顯示具有 organize 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 organize 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2007年1月15日 星期一

Seven Tips For Starting a New Job Successfully

Seven Tips For Starting a New Job Successfully (k 28, 2006)
 
By Randy Block  
Congratulations. You have accepted a new position. All that work in your job search has paid off handsomely. Take a breather. But not for too long as it's time to switch gears.
 
Your next objective is to integrate yourself into the new organization. Here are seven steps to making it happen:
 
   1. Day One: Maintain Old Contacts
      Start off by saying sending out 'thank yous.' Contact all the people who helped you get the new position. Often people don't make this effort because they feel they'll be in the new job for a long time. But today, when the average American changes jobs every four years, the odds say you're going to change jobs again soon. You need to keep the network alive.
 
   2. Avoid "Big Projects" The First Three Months
      On your second day, you think: "Here comes a big project! I'll take this one on and really impress them." This is a mistake that many people make in the first three months of employment. It's critical that you acquire knowledge about the system and the people. You cannot comprehend the implications yet of certain decisions you make. Your company isn't going to expect you to know everything in the first couple of weeks. Take your time to learn how things work.
 
   3. Get To Know The Stakeholders
      These are those people who have a huge stake in your success. And they don't necessarily have a fancy title. Find out who they are. Ask for their support and offer yours to them. Start the bonding process.
 
   4. Identify Priorities And Challenges
      Most of the world's unhappiness stems from the unmet expectations. Develop a plan that demonstrates how you will address your most critical challenges and the time frames that you expect completion. Communicate this with your boss.
 
   5. Keep An 'Up' Attitude
      Do not share any concerns or misgivings about the job. Even if your boss appears to be going back on a promise, be careful. So when the boss (or anyone) asks you in the first three months, "how is it going?" the only good answer is "things are going wonderfully." You are still learning.
 
   6. Give Precise Meaning To Your Job
      When asking for information, listen carefully to the input offered by fellow employees regarding ways to add more value to your new employer. Ask the question 'how was this job done before?' This will give you insight into how you might achieve some early successes.
 
   7. Keep Managing Your Career
      It's understood that no one is going to watch out for your career but you. Setting vision and long-term goals is critical in the career management process. This certainly comes into play when projects come up. If a project fits into your long term career plans, then do it. If not, then gracefully decline (you are "too busy"). The more proactive you in taking on assignments that help you achieve your career goals, the quicker you will attain them.
 
Final thought: Have fun!
============================================================================================
  

2007年1月8日 星期一

R&D人生-工作,不斷解決問題,讓我更快樂

(曹其瑋╱DigiTimes.com)因為專案正在趕,現在跟客戶進行最後密集聯絡中,Philip連續一個禮拜窩在座位上,工作到昏天黑地有點不知今夕是何年的感覺。他的家人覺得他很辛苦,他的朋友都說他幹嘛做那麼累,不過Philip似乎對這樣長時間的工作不以為意,他覺得蠻快樂的。

對於Philip來說,客戶提出來的問題或要求,都是他的責任,許多人會把責任當作肩頭的重擔,完成責任似乎心不甘情不願,似乎都是為別人而做的;但他卻從來不會如此,欣然面對一個又一個的問題並加以解決。

他很喜歡解決問題的思考過程,在其中,他可以發揮創意,可以加進自己腦袋中的東西,與客戶討論。當客戶認同他的設計與想法,當客戶點頭並露出滿意的笑容時,他覺得很有成就感,時間的付出似乎都值得了。

他沒覺得他是在為那份薪水工作,也沒覺得就只是在為公司賣命,也不全然認為微笑的只是客戶而已;這樣的投入,讓自己的想法有所發揮,並且在專業上更成熟,滿足的也是他對科技業的熱情。

這是他工作快樂的泉源。

Philip是一家軟體公司的技術主管,年齡很輕,只有30出頭,他的工作夥伴們也都跟他一樣的年輕,有熱情、有創意是年輕人的代名詞。他們所在的產業又是最需要創意的軟體業。

