project, moved to the desktop and garnered a large percentage of the market. However, these tools were still complex, required training and were only in the realm of the project professional, those that understood work break-down structures or who had been PMI trained. Now that project documents were on everyone’s PC hard drive, there were multiple versions floating around, everyone was mailing documents back and forth and the project managenment (PM) systems itself was flooding our Inboxes with alerts and notifications.

For Everything There is a Season...

In the IT world most things seem to happen in about 10 year cycles. However, the evolution of project management seems to be on a 20 year cycle. In the 60’s and 70’s we had a consolidated mainframe approach to project management. In the 80’s and 90’s we had a more distributed, desktop-oriented PC approach to project management. Today in the new millennium we are back to the more consolidated approach, but with a difference. The difference is that each time we go through the cycle we seem to add a layer of abstraction getting closer and closer to the end-user each time. In the current iteration we have returned to software ‘in the cloud’.

This time it was not in the mainframe where the software resided, but project management software was starting to be offered as a service (SaaS). In this scenario the software was hosted on a network of servers (like Amazon’s S3 for expandable storage or EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud)) that had the capacity to expand if the number of users increased. We now have come full circle with the mainframe, where everything can be stored in one space, online, with only one version of project documents stored in a secure project space. However, the newer SaaS PM tools promise not only less complexity and improved ease-of-use, but they often do not require a highly trained project manager to make the project successful. Add to this the fact that you can “try-before-you-buy” with many of these tools, lowering not only your initiation costs (you don’t have to buy a server, software license, or hire someone to maintain it), but also lowering your overall risk.

However, with each iteration the level of project success has not gotten any better. A recent survey of the PM literature shows:

• 75% of IT projects fail, are late or over budget (PWC, March 2007)
• 7 out of 10 UK government IT projects fail (Joe Harley, CIO, Department of Work and Pensions, Government IT Summit, May 2007)
• 85% of project success is dependent on factors related to people (Source, John McKean, Executive Director of the Center for Information Based Competition quoted from a blog)
• 60% of IT systems fail because projects neglect the organization and people changes introduced by new technology (Cranfield University/BEST project)

If we define failure as a project that is late, over budget, or does not meet the customer needs then what is causing this high rate of failure? If the technology has gotten better with each iteration, and our training of Project Managers is better, what are we missing? My belief is the realization that communication amongst project teams and project team members is poor.

“Communications failures top the list of reasons IT projects fail”, according to poll results from the Computing Technology Industry Association. About 28% of 1,000 respondents identified poor communications as the main cause of project failure, according to CompTIA (March 13, 2007 InformationWeek.")

What are some of the problems in a project management context than can happen without collaboration?

- False Consensus
- Unresolved Overt Conflict
- Un-discussed Covert Conflict
- Rigid Hierarchy
- Weak Leadership
- Unrealistic Expectations
- Closure Avoidance
- Calcified Team Meetings
- Uneven Participation
- Lack of Mutual Accountability
- Left out Stakeholders
- Forgetting the Customer
- Adoration of the Technology

From: Alan and Deborah Slobodnik, Options for Change – MA Bay OD Learning Group

Even more critical than communications, collaboration may be the key to project success. It is the level of participation, ownership and interaction that are inherent in collaboration that may hold the key to project success.

Communication, Interaction, Coordination, Collaboration

As an industry analyst firm, Collaborative Strategies is a lot more meticulous in its definitions of terms. For this discussion we will distinguish between communication, interaction, collaboration, and coordination, and use the following examples to help define each of these terms:

Communication: Person A sends a message to person B, and person B acknowledges receipt. The message could include simple or complex information (graphics, pictures, or multimedia).
Interaction: Person A sends a message to person B; person B acknowledges receipt and sends a message back to person A in reply. The type of information transferred in an interaction is, by its nature, complex.
Coordination: Using communications to have multiple people work on a variety of tasks over time with a common goal.
Collaboration: Multiple interactions occur between two or more people; each transfers complex information in pursuit of a particular common goal over a specified period of time.

For a common definition of collaboration we turn to Wikipedia, which notes that collaboration has these characteristics: creation, innovation, problem solving, participation and ownership. Collaboration in the Web 2.0 world is more about participation: working together to work things out because you’re part owner of the goal/solution. This is a big shift from the initial mainframe focus on resources and schedules and shows that we can learn each time we go through a cycle.

