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Managing Expectations!!!!

Managing Expectations
Managing Expectations

1. Show them you care.
From the very beginning of anything you’re about to do, make sure you care about it. First and last impressions are everything and it sets the tone for the working relationship. It’s also flattering for a client if you’ve done your homework and are prepared to talk about concerns they have too.
One of my favourite paraphrased quotes on the subject is by Theodore Roosevelt:
“No one cares how much you know until they first know how much you care about them.”
And it’s true. It doesn’t matter how many awards your last site won or what you did with some other company, it only matters what you are doing right now and what you plan to do for them in the future.
For extra points, get to know them outside of a business relationship. Strike up a personal conversation when appropriate. This will help you figure out what makes them tick and you’ll start to understand their motivations and more importantly, they’ll start to understand yours.
2. Work on your trust issues.
Trust doesn’t come easy. You can lose it at any time and never get it back. How do you avoid this? Just as easy. Say what you mean, do what you’re going to do and follow through on it. Hit your dates or just make sure you show up to work on time. And if for whatever reason you can’t, make sure everyone understands why.
Along these same lines, make sure everyone understands why you are doing what you’re doing. Provide background for the most mundane of tasks. This will not only provide transparency, it will create buy-in to the work and give value to the little things that help make everything else better.
3. Communicate over and over and over and over and over….
This is the single most important point on this list. Why? Because how we present information is always subject to interpretation and people absorb it in all sorts of different ways. Some absorb contextually from a situation and others verbally. Some need it drawn out on a whiteboard and others need to take their time with a cup of coffee and an email.
To add to the complexity, once you’ve picked your communication of choice, you now have to deal with how the recipient internalizes it. We all have filters that only let in the information we need or worse what we want to hear. We then impose a perception of the situation based on our own experiences which naturally develops a bias. To complicate things further, this changes daily depending on our moods or level of distraction.
In order to eliminate that grey area of understanding, deploy a combination (I’d even recommend using all) forms of communication and deliver it in the simplest way possible. Be a broken record. It might seem annoying, but it’s the bridge between expectations and assumptions, which we’ll touch on next.
4. Never assume, it makes an @$$ out of you and me…
You may think that after you have communicated everything clearly it ends there. You are wrong. The minute you assume everything is fine, you’re in trouble.
Most people (clients included) are really bad at articulating exactly what it is they want or need. So you’ve got to work doubly hard to extract all meaning and get to the marrow of what they’re actually asking for. Otherwise they’ll assume you know and will be disappointed when you don’t deliver.
If there’s any doubt or if something can be interpreted in a number of ways, follow up and get a concrete answer. Never read between the lines.
5. Agree then disagree, then agree again!
Yes, this is confusing, but stay with me. Agree on a strategy, agree on goals, agree on a timeline and agree on expectations. Then agree on what success looks like – this will be your north star throughout the project and for getting you back on track after you do this next part.
Disagree. It’s not easy and no one wants rustle feathers, but sometimes you have to say no. It’s a necessarily evil in order to accomplish the things you have already started. If this becomes a sticking point with a client, make sure there is an equal trade-off or a concession in place that keeps you pointing north. Anything that is a distraction from this needs more discussion.
And of course, there can actually be some good that comes out of these constructive disagreements. The client hired you for your expertise, but they keep you around for your opinion. As a consultant, you’re outside of the organizational politics and chains of command. If something isn’t right or if you think something can be improved, speak up! When you offer up the brass tacks you become more than a vendor. You become a partner.
6. Money talks, so talk about it.
In business, money is not a dirty word. Although, it will still be the root of all evil if you don’t address it openly. Being open and honest about budget reduces any tension associated with it. And it also shows a client just how much something costs and what is required to continue.
If this isn’t addressed, (especially if you’re operating in the red), you’ll quickly find you have some unhappy customers and you might end up having to pick up the check.
7. Write down everything we just talked about.
Lets’ face it, information travels fast and we can only absorb so much before we lose track. Like witnesses reporting the details of a crime, the information gets less accurate the further they are from when it occurred. As time goes by, people forget what was agreed upon or morph details into something else. So taking notes during these meetings and conversations is crucial.
This paper trail not only serves as a reference for what was said, it also allows you to codify potential new requirements and provide instructions for what to do next. Post these notes in your collaboration tool of choice (ie. Jira, Basecamp, etc.) for all to see and refer back to when times get busy or when lines blur as new things are added last minute.
These 7 tips are only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to managing expectations, but they’re simple and easy to execute at any point during the engagement. You’ll find too that once you put these into practice you’ll start to notice a shared vision and understanding of where things are going and what needs to be done to get there.
Plus if you’re consistent, you’ll have created a great project experience. And success or failure, that will be the metric used to determine whether or not a client works with you again.

Rules of Project Management

•It takes one woman nine months to have a baby. It cannot be done in one month by nine women.

•Nothing is impossible for the person who doesn’t have to do it.

•You can con a sucker into committing to an impossible deadline, but you cannot con him into meeting it.

•At the heart of every large project is a small project trying to get out.

•The more desperate the situation the more optimistic the situated.