雖然台灣的軟體產業相較起硬體產業,顯得相當不受重視;儘管在與硬體廠商接觸的過程中,讓他們倍感挫折,因為台灣硬體廠商似乎都理所當然地認為,軟體應該是不要錢的。不過大環境的不利處境,並沒有澆熄他對產業的熱情。

有位軟體界的前輩曾經說過,軟體和硬體是不同的,硬體業做出許多東西讓人生活更便利,然而軟體能夠注入創新思考,能讓世界變好玩,讓人快樂。

即使工作得沒日沒夜,對他來說也像在實踐這個「好玩」,讓人快樂也讓自己快樂。

Nicholas是一家IC設計公司的技術主管,雖然他已經接近中年,在產業中也已經有好長一段時間,不過和Philip一樣,他對科技業也有著很大的熱情與興奮感;而且更難得的是,時間並沒有磨掉他心中的這股力量。

對Nicholas來說,工作是能力發揮的場所。Nicholas從小就有資優的潛質,不僅學科成績從來不低於90分,而且大學時代就常常把電器用品的線路接來接去,試試腦袋中想到的新方法。

即使是踏入產業界了,他仍然持續勤讀paper吸收新知,現在的工作,與他大學時代的嘗試,或者學習過程中所有的理論應用和推演,本質上沒有太大的不同,只是做的研發更先進,分工更精細,並與現實作更多的結合。

他現在要帶著一群工程師尋找問題的答案,或許問題沒有答案,要找出沒有答案的理由;或許在不同的條件下,可以得出許多不同的答案,這時就要結合工作目標,作出取捨(trade-off),找出對產品開發最有利的那個答案。

Nicholas最enjoy(陶醉)的,就是解題的過程,和解答出來的興奮感。這是他發揮的空間,可以很大很大。

研發工程師常常要面對的,就是工作期程(schedule)的壓力,某年某月某日要完成什麼,早就訂得死死的。但是愈緊的schedule,顯示的是這個工作性質,〝D(Development)〞的成份愈是遠大於〝R(Research)〞,這就讓工程師喘不過氣來,不僅時間是壓力,研發過程中缺乏思考空間,也使工作內容變得沒有味道。

相對來說,〝R〞的成份愈重,工作就愈有讓人發揮的空間。R和D就好像是頻譜的兩端,頻譜就像是光譜,可見光的分佈由紅到紫連續分佈,工作性質偏紅或偏紫,顯示出R成份愈多或D成份愈多。樂趣也就不同。

有一位科技研發資歷已經超過20年的資深研發人員,對於長時間以來,研發工程師因為大環境變化而產生的命運改變,相當感慨。他說,早期的研發人員,通常被賦予某些任務,也擁有相當大的空間,他們也朝著這些任務全力以赴,研發成果對他們來說,好像自己的baby一般令人興奮且珍視。

但是現在全然不同,研發人員普遍得不到滿足感,工作就只是一份工作,而且是要付出極大時間成本的工作。做任何事都會遇到困難,然而若是認為有樂趣的領域,困難就不會覺得難,而能設法解決;但若無法從其中感到樂趣,期程或困難點都會被視為是壓力,漸漸生活就會像個行屍走肉,對一切都很麻木。

許多研發工程師對科技業都充滿熱情,或許在商業運轉環境的壓力下,熱情逐漸熄火,不過Philip和Nicholas沒有。腦袋原本是發揮創意的地方,本質上就是靠腦袋的研發工作,若沒有了興奮感,就好像缺了一角的圓,不是太可惜了?

http://tech.digitimes.com.tw/ShowNews.aspx?zCatId=417&zNotesDocId=0000037203_A2K8LW1KQX1KOAR2T5JCI

2007年1月1日 星期一

找方法的方法——清楚的目的會把方法逼出來

 
文╱資深財經記者 陳碧芬

找方法的方法——清楚的目的會把方法逼出來

上市公司年屆60歲的董事長,在百忙中還主動報考商管學院EMBA班;某電視台新聞主播,保持每年出國一個月的休假慣例。很多人想知道,他們到底用了什麼好方法,竟然可以隨心所欲,不為外力左右?