Collaboration and Project Management

One of the benefits of having a hosted project management tool is the increased ability for collaboration. This means that project teams can incorporate communication, interactions, coordination and collaboration all within some of these new Web 2.0 project management tools. Many of these tools include functions such as:

• User Profiles (project team member profiles)
• Expertise Discovery
• Project team chat (while in a specific project room)
• Integrated opinion polls (for team decision making)
• Private messaging (IM)
• Blogs – an interactive online journal that contains an ongoing dialog about the projects status and issues
• Wikis – a collaborative project web site that allows any member of the project team to add or edit the page(s) and can easily be linked to other project pages or resources.
• Multimedia file sharing
• Customized notifications and alerts
• Tagging, tag clouds and social tagging
• Presence (ability to detect if someone is online)
• RSS feeds
• Discussion forums for project issues and risks
• Group and role administration (supports security and access management)
• Integrated calendar management for coordination of tasks and meetings
• Rating and ranking of content
• Reputation engines, so team members can vote on different project documents

Project Collaboration 2.0

You can see a longer version of this blog and more about Project Collaboration 2.0, look at the Clarizen Community site by clicking here

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: Duncan Blakemore [Visitor] · http://www.opmcreator.com
We have a number of collaborative tools built into our project management tool http://www.opmcreator.com these include project based emails and discussions, file sharing, customised notifications and alters, project calenders, project feedback and more. Please take a look, we welcome your feedback!
Permalink 10/03/07 @ 09:39
Comment from: Lionel Naismith [Visitor] · http://www.CollabTRAK.com
Very nice article Mr. Coleman on project collaboration (or the lack of it).

I personally help manage another online tool that is useful called CollabTRAK. CollabTRAK is a free web-based project tracking and collaboration application. It is designed for use with design projects. Web designers can collaborate with their clients or other web designers. Tools include file sharing, live chat, clients can pay designers, project notes, etc. I definitely understand the importance of having productive collaborative tools. :)
Permalink 10/20/07 @ 21:01
Comment from: Jed Cawthorne [Visitor] · http://www.ecm-stuff.blogspot.com
We use EMC | Documentum's eRoom for collaborative project management. Not free, not online (although there is an internet hosted version I beleive) not even very web 2.0 tech wise, but it does allow content centric collaboration, with simple threaded discussions, databases (e.g. of people in the team), good search facilities, easy inline authoring of 'web pages' (notes in eRoom vernacular) and it offers a project management tool, with simple scheduling, tracking and gantt chart views (not MS Project, but its not meant to be). Also integrates with Outlook task lists etc. We like it a lot, and I don't think its pushed enough by EMC for 'collaborative project management'.
Permalink 10/25/07 @ 05:13
Comment from: David Coleman [Member] · collaborate.com
Jed,

I agree with you. We have tracked e-room since its inception many years ago. You are right it is not pushed much by EMC, and yes there is eRoom.net which is an online service. I am glad that your using this tool to collaborate with your project teams. I realize it is not very Web 2.0, but the fact that it integrates with Outlook is key. However, we are seeing a number of Web-based tools that are offering good functionality at low cost, and low start-up costs (because they are hosted). CopperProject is one I looked at recently.
Permalink 10/31/07 @ 16:11
Comment from: Troy Malone [Visitor] · http://www.pelotonics.com
In my experience, most project management solutions are focused around the individual. The Project Manager, the Engineer, the programmer, etc. The fail to realize that the details of the project are just one aspect of the equation. In reality, no project proceeds exactly how it is planned. These deviations must be communicated in a transparent manner for the project to succeed. When this is left to email and traditional communication methods, things fall through the cracks and problems happen. Structured collaboration is definately key to a successful project.

