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| Approach and competency frameworks |
Adopting project-based working practices More and
more public sector organisations are trying to improve their performance by
developing their own skills and capabilities in programme and project management. This is leading to a focus on the
deployment of their own approach, life-cycle and standards, and the development
of programme and project management (PPM) competency for all relevant staff. Our approach
- Ensure the PPM approach is robust, clear and comprehensive and
adaptable to all sizes and types of project, without being bureaucratic.
Use the lessons learnt from OGC, NAO and others.
- Use clear, consistent and regular communication with all staff
involved - essential if you are to win the hearts and minds of your
staff.
- Embrace all stake-holder groups, such as Procurement and Human
Resources. These groups will want to be engaged in the project and help
it succeed - becoming important allies for the PPM approach.
- Deploy one-to-one engagement with those people responsible for
major projects and programmes. This will gain their buy-in to the
approach and build up a core of allies who can help to spread the PPM
message.
- Obtain value and influence by establishing a "PPM community" which
can champion the value of the PPM approach and help local or less
experienced project managers to deploy it successfully.
- Be clear on what you are implementing - a good PPM framework
addresses both behavioural and technical competencies, and is phrased in
terms of what the individuals "are" rather than what they
"do".
- Keep the framework relevant - it must be thorough enough to cover
all the requirements but small enough to be manageable. Focusing on some
competencies will be more effective than identifying them all and
leaving people confused as to where the emphasis lies.
- Future-proof your framework - not only must it encourage
creativity and innovative approaches, but it must consider the skills
required for the future rather than just those skills that have worked
in the past.
- Don't treat the framework as a once-a-year appraisal tool -
behavioural change is a gradual process that must be worked on
continually, not crammed in when appraisals are due.
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