從個人的採訪經驗了解,上市公司董事長的個案,是因為他選擇了進入正式商管教育系統,作為念書、進修的個人方法;而電視台新聞主播的方法,既沒有向辦公室強求、也沒有向老闆要脅,就只因為她已有紀錄可循,會在固定時間進行年休,她採行的方法就是把過去以來的作法累積起來,大家都習慣了。

大家都想知道,別人到底用了什麼好方法,於是有心的人就繼續找方法,解決了A問題,再到處找方法解決B問題。在我看來,這是一種漫無目的的爛方法。

找方法的第一要務是自己想清楚,是為了什麼目的,才找方法。

有一位頻頻得獎的中小企業主周君,國際貿易出身,口才好、數字觀念強,公司經營也從來沒虧錢。他和前述的上市公司董事長,都進了大學商管學院的在職進修學程,可是他坦白說,報考入學的目的是為了交朋友,不像該位董事長是為了念書。

周君的進修目標清楚,接下來就開始找方法。他從身邊開始找尋可用方法的跡象,第一位是他的特助。周君的方法,不是請特助幫他寫作業、做報告,而是把課堂上的知識理論,以不知情的特助為對象,進行實務練習,再把特助的反應記錄下來,作為回到課堂上與同學一起做報告的素材。

他的紀錄,不是隨便寫寫,而是像中學生一樣字跡恭整,還特別在空白的地方加上自己的「感想」。因為周君對同學的傑出回饋,這些來自不同企業的經理人,對他有極深的印象與敬佩,不僅建立起友誼,甚至都成為市場上的好夥伴,周君的目的也達成了。

至於我個人,最大的困擾就是時間不夠用,我找的方法,以「善用工具」、「擴大使用」為方向,例如說,手機不能只是手機,應該是有其他的工具項目,最好能把照相、錄音、PDA、聯網全都加在同一機上,出門時不必瞻前顧後,所以時間節省了、效率提升了。或許,這個方法,會被攻擊成一味追求新科技,可是,科技的發明不就是為了追求進步?人們設定的目標,我只是找到方法,把使用過程轉換成為實踐效率的方法。

