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About this lesson
Many stakeholders have additional goals for a project beyond the primary business goal. Understanding those goals can help the team ensure project success and maintain stakeholder support.
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Quick reference
Stakeholder's Project Goals
Many stakeholders have additional goals for a project beyond the primary business goal. Understanding those goals can help the team ensure project success and maintain stakeholder support.
When to use
When the Stakeholder Register is first created, the stakeholder goal(s) should be identified. Whenever there is a change in stakeholders, the goal of the new stakeholder should be determined. At the beginning of each major phase of a project, the stakeholder goals should be confirmed to determine if there have been changes.
Instructions
Determining stakeholder goals is often as easy as just asking them. They will of course want the business benefits, but ask them what would make this an exemplary project in their mind, and what makes this a project failure. If you are unable to ask the stakeholders directly, review their attitude and actions on other similar projects and infer their likely goals.
Stakeholder Viewpoint
The stakeholder viewpoint of project success is often different from the project team. Many times the project team is focused on project management success, meaning the project finishes on time, on budget, and meets all the quality requirements. However, stakeholders are usually much more interested in the project goal (not the project management goal). They are less interested in on-time and on-budget than they are in the business benefit that will be derived from the project. They want the sales increase, the cost savings, or the new capabilities that come from the project. In some cases, the project is being used to initiate a new strategy. These projects are often project management failures because of the difficulty of changing the strategic direction within an organization, but if they are successful at introducing the new strategy, they may still be viewed as a success by the senior management stakeholders.
Personal and Business Goals
Personal goals are often even more important to some stakeholders than business goals. When possible you should ensure the project also meets the personal goals of stakeholders. Often these can be accommodated with very little effort but will lead to strong stakeholder support. For example:
- You may have a team member who is hoping to use this project as a step for promotion. They will probably want an opportunity to showcase their skills with senior management.
- You may have a stakeholder who is primarily responsible for managing a portion of the organization and views this project as an irritant. They will want the project to make as few demands as possible on their time and attention.
- You may have a stakeholder who is trying to use the project to further another initiative. They may want to modify the project slightly to align it with their initiative.
- You may have stakeholders who are responsible for other large projects or initiatives. They want your project to not interfere with their project, and if possible enhance the likelihood of success on the other project.
Stakeholder Engagement Matrix
The Stakeholder Engagement Matrix is an excellent tool for identifying where there is a problem with stakeholder goal alignment. For each stakeholder assess their level of current support for the project and their level of required support for the project to succeed. Where there is a gap between the current and desired state, create an action to align the project and stakeholder goals.
Stakeholder | Unaware | Resistant | Neutral | Supports | Leading | Action |
Sun Tzu | C | D | meeting on 10/4 | |||
King Tut | C | D | Modify end date | |||
Attila the Hun | C,D | None |
Hints & tips
- Don’t jeopardize the “project success” to achieve a “project management success.” The senior management stakeholders will quickly forget about project management success, but they remember project success.
- Leverage personal goals to gain support for the project. Everyone has them, if you leverage them, you will have a more loyal team or more interested senior stakeholders.
- When determining the current state for a stakeholder on the engagement matrix, pay attention to what they do, not what they say. If they say they fully support the project, but never attend meetings or assign resources to the project they are at best Neutral.
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