Troy Malone
Chief Evangelist
www.pelotonics.com
Permalink 12/22/07 @ 23:35
Comment from: Ed Jones [Visitor] · http://www.egantt.co.uk
If you want a fast & simple mpp viewer, which can recall your plans online and to all your Team Members, then I recommend www.egantt.co.uk ;This site will read 2000, 02, 03, 07 mpp formats and then store a plan to your repository account, synchronising regular updates. Your team members can then be updated via the website. Try it out, its totally free.
www.egantt.co.uk
Permalink 01/20/08 @ 13:34
Comment from: Clive Selly [Visitor]
Totally agree with you. Collaboration is the most vital key for any project success. In fact as per PMI, 90% of project management is communication.
Recently we have evaluated various Project Management tools for our organization. Due to diverse teams, apart from project management we wanted to have collaboration as key feature. After extensive scrutiny we finally decided to go with Celoxis . So far we have made a good progress with it.
Permalink 01/25/08 @ 04:44
Comment from: JonesE [Visitor] · http://www.egantt.co.uk/mpp-viewer.htm
Mpp Viewer (100% Free). View 2000-2007 mpp files with this online gantt chart, without the need to download an application.
http://www.egantt.co.uk/mpp-viewer.htm
Fast and simple, very effective when you need to share/communicate task data to your team members/clients without the cost of extra Microsoft Project Licences.

Permalink 04/02/08 @ 07:23
Comment from: anal sex [Visitor] · http://www.daha18.com
For Everything There is a Season...Sex , Porno , Free sex , Adult , Turk sex , Anal sex , Oral sex , Turk sex , Turk porno , Turk amator , Zenci video , Asyali sex , Asian pornos , Turk videolar , Asian Girl , Asyalı kızlar , Liseli Kızlar , Çıtırlar , Latin Güzeller , Zenci Kızlar , Hardcore , Hardcore , Parti Plaj Çekimleri , Mankenler , Olgun sex , Lexbiyen , Lezbiyen porno , lezbiyen sex , Cep sex , Cep resimler , Ünlüler ,Yabanci unluler , Free sex , Asian sex , Porno , Gay sex , Turk sex
Permalink 04/09/08 @ 22:54
Comment from: wow power leveling [Visitor] · http://www.xowow.com
Reflecting on wow power leveling ideas, I was wow power leveling very happy wow power leveling it explained a wow power leveling of things. First, a wow power leveling of parents complain wow power leveling what impact games wow goldon children, but wow powerlevelingthose parents are generally only wow powerlevelingseeing the trivial wow powerleveling of the game, rather wow powerlevelingwhat the game is REALLY teaching. Chess wow goldto be vaguely about war (it has knights and castles and kings), but it's world of warcraft power leveling a game of controlling space, of world of warcraft power leveling the opponent's mind, of twow power leveland tactics and so on. Grand wow power level Auto appears to be about power leveling wow cops and hookers, but it's power leveling wow a game of power leveling wow and freedom. There is value topowerleveling wowa virtual world that lets you do powerleveling wow you can't do in thecheap wow power leveling world. Don't be fooled by the gangster facade.Even more to Raph's point, I Maple Story mesos on what Street Fighter MapleStory mesos me: anms mesos lot. Wheremesos even begin? SilkRoad Gold starters, there's tactics SRO Gold strategy. When SilkRoad Online Gold you attack and when eq2 plat you? You have eq2 goldunderstand the eq2 Platinumpoints in EverQuest 2 Platinummatch, the EverQuest 2 gold thatEverQuest 2 plat the lotro gold open. If you lotr gold winning, you Lord of the Rings online Gold to avoid these situations, if you're losing you need to create them. Street Fighter taught me about yomi: knowing the mind of the opponent. You can't just play the odds and do the textbook-correct responses, you have to adapt and anticipate your opponent's moves. The game is merely a medium through which you play against the other player. Some players develop skills in planning, while others develop theirRolex Replica at improvisation Replica Rolexadapting to any situation they are thrown into. I learned first hand that when all seems lost, if you push, push, push and never give up, it's still possible to win.

ss
Permalink 04/29/08 @ 03:30

Leave a comment:

Your email address will not be displayed on this site.
Your URL will be displayed.
Allowed XHTML tags: <p, ul, ol, li, dl, dt, dd, address, blockquote, ins, del, a, span, bdo, br, em, strong, dfn, code, samp, kdb, var, cite, abbr, acronym, q, sub, sup, tt, i, b, big, small>
URLs, email, AIM and ICQs will be converted automatically.

Please type the code you see in the image above into the textfield. If you cannot read the code, just press "Reload" to generate a new one.
Options:
 
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Set cookies for name, email & url)

The Collaboration Blog

This is where the Collaborative Strategies analysts make observations and comments about the dynamic collaboration technologies market. You are welcome to write back to us by posting your comments at the end of this blog.

March 2009
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
<<  <   >  >>
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31          

Search

Categories


 

 

Syndicate this blog XML

What is RSS?

powered by
b2evolution