Could it be that predictable project success boils down to an essential tool?

In 1998 – 1999 I had the wonderful opportunity to facilitate and write the program for the Caltrans Statewide Partnering Steering Committee (the California Department of Transportation). The committee included Caltrans’ heads of construction from all over the state, key industry contractors, and the FHWA. Over an eighteen month period we met and discussed how to make construction projects succeed. We had a chance to identify and interview project managers from all over the country who were consistently successful. These were people who just seemed to know how to make a project succeed. We asked them the secret to their success. Over and over we heard that it was the fact that they had a monthly project survey. The survey was sent out to those working on the project. When the project managers got the results they met with their counterparts and discussed them.

How can you succeed if you don't know where your project stands?

The Caltrans experience, along with working with over 1,000 project teams, was the beginning of some real insight on what it takes to consistently make a project succeed. Monthly measurement allows the team leaders to assure accountability - that project commitments are made and kept. It allows the leaders to assure that project risks and issues are fleshed out before they become project problems and disputes. It provides a way to make course corrections and to steer the project toward success. Most project leaders are working in the dark. Sure they have a project schedule, budget, weekly meetings, and many forms and documents…but they don’t really know what their team members are committed to or concerned about. Most of the time project risks only come to light when they have grown into problems or disputes. Whether it's an IT, strategic, branding, R&D, or other type project, even the best, most experienced project leaders can’t manage what they don’t know about!

Projects are often the site of many prayers... prayers that things come together so the project succeeds

Of course project leaders want their projects to succeed. They work very hard and use many management tools to help. But, most project leaders tell me that a project’s success is really up to hoping that the right people come together, in the right way. This seems, at best, pretty hard to manage. It makes you, as the project leader, a victim to the circumstances of your project team.

Many times the belief that all you can do is hope for the best leads to a sense of helplessness. Helplessness and loss of hope, with it’s undercurrent of fear, can spread over an entire project like wild fire! That’s when projects really begin to get stuck. Yes, even good seasoned professionals can get stuck. Once a project is stuck it is next to impossible for the project leaders to get it unstuck…because they are now a part of the problem.

Dear Colleague,

For over twenty years I’ve worked to develop processes and tools that create predictable success for projects. It has been impossible for me to work on all of the projects that have asked for my assistance. I have worked on as many as 100 projects per year. But this has been a point of frustration. I have a mission to truly transform project teams… not just to help, but to really show project leaders how they can almost assuredly have successful projects. Now for the first time I am offering my assistance to any type of project. I can do this through the Scorecard Program and the Internet.

I am very excited about this program and the possibility of working with you on your projects. I can’t share with you everything about this program on this introductory page, so if you are interested in knowing more, I have created a guided tour for you. Just clink on the link below to take the tour.

It is my sincere wish that all of your projects are a great success!

Before you start your tour, please take a moment to sign our guest book (rest assured, we hate spam as much as you do and would never share or misuse your information)

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Sincerely,

Sue Dyer,
President, Orgmetrics
Founder, International Partnering Institute
Author, Partner Your Project

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