Friday, 10 April 2020

Lessons from the Bushfires: understand stakeholders to communicate better

Lessons from the Bushfires

Communication is a critical success factor in project and programme management. To communicate successfully, you must analyse your stakeholders correctly.

Australia has suffered horrendous fires in the past few months. The authorities evacuated tens of thousands of people from their houses.

analyse stakeholders to communicate better
That required a lot of organisation and a lot of communication.

The public authorities struggled to communicate effectively. How to give the right advice to people? How to get them to listen? How to ensure householders react correctly?

For the authorities, there were two types of householders - those who will evacuate; and those who won't.

But that was too simple.

Analyse your Stakeholders

An Australian researcher, Dr Ken Stahan, has come up with 7 types of householder
  • Threat Denier: they deny that a threat exists
  • Responsibility Denier: they do not believe that they are responsible for themselves
  • Dependent Evacuator: they are unable to take responsibility for their safe evacuation
  • Considered Evacuator: they are determined to safely evacuate
  • Community Guided: they look to advice and guidance from their community
  • Worried Waverers: they want to remain. They worry that they lack the experience to remain successfully
  • Experienced Independents: they are experienced with bushfires and are self-reliant and well prepared. They are committed to remaining but in unfavourable circumstances may evacuate.
(You can listen to Ken Stahan talking about his 7 types on Australian RN radio here)

Once you know there are seven types of stakeholder, you can communicate so much better. For each category, there can be a tailored communication - the channel, the timings, the content.

The next step in Australia is to get this working. Ken Stahan's idea is to use questionnaires, to better understand householders. To categorise stakeholders correctly.

That's the key: understand your stakeholders before you communicate.

Thursday, 2 April 2020

Toyota is not just a car maker. Are you just a project manager?

Toyota is the home of Lean Manufacturing. In the 50's, Toyota developed the Toyota Production System, which became Lean Manufacturing. All world-class manufacturing today uses Lean.

There's a classic article by Charles Fishman in Fast Company, published in 2006. It analyses continuous improvement at Toyota’s factory in Georgetown, USA.

Lean Manufacturing

Lean means Continuous Improvement

The author argues that Toyota is not just a car maker.

Here's the key quote
Toyota’s Georgetown factory only looks like a car factory. It’s really a big brain–a kind of laboratory focused on a single mission: not how to make cars, but how to make cars better.
The work is threefold: making cars, making cars better, and teaching everyone how to make cars better.
At its best, Toyota adds one more level: It is always looking to improve the process by which it improves all the other processes.

Project Management needs Continuous Improvement, too

Are you just a project manager?
Or are you a Lean Project Manager with a focus on Continuous Improvement
To qualify as a Lean Project Manager, your work would be threefold
  1. Running projects
  2. Improving your project management process
  3. Teaching everyone how to improve your project management process
And are you at your best - do you add one more level? Are you always looking to improve the process by which you improve your project management process?

From Lean Manufacturing to Lean3 Project Management

Toyota makes it appear easy, by building continuous improvement into their culture. Read the Fast Company article to find out how they do it.
You can do the same for your projects. You can build continuous improvement into your Project Management. Read my new book Lean3 Project Management to find out how you can do it.