2006年10月9日 星期一

R&D人生-發現工程師的「內在科學家」

R&D人生-發現工程師的「內在科學家」
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (曹其瑋∕DigiTimes.com) 2006/08/07   7月,炎炎夏日,頭頂著驕陽,腳踩著冒著熱氣的大地,週圍疾駛而過因開著冷氣而發熱的各式車種。這樣的天氣讓人心煩氣躁,Patrick流著汗在做公司新產品的路測,他因路測不順心裡正痛罵著。
 他東調調、西調調,想找出一個好的方式,讓收訊可以好一點,而不會有的地方太完美,但有的地方太差。他直覺認為,用調來調去的方式,可以改善收訊狀況。除此之外,他也沒有別的辦法。
 但是他的方法顯然並不管用,他心裡一直罵,真是機車,怎麼這麼機車。然後他帶著不好看的數據回去交差。
 Patrick是無線通訊產業的junior工程師,路測是他這段時間的任務。他一直在耗體力,但忘了耗一點腦力,為什麼數據是這樣,發生了什麼事,是不是有什麼外界的影響,致使訊號不清,為什麼移個幾公分,訊號就如此完美?他想都沒想。
 回到公司,將數據呈給senior的工程師Steven,隨後把一肚子的機車疑惑和抱怨提出來,Steven問他:你以前修電磁學時有沒有學過干涉理論?呃~嗯~Patrick在腦袋中搜尋…。
 Steven決定帶著Patrick做一次路測。這回再遇到上述那種很機車的問題,Patrick只見Steven來回在不同的2個點測了幾次,然後娓娓告訴他,這是干涉現象,只要有反射,就會有干涉,這邊很完美,但那邊是破壞性干涉,雖然距離很近,只有幾公分,但因為頻率愈高,建設性干涉或破壞性干涉的點,距離就愈近,你看,這樣,從無到有!
 這是沒辦法避免的事,除非是在真空狀態,大自然中一定會有這樣的現象,所以我們要做的事情,是如何讓干涉的影響降到最低,最好的solution就是diversity receiving,同時用2個天線來收,除非說2個天線都掉在破壞性的點,不然收訊應該是OK。
 遇到不同的狀況,Steven都會停下來,思索一下。Patrick注意到,其實Steven很常使用隨身帶的筆記本和筆,除了把狀況紀錄下來以外,他也會在上面做一點數學推導。
 Steven算是一個相當訓練有素的工程師,而且工作表現也優異,除了已經很有經驗以外,他很喜歡思考,只要遇到問題就會去想為什麼;至於訓練有素,指的是他在學校已經受過很好的知識上的訓練,包括原理、假設、理論和推導等。
 那天的午餐時間,Steven邊吃邊在筆記本上畫東畫西的,看到Patrick好奇的模樣,Steven說,以前在學校時,老師很強調在〝back of the envelope〞進行推導的能力,遇到問題必須有辦法在咖啡店中,隨手找到1個信封,就在上面做簡單的分析和推導。因為這樣的訓練,所以現在有這樣的習慣。
 真的沒有多久,大約10多分鐘,Steven導出一個簡單的推論,而且眼神流露出滿意而且自信的神情,Steven說,待會兒可以派上用場。
 有了結果,Steven放開心情聊了起來,他說,他小時候就自己做車子,長大一點自己做音響,不過小時候的夢想是要成為一個科學家,等自己做了這些東西,才發現其實做工程師好像更實際。
 在學校中,他對學科的掌握度就很好,尤其對數學特別感興趣,沒想到在數學訓練中嚴謹且精確的思考態度,對後來工程師生涯也有很大的影響。遇到問題,他很清楚地釐清狀況和假設條件,然後作一些推導,再把結論對照假設作一番修改和再推導,往往能夠得到頗理想的結果。
 大眾心理學上有一個說法,叫做「內在孩童」(inner child),指的是人的內心有著原始的自己,在成長過成中內在孩童的需求若被壓抑、扭曲,就會使人的心理產生不滿足甚或複雜的負面情緒,進而影響到性格或行為;因此在心裡治療上可以用尋回自己內在孩童,進而照顧他的方式,讓內在孩童的潛能表現出來。
 對Steven來說,他的工程師生涯中,總是有著好像內在孩童般的科學家精神,存在於他的靈魂中,在工作中不時會跑出來奔跑跳躍一下,發散出純淨而豐沛的能量。姑且稱這樣的精神為「內在科學家」吧。
 工程師不只是動手操作而已,多用一些腦袋,多花些力氣去發現自己的內在科學家。

