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About this lesson
Project Decision Making is the process whereby the project leader and project team decide upon project strategy, tactics, and acceptable actions. For Project Stakeholders, the decisions normally concern project boundaries. For Project Core Team members, the decisions normally concern project plans and execution.
Exercise files
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Quick reference
Decision Making
Project Decision Making is the process whereby the project leader and project team decide upon project strategy, tactics, and acceptable actions. For Project Stakeholders, the decisions normally concern project boundaries. For Project Core Team members, the decisions normally concern project plans and day-to-day execution.
When to use
Cross-functional project decision making is required throughout the life of the project. A decision making process is often needed to resolve conflicting points of view.
At the time of project initiation, Project Stakeholders must make decisions about project goals and project boundaries.
During the project, Project Core Team members must make decisions about project plans, risk response, and the adequacy of project performance.
At project reviews and toll-gate reviews, Project Stakeholders and Project Team members must make decisions about project progress and risk response.
Instructions
- Clarify the decision that must be made and who should make it.
- Schedule an appropriate meeting(s) for those to gather who must participate in the decision based upon the selected decision making process.
- At the meeting, present the options, risks, and known data.
- Make a decision using the selected decision making approach.
Hints & tips
- Not making a decision that is needed is often the worst thing that can happen on a project; time continues to go by with the team not knowing what to do.
- Communicate the decision making approach you will be using so that those involved can manage their expectations.
- Different decision making approaches take different amounts of time, match the approach with the time available.
- Recognize the possible causes of bad decisions by stakeholders or team members and guard against those.
- 00:04 Hi, I'm Ray Sheen.
- 00:06 I'd like to talk with you about one of the most important aspects of project
- 00:09 execution, and that is decision making.
- 00:14 I'll start with the characteristics of a good project team decision making process.
- 00:18 The process focuses on the goals to be achieved by that decision.
- 00:22 Second, the process uses available data.
- 00:25 It doesn't just rely on opinions and tradition.
- 00:28 Third, it takes into consideration the project and
- 00:30 the organizational constraints.
- 00:31 The decision is realistic for the project situation.
- 00:35 Fourth, it addresses the risks associated with that decision as part
- 00:39 of the decision making process.
- 00:41 It identifies the existing risks and recognizes any new elements of risk or
- 00:45 risk mitigation that occur because of the decision.
- 00:49 It also follows a reasonable process.
- 00:51 Team members involved in making decision have confidence that the process is fair
- 00:56 and will yield a good result.
- 00:58 Finally it respects and develops the team members throughout the process, so
- 01:02 that decisions would get better and better over time.
- 01:06 Project decisions often can involve many people, but
- 01:09 also must be decided quickly to maintain the project schedule.
- 01:13 Different decision making processes have
- 01:16 various levels of project team engagement and time requirements.
- 01:20 When there is very little time, the leader decides.
- 01:23 This also requires very little involvement, and
- 01:25 the leader loses the benefit of insight from other team members.
- 01:29 When there is more time, the leader can check with some other team members and
- 01:33 ask their opinion about the decision.
- 01:35 After listening to several members' opinions, once again the leader decides.
- 01:40 When there is even more time available,
- 01:42 the leader can call the entire team together and let them debate the issues.
- 01:46 Each individual has an opportunity to present their position and
- 01:49 to discuss the merits or defects in other positions.
- 01:53 At the end of the debate the leader decides.
- 01:56 The final technique is when the entire team gathers together and
- 01:59 debates until they reach a consensus decision.
- 02:03 This will often take a long time.
- 02:04 And it may lead to the best decision although it also may lead to a stalemate
- 02:09 and no decision when there are two or three irreconcilable positions.
- 02:13 In that case, the leader has to step in and decide,
- 02:16 often leaving the team feeling frustrated with winners and losers.
- 02:20 Lets talk about the confidence we can have in those decisions.
- 02:25 The confidence is based upon the stability of the information used during
- 02:28 the decision making process and the reliability of that information.
- 02:32 Reliability is based upon whether there are facts or opinions.
- 02:36 And stability is based upon whether the information is fixed or still changing.
- 02:41 Ideally, key decisions on the project are made based upon fixed facts.
- 02:47 These decisions should be final decisions and not revised multiple times.
- 02:52 Sometimes, especially on development projects, we don't have any facts.
- 02:57 We only have the expert judgment that is the opinion of the subject matter experts.
- 03:01 In that case, we can decide on a direction.
- 03:04 We can decide what we think should be done.
- 03:06 We should make that decision and then move quickly and efficiently on that path.
- 03:11 However, at some point in time, we need to confirm that decision with actual facts.
- 03:16 Now sometimes we have some facts, but the facts are few and far between.
- 03:21 The situation is still somewhat fluid, and
- 03:23 each new fact adds another significant piece of information.
- 03:27 When that is the case, we can usually decide some of our boundaries.
- 03:32 What I mean by that is we can eliminate some of the options.
- 03:35 Lets say we're looking at five different possible paths forward.
- 03:38 But based on the few facts we have, we can now eliminate two options.
- 03:42 However, we still need to consider three options until we get more facts.
- 03:47 We definitely are not able to make a final decision.
- 03:50 Now finally, sometimes there are no facts and
- 03:52 there's no agreement between the subject matter experts.
- 03:56 When that's the case, all you can decide on is to do something next.
- 04:00 Hopefully that something we lead to facts or an agreement of opinion.
- 04:04 You move forward rather than sitting and doing nothing.
- 04:08 Sometimes bad decisions are made on a project.
- 04:11 The typical cause for bad decisions on the part of senior management is ignorance.
- 04:16 They don't understand how this project interacts with other projects.
- 04:19 So a decision that is good for one project is devastating on another, or
- 04:24 the project definition and goals are sometimes unclear.
- 04:27 Senior management has many projects in their mind, and
- 04:30 they confuse which project is which.
- 04:33 Third, they may not understand the demand that each project is making on the same
- 04:38 pool of resources.
- 04:39 Because of that, they over-commit the organization.
- 04:42 The core team, including the project leader, often make bad decisions for
- 04:46 different reasons.
- 04:47 Gaps in accountability and
- 04:49 empowerment lead to the core members not engaging with the rest of the core team.
- 04:54 Sometimes the problem is that the functional strategy does not align with
- 04:57 the project goals, and
- 04:59 the core team member feels that they are caught in the middle.
- 05:02 They just pick one and undermine the other without finding a way to meet both.
- 05:07 Of course, on any project there can occasionally be some planning gaps.
- 05:11 And finally, they may underestimate or fail to recognize risk, which will
- 05:15 then often lead to a bad decision that must eventually be corrected.
- 05:20 The third group that sometimes makes bad decisions with respect to projects
- 05:23 is the functional managers.
- 05:25 These are the people who are assigned and supervise many of the resource pools
- 05:29 that are used for doing the work of the project.
- 05:31 One of the challenges they face is over-commitment.
- 05:34 They strive to make sure they have work for everyone on their department and
- 05:38 end up taking on more than they can do.
- 05:39 Also they often are not aware of unique project requirements due to
- 05:43 communication breakdown between them and the core team members.
- 05:49 Decision making is a key element on any project.
- 05:51 Making wise decisions is crucial to project success.
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