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Corporate
Culture: A Constraint On Your Project?
By Bob McGannon
You have assembled a highly skilled technical team. After a long
search, you have hired an experienced project manager to ensure
the project is tightly controlled. Through careful budgeting, you
ensure that appropriate funding is available. Do you think you
have mixed a recipe for a successful project? Think again - a primary
factor that may determine the success or failure of your project
is your corporate culture.
Can corporate culture really make that much difference? Think back
to the last time you tried to request a special service from - or
implement a change in - an organization that embraces processes it
has used for years. Did you get very far? Project management professionals
can face the same type of resistance to change if they are working
with an organization that does not embrace change as part of its
culture. As projects are intended to bring about some form of change
- a new product or improvement to an existing product, new processes,
or enhanced tools - projects are especially threatening to an organization
whose culture won't embrace the transformation brought about by the
project's product.
Should you find yourself in a position where you face these challenges,
the following are a few tips to help guide the project manager through
this labyrinth of cultural tradition and emotion.
Introducing New Ideas
Although organizations vary in their acceptance of new ideas, concepts
and approaches, each culture usually has a means by which new ideas
can be incorporated into the mainstream workings of the organization.
The introduction of new ideas is usually accepted when they originate
from specific trusted individuals or from senior management. The
astute project manager will work with the project sponsor to understand
what type of ideas or changes they have introduced into the environment,
along with the challenges they had to overcome along the pathway
to implementation. In addition, conversations with the project sponsor
about others who have successfully introduced change to the environment
can be beneficial. Creating processes as part of your communication
plan to make allies of these individuals can help significantly as
your projects move through requirements formulation to implementation.
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