2006年8月31日 星期四

10 tips for keeping your desk clean and tidy

10 tips for keeping your desk clean and tidy
August 21, 2006 by Chanpory
A messy desk is a sign of creativity and imagination. This is the excuse I gave myself for the mountain of papers, knickknacks, and San Pellegrino bottles normally piled on my desk at work. Truth is, I'm just lazy. When I started wasting more and more time looking for lost items instead of being a brilliant creative person, I knew I had to do something. I got my desk organized, and have been miraculously keeping it clean for the past three months.
Here’s how:
1. Use a system to manage paper
Most of the clutter on my desk is paper. In a
recent post, I wrote about a system for organizing files on the computer. The same system can be modified to work with physical files:
Setup: A place for everythingFirst, you’ll need a few items:
InboxThis is a standard stackable letter tray. Put documents that don’t yet have a place in here. This may be items like memos, print-outs, and random things placed on your desk by random people.
Incubate boxOn top of your Inbox tray, stack another letter tray to put items that are 「on hold」. These are items you aren’t yet ready to do or complete in here. They may be articles you’re thinking of reading, sketches for potential projects, and information about events you might attend.
Action & Tickler fileFor this, Merlin Mann of
43 Folders recommends an A-Z accordion file. Put papers requiring an action that takes more than 2 minutes in here. This may be items such as forms to fill out and documents to proofread. You can also use a tickler file to supplement this. Check out Merlin’s tutorial for more details.
Current projects rackFor this, use a file rack or small file box to hold folders for active projects. Create one folder per project.
Filing cabinetPut completed projects, general reference items, and anything else you might want to look at again in a filing cabinet. Use simple flat folders organized from A-Z, instead of hanging folders.
Dump boxes (trash can, recycling bin, shredder)I avoided throwing away paper because I didn’t have access to a trash can, felt guilty about tossing recyclable paper, or was afraid of throwing away confidential materials. Having a trash can, recycling bin, and shredder for each of these situations eliminates these hesitancies.
Usage: Process, Organize, ReviewYou’re now all set and ready to clean your desk. The steps below are adapted from David Allen’s
GTD system:
ProcessPut all papers on your desk in your Inbox tray. If it doesn’t fit, just put it next to it for now. Go through each file one by one. Ask yourself: can I act on this file? If yes:
Do itIf it takes less than two minutes, just do it.
Delegate itIf you’re not the right person to do it, then send it to someone who can.
Defer itIf it takes more than two minutes to do, but it in your Action or Tickler file. Or if it’s project-related, put it in your current projects file rack.
OrganizeIf the file has no action for you to do, you can:
Trash it, recycle it, or shred it, if you don’t need it.
Put it in the Incubate tray if you’re not ready to deal with it.
Archive in your filing cabinet for later.
ReviewThe most important part of the system is setting up reviews for you to process your Inbox and organize your files:
DailyProcess your Inbox as often as you like throughout the day, but do it at least twice a day: once around noon and again at day’s end. You must empty it at the end of the day, so that your inbox is nice and fresh in the morning.
WeeklyAt the end of the week, move completed projects into your filing cabinet. Go through your Incubate tray and decide if you’re ready to act on any of the files, following the steps you would to process your Inbox. Take items in your recycling bin to the main recycling bin in the office.
MonthlyAt the end of the month, go through your filing cabinet and prune any files you don’t think you’ll ever need again.
2. Banish Post-it notes
Stop using Post-its to remind yourself of important information. They’re just to easy to lose and they’re ugly when plastered all over your monitor. Instead, keep a little notebook on your desk to write down reminder notes. Better yet, use GTD tools such as the hipster PDA and kGTD to keep track of what you need to do.
3. Trash those printouts
After printing a file and completing the action associated with it, throw it away. You already have a copy of it on your computer, so you don’t keep it lying around on your desk.
4. Keep blank file folders and a label maker at your desk
The reason while you don’t file is because it’s so tedious to find folders and label them. With a stack of blank folders and label maker within reach, you have no excuse.
5. Ritualize your reviews
Schedule time in iCal or other calendaring program to clean your desk at the end of each day. After two or three weeks, the habit will stick.
6. Throw away pens
Why do you need so many pens? Throw them all out except for two or three. If it doesn’t have a cap, toss it.
7. Say no to schwag
Yes, it’s hard to resist the ugly free crap at conferences and internal office events, but avoid taking them just because they’re free. This includes all those cheap pens, stickers, free magazines, brochures, postcards, and anything else that will likely end up littered on your desk. If you need a reminder of a particular vendor, take your PDA or notebook with you and write the company’s name and URL down.
8. Take your books home
Take home any books you don’t use on a regular basis for work. You’ll have more space to work, and if you have to leave your job for any reason (heaven forbid), you’ll have fewer heavy items to pack.
9. Eat away from your desk
Eating at your desk encourages trash like paper bags, cups, and utensils to stick around your desk. I’ve been guilty of this and have the crumbs in my keyboard to prove it. To prevent this, eat somewhere else. Preferably, out of the office. Doing this also allows you a mental break from work where you can enjoy your meal without phone or computer interruptions.
10. Limit photo frames on your desk
Pictures of loved ones remind us of what’s important in our lives. More than three on your desk, however, is a distraction. Instead, use Flickr to store photos which you can view in a slideshow during a break.


http://www.lifeclever.com/2006/08/21/10-tips-for-keeping-your-desk-clean-and-tidy/

2006年8月29日 星期二

[life] 101 ways to organize your life

August 26, 2006Lessons from Project Management: 101 ways to organize your lifeProject Management (and life) Wisdom straight from the mouths of the horses – oops, I mean project managers:

Leadership

1. Keep your approach friendly: People are not looking to make friends at work, but refraining from an aggressive approach towards your employees is a good idea. The whip - your - team - into - submission approach worked with the "Pyramids of Giza" project – but it is outdated now. The days when you could bully and scare the s*** out of your team are over. Be diplomatic and assertive, instead.

