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As I child I had a
lot of experience with both of these. I assume everyone is familiar with
band-aids, the merry-go-round I’m referring to is the kind you find on a
playground. These are basically a large dish parallel to the ground
mounted on a central axis with some handle bars to hold on to -
here is a picture of one. Aside from a trip
down memory lane, what do these two things have to do with managing a
PMO or even project management or even work?
I’m glad you asked – both
of these items and their lessons from childhood give us insight into
change. First, I want to look at each type of change and then talk about
which is better (or not)?
Band-Aids
Band-aids are good at
covering up and protecting a cut, but that is not where I want to go
with that, nor am I alluding to a band-aid fix for something. The change
I want to discuss is the change that happens when the band-aid comes off. |
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I don’t know about you, but
sometimes I dreaded having the band-aid off more that the cut. If you are a
guy with a lot of hair – it is even worse! Now there are many techniques for
removing a band-aid. You could soak them in water, wait until they fell off,
or go for the slow excruciating teeth gritting pull. However, as mom always
told us, the best way is the quick pull or yank. One short burst of pain, a
heartfelt OUCH and it’s all over – we have changed from with a band-aid to
without a band-aid and we can run off to play and get more cuts.
This is a type of change – more
formally we often call this a revolutionary change. We move from one state
to another with a lurch. Revolutionary change usually involves some sharp
pains, but we quickly settle into the new status-quo. Revolutionary changes
often take the form of management directives – “we will now have full
project schedules for all our projects.” Presto, all projects have schedules.
We have all been through this in one form or another, one day you do it this
way, then next you do it that way. Fast is good – sometimes, what about slow?
Merry-go-rounds
Seems like a lot of hyphens in
today’s piece. The merry-go-round uses centrifugal force to basically spin
kids around, make them dizzy and fall down. Oddly, this used to be a lot of
fun. The thing about merry-go-rounds is that you always needed someone
strong to get them going, and it seemed to take forever.
Here is an example of slow
change or evolutionary change. The merry-go-round spin begins from a full
stop. Usually the next step is for everyone riding to grab a bar and start
walking, then running around the outside to build up speed. As the speed
builds up, some run harder and some jump on for the ride. Once things are
really going, you need only one person standing on the outside giving a
light but fast push. Here we went from full stop to head-spinning speed
through constant every increasing speed, yet ever decreasing effort.
In a strange twist, it takes
less effort to keep the merry-go-round spinning than it did to get it there
in the first place. This is often a characteristic of revolutionary change.
So which is better, and how do we apply this to working in a PMO?
Evolution v. Revolution
I think that each of these
types of changes has their place; it is the incorrect application of the
type of change that causes the problem. Revolutionary change is fast,
deliberate and often brutal where evolution is slow, smooth and palatable.
We move through and evolution and we experience a revolution. The answer to
which is better lies in the analogy.
Revolutions, like band-aids,
are powerful when a change creates pain or must be done immediately. The
revolution is best in lay-offs, or killing projects, or organization changes.
You move immediately from one state to another and get on with life.
Evolutions are like pushing the
merry-go-round; it is almost impossible at first, but as you keep pushing
the changes come faster and faster with less and less effort – and everyone
jumps on board. Evolutions work for cultural or procedural changes on a
large scale, exactly like creating a culture of project management.
Certainly there are exceptions,
and one could argue that an evolutionary change is nothing but a series of
revolutionary changes all in the same direction – good point. I also think
that revolutionary changes are more suited to making small scale changes. To
get an organization of 20 people to use project management does not require
a long slow push. Getting 200 to use PM is another story.
When you think about how you
will make a change – which is the job of the PMO, think about the best way
to do it. I think that you’ll find some changes are best treated like
merry-go-rounds starting with lots of effort while other times all you need
is one good yank – OUCH
Copyright© 2007 Derry Simmel
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