MPA Presentation

Report 6 Downloads 186 Views
Delivering Successful Change Through Engaging Customers and stakeholders

Dr. Waffa Karkukly, PMP, ACP [email protected]

About Me Dr. Waffa Karkukly, PMP, ACP is the owner and Managing Director for Global PMO Solutions, Inc. During her career, she has been involved in leading strategic organizational change programs to connect strategy and delivery. Dr. Karkukly has managed the improvement of projects, programs and portfolios and every aspect of PMO setup, implementation and sustainability for fortune 100 and start-ups across various industry sectors. Dr Karkukly has a PhD in Strategic Program and Project Management and Masters’ Degree in Information Technology. Waffa is a published author who written books on PMO setup, implementation, sustainability, and outsourcing. She is a regular speaker in the project management circuit and brings wealth of industry experience in addition to her academic accreditations and experience. 2

Outline  What is Change Management ?  Why Plan Change Management ?  Drivers to Change Management  Introduce the Organization Situation  The Need for the Change  How was the Change carried out  Engaging Customers and stakeholders  Start small and build immediate wins  Leverage tools for transparency

 Questions 3

What is CM? Change Management (CM) is a comprehensive, cyclic, and structured approach for transitioning individuals, groups, and organizations from a current state to a future state with intended business benefits. (PMI, 2013) Organizational change management (OCM) is a framework for managing the effect of new business processes, changes in organizational structure or cultural changes within an organization. (Search-CIO, 2010) Simply put, OCM addresses: The people side of change management.

4

Why Plan CM?  Helps improve adoption rate  Minimize surprises, anxiety, and risks  Focus on the People first and foremost  Engage all organization layer to take ownership of new opportunities

5

Types of Change  Evolutionary ● Occurs very slowly over time ● Adaptation is in small,

sometimes almost imperceptible steps ● Success dependent on recognizing change is occurring ● Examples: - Endangered species - Culture shift in an organization

 Revolutionary ● Happens in one or only a few

strokes in short time frame ● Adaptation must occur rapidly ● Success dependent on acceptance and engagement in change ● Examples: - Becoming a parent - Merger & Acquisitions

6

CM Drivers?

External Forces

Internal Forces

7

CM Drivers?  Management adopts a strategy to accomplish new goal  Change in the industry may be provoked by some major    

outside driving force An Organization may wish to evolve to a different level in their life cycle Transition or the hiring of a new chief executive officer Regulatory change required for compliance Improve efficiency of product deliver into market

8

The Organization Situation – Background Pace of Change in the industry Landscape

Increased Competitive Pressure

Product Portfolio Diversification

Need for an Integrated organization Delivery Model

Volume of Strategic Projects

Speed-tomarket

Project Complexity

9

Challenges & Opportunities  The organization employs three lifecycle models in

various elements of business and operations:

 Product Development Life Cycle (PDLC), Project

Management Life Cycle (PMLC), and System Development Life Cycle (SDLC)

PDLC

PMLC

SDLC

Strengths and Challenges 10

The Solution – Integrated Delivery Model  One Integrated Model based on LEAN Practices and

Agile.  Leverage existing strengths and build upon new practices to eliminate challenges leading to increase efficiencies PDLC

PMLC

SDLC

IDM 11

How Was The Change Carried Out? Build processes and pilot small scale

Leverage tools for transparency

Engaging customers and stakeholders 12

The Change Implementation Approach  Building people then building products  Building process tailored to the organization that

    

encompass all cycles from product ideation to operationalization monitored through gates Start small and pilot before going big Build visualization tools (Kanban boards) Build frequent retrospectives Build competency model to measure success Reward and celebrate

13

Engaging Stakeholders  Individual Level  Awareness of where people are on the change curve 

Shock, denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance

 Increase the engagement and adoption through various    

communication channels. Increase learning interest through various learning options Provide time to attend Lean and Agile conferences for key individuals JIT Training at all levels. Allow individuals to learn from mistakes 14

Engaging Stakeholders  Team Level  Formal middle management training on leadership styles  Formal middle management coaching on new ways of managing in Lean and Agile  Educate all cross-functional teams on Lean and Agile, new collaboration techniques through visualization and self managed teams  Coaching for identified pilot teams  Learn through retrospectives

15

Engaging Stakeholders  Executive Level  Formal C-Level on value of Lean and agile and the benefit for their organization  Obtain agreement on team training and individual training  Obtain agreement on use of pilots  Support results of retrospective

16

Managing Change  Train and educate  Build allies and champions  Start small but think big

Delivery Model Process Adoption Cultural and Behavioral Change

Leadership Alignment and Communication

Process Enablement

Capability Development

Pilots (Lean / Agile / Kanban Adoption)

17

Building New Processes Illustrative Delivery model Value Stream Map for Three Types of projects

Elaborate

NonTechnology

Regular Maintenance

New Products or Major Enhancement

Initiate and Plan

Ideation

G

Idea Validation

G

Initiate and Plan

Initiate and Plan

Elaboration

Analysis

G

Design

Release and ongoing

Deliver

G

G

Delivery

Delivery

Delivery

G

Release

G

Ongoing

Release

G

Launch and Ongoing

G

Toll-Gate Review

18

Pilot New Processes Initiate and Plan

Delivery Model Pilot Projects

Validate through Pilots (test and learn)

Target Coverage for Pilot* Ideation

Validation

Elaboration

Delivery

Release

Scale Delivery Model

Core Team for Projects

Project 1 Project 2 Project 3

19

Leverage New Tools - Kanban

20

Leverage New Tools - Kanban

21

Transparency provides the underpinning for a high trust culture...

22

Build Trust Through Feedback The Retrospective is a chance for the team to act like a team, hearing every voice, integrating their perspective and reaching consensus on how to move forward, better. “Closure: it’s difficult to start something new when something else remains mentally or emotionally unclosed”  List What We :  Liked  Learned  Lacked  Longed for

23

The Learning  Organizations go through changes  Tools and processes are important to carry the change  The most crucial success criteria is how to engage

stakeholders to obtain successful results  Change at individual level  Change at the group or team level  Change at the executive level

 Start small and obtain small wins  Use retrospectives to reflect and improve  Leadership support is vital to teams commitment 24

Questions

25