2. When taking on a new project/responsibility at work, convey to your management the extent of authority you need in order to effectively execute your project. Ensure that you have the authority that you need before you start work on your project.

3. Being people-oriented does not mean that you cannot be task-oriented (and vice-versa).

4. One-to-one: Meet regularly with your team members on a one-on-one basis. When you apply this principle to your kids, it makes each of them feel special.

5. Nobody appreciates a micro-manager: Don’t sit on the heads of your team members.

6. Giving autonomy does not mean not keeping track of progress.

7. Learn how to manage people (more difficult than it sounds, believe you me!), and the rest of your job will that much easier to execute.

8. As a leader, you should have the ability to bind the team together and give them a sense of “we’re in this together.” For instance, as the head of your family, you can promote bonding by setting aside time for family board games, story-telling sessions, family picnics, family prayers and the like.

9. Stay visible – As a leader, you need to be visible in good times, as well as when there are problems to address.

10. Your reputation depends on your perceived credibility and integrity: A very basic item for leaders is to ensure that promises made are promises kept. If action is committed, it must be performed.

11. Personality: As a leader, does your personality influence and inspire your team?

12. Leadership CAN be learned. Focus on these areas to improve your leadership skills:

Initiative Leverage your charisma to influence others Lead purposefully and with commitment Develop a result-oriented approach Cultivate an attitude of optimism Work on your self-confidence - especially for weakness areas (for instance, if you are particularly nervous around people with an intimidating body language, create a plan to tackle that, and come across as confident and in-control in their presence.) Cultivate empathy so that you can encourage and nurture your team Learn to identify winners – and nurture them Learn to read between the lines to understand the underlying concern that prompted the dialogue The ability to motivate people so that they stretch out of their "comfort zones" Improve your decision-making abilities by learning from past decisions Learn to see the big picture Polish your Goal Setting skills Develop Personal Goals and examine them at regular intervals Effective Time Management 13. Flexibility: While it is a good thing to be firm and stand by your decisions, It is important that you are flexible enough to realize when plans need to change. View planning as an ongoing process. That way, you can change course midway without too much damage, if the original plan is not working. Are you open to continuous planning and updating of the plan?

Effective personnel management (Managing your team / family unit)

14. Stand up for your team. When your employees are in the right, have the guts to take up their case.

15. Don’t let team members intimidate you with technical mumbo-jumbo. Don’t feel stupid when you ask them to explain what they are saying in layperson’s language.

16. Match assignments with skill sets: Is every team member equipped to handle his part of the assignment? If not, then you are in deep trouble!

17. Creative Solutions: A Japanese story – when a little girl kept wearing the wrong shoe on the wrong foot, her parents found a solution. There was half a smiley face on either shoe. The smiley face was complete only when she wore her shoes the correct way. Problem solved. It can be as simple as that if we use our creativity.

18. When you pressure your team to deliver faster than is humanly possible, don’t be surprised to see a poor quality, bug-laden product.

19. Agree on rules: In project management, once the design has been completed, the design and production staff create a style guide for future reference. Make the rules of the game clear to all players involved, and to any players who join in later on.

20. Building Trust: Build trust within the team by demonstrating to each team member that everyone is important and creating a sense of personal value and contribution.

21. According to the book "Retaining Your Best People" (Harvard Business School Press), retention should become a core strategy. A very significant and important piece of advice from the book and something that all leaders should do on a regular basis is to "let your best people know you treasure them, count on them, and want to reward them in as many ways as possible."

22. Look beyond money: There should be an effort by the manager, project manager, or business executive to determine what the non-monetary interests of the key players are. Translated to a family situation, don't sit smug thinking that you are doing your bit by bringing in the bacon. Your family needs more than that from you - your attention and interest, for instance.

23. Say thanks, offer words of support, and show appreciation for good work.

24. Reward your key players as often as possible. People generally won't work for people who just don't care for them.

25. Provide Challenges – Encourage your team to stretch beyond their comfort zone. This will help them see just how far they can go.

Recognition

26. Rewarding works better than nagging: A reward can be something as simple as a coin or a note of appreciation – as long as your employees perceive it as a symbol of recognition, it works.