•A problem shared is a buck passed.

•A change freeze is like the abominable snowman: it is a myth and would melt anyway when heat is applied.

•A user will tell you anything you ask, but nothing more.

•Of several possible interpretations of a communication, the least convenient is the correct one.

•What you don’t know hurts you.
•There’s never enough time to do it right first time but there’s always enough time to go back and do it again.

•The bitterness of poor quality lasts long after the sweetness of making a date is forgotten.

•I know that you believe that you understand what you think I said, but I am not sure you realise that what you heard is not what I meant.

•What is not on paper has not been said.

•A little risk management saves a lot of fan cleaning.

•If you can keep your head while all about you are losing theirs, you haven’t understood the plan.

•If at first you don’t succeed, remove all evidence you ever tried.

•Feather and down are padding, changes and contingencies will be real events.

•There are no good project managers – only lucky ones.

•The more you plan the luckier you get.

•A project is one small step for the project sponsor, one giant leap for the project manager.

•Good project management is not so much knowing what to do and when, as knowing what excuses to give and when.

•If everything is going exactly to plan, something somewhere is going massively wrong.

•Everyone asks for a strong project manger – when they get one, they don’t want one.

•Overtime is a figment of the naive project manager’s imagination.

•Quantitative project management is for predicting cost and schedule overruns well in advance.

•The sooner you begin coding the later you finish.

•Metrics are learned men’s excuses.

•For a project manager, overruns are as certain as death and taxes.

•Some projects finish on time in spite of project management best practices.

•Fast – cheap – good – you can have any two.

•There is such a thing as an unrealistic timescale.

•The project would not have been started if the truth had been told about the cost and timescale.

•A two-year project will take three years; a three-year project will never finish.

•When the weight of the project paperwork equals the weight of the project itself, the project can be considered complete.

•A badly planned project will take three times longer than expected – a well-planned project only twice as long as expected.

•Warning: dates in a calendar are closer than they appear to be.

•Anything that can be changed will be changed until there is no time left to change anything.

•There is no such thing as scope creep, only scope gallop.

•A project gets a year late one day at a time.

•If you’re 6 months late on a milestone due next week but really believe you can make it, you’re a project manager.

•No project has ever finished on time, within budget, to requirements.

•Yours won’t be the first to.

•Activity is not achievement.

•Managing IT people is like herding cats.

•If you don’t know how to do a task, start it, then ten people who know less than you will tell you how to do it.

•If you don’t plan, it doesn’t work. If you do plan, it doesn’t work either. Why plan!

•The person who says it will take the longest and cost the most is the only one with a clue how to do the job.

•The sooner you get behind schedule, the more time you have to make it up.

•The nice thing about not planning is that failure comes as a complete surprise rather than being preceded by a period of worry and depression.

•Good control reveals problems early – which only means you’ll have longer to worry about them

Top Traits of a Great PM

Here are the top 10
traits of project managers who are really making ideas happen:

 

 

1.
Command authority naturally.

In other words,
they don’t need borrowed power to enlist the help of others – they just know
how to do it. They are optimistic leaders who are viewed in a favourable light
and are valued by the organization.

 

 

2.
Possess quick sifting abilities, knowing what to note and what to ignore.

The latter is more
important since there’s almost always too much data, and rarely too little.
Ignoring the right things is better than trying to master extraneous data.

 

 

3.
Set, observe, and re-evaluate project priorities frequently.

They focus and
prioritize by handling fewer emails, attending fewer meetings, and generally
limiting their data input.

 

 

4.
Ask good questions and listen to stakeholders.

Great project
managers don’t just go through the motions. They care about communication and
the opinions of the parties involved. They are also sufficiently self-aware to
know how their communication is received by those stakeholders.

 

 

5.
Do not use information as a weapon or a means of control.

They communicate
clearly, completely, and concisely. All the while giving others real
information without fear of what they’ll do with it.

 

 

6.
Adhere to predictable communication schedules

…recognizing that
it’s the only deliverable early in a project cycle. All this takes place after
very thorough pre-execution planning to eliminate as many variables as
possible.

 

 

7.
Possess domain expertise in project management as applied to a particular
field.

It’s not just that
they have generic project management skills; they have a deep familiarity with
one or multiple fields that gives them a natural authority and solid strategic
insight.

 

 

8.
Exercise independent and fair consensus-building skills when conflict arises.

But they embrace
only as much conflict as is absolutely necessary, neither avoiding nor seeking
grounds for control of a particular project segment.

 

 

9.
Cultivate and rely on extensive informal networks inside and outside the firm
to solve problems that arise.

They identify any
critical issues that threaten projects and handle them resolutely (vs. ignoring
them).

 

 

10.
Look forward to going to work!

They believe that
project management is an exciting challenge that’s critical to success. The
truly great ones view project management as a career and not a job, and they
treat it like so by seeking additional training and education.

 

 

 

In summary, great project managers
plan, manage, and handle details in a way that lets others relax.

 

 

What
Do You Think?

Are there other key skills that
aren’t represented here?

 

 

What makes a great
project manager in your experience?