The relationship between Accountability, Empowerment, Ownership and Motivation

27. The buck stops here: You are accountable for your task / project. However, this does not mean that you do not delegate. Delegate work to your team members, let them know that they are accountable for their assignment/s, and ensure that they have the resources so that they can deliver successfully. Decide the plan of action beforehand, and decide how follow-ups will happen.

28. Ownership: Have an attitude of owning your work.

29. Minimize your supervision - Provide a sense of autonomy. Freedom is a major motivator and builds trust on both sides. (Tip: But don’t tune out completely.)

30. To motivate, you have to empower. Motivation involves not only being enthusiastic and pumped up about approaching the task, but also involves being equipped with the tools and the ability to complete the assignment. When you delegate an assignment, convey to the team member that it is now THEIR exclusive responsibility that the job gets done. If it doesn't, they will be held accountable.

31. Accountability of Self: Take a couple of co-workers into confidence about your expectations from yourself. Besides making your goals clearer to yourself, this helps others keep track of your progress.

Communication

32. Clear, open communication is a prerequisite for a healthy, result-oriented work environment.

33. Keep them posted: A lack of information is a fertile ground for rumor, gossip and insecurity. Keep the team in the loop about information concerning and affecting them.

34. When in doubt, ask: Don’t refrain from asking “stupid” questions – they may save miscommunication and misunderstandings, resulting in saved time and money!

35. It is bad policy to wait till your team members find out important information concerning them from other sources. That information should come from you.

36. Ask questions and listen to suggestions.

37. Feedback: Provide it often and ask for it. Keep an open mind. (Tip: Don’t expect all feedback to be pleasant and positive.)

38. Listen: It’s always important to listen, but even more so in tough times. Listen for undertones.

39. Be Open: While you should not be a dumping ground for grievances, you SHOULD be accessible enough for team members to openly discuss concerns or delays. (Tip: If you are not open, you'll find out about the concern or delay later in the game when there is less time to fix it.)

40. Touch Base: One-on-one and in meetings, meet up with your team members (or family members). (Sitting in front of the television with the family does not count as touching base!)

Morale

41. Pride: Have you read the Japanese story about the janitor who described his work as “Contributing to the progress of his country?” His logic – if the executives did not have clean toilets to use, they couldn’t be very productive, could they? That is the kind of pride you need to have in your work / project.

42. Keep your sense of humor: It helps – especially in situations where no one feels like laughing. (Like the time a short executive stood on a chair so that she was at eye-level with her colleague, and she quipped, “Maybe now we can see eye-to eye?” The laughter that followed this lightened up the tension that everyone in the room had been feeling up to that point.)

43. Have fun @ work: It’s true that all work and no play makes Jack a dull b ec638dcoy. And fun, on the other hand, recharges your batteries and lets you approach work with a fresh mind.

44. Celebrate achievements – even mini-achievements: Celebrating at every landmark gives your team something to look forward to, and lets them remember that they are making steady progress towards their goal – project completion!

45. Give praise: When a team member does something great, let them know it! Make sure your praise is sincere. Also, your praise will be valued only if it is given when it's due.

46. Help Others Help Themselves: If a team member / family member has a mental block, you can guide this individual to tear it down. (Tip: Tackle such issues early on, because a negative frame of mind can be highly infectious.)

Self-Management

47. Use impatience to your advantage: Channel the energies generated by your impatience to propel the process faster.

48. Procrastinators don’t make good project managers. Find a way around your weakness (procrastination) if you want to achieve your targets.

49.

24X7 availability for the project is not the way to effective achievement of targets. It will only end up overwhelming you. “The key is to schedule and set boundaries so you don't need to be accessible 24/7.” (webmonkey)

50. Do you like what you are doing? If not, why are you still doing it? Money is not compensation enough for being trapped in a role you do not like. Because for every hour you spend doing something you don’t enjoy, you are giving up doing something that you do.

51. Be Informed: Know not only what is happening in your organization, but also keep track of changes within other organizations that may impact your team members.

52. Analyze after the event: A postmortem offers valuable insights for future reference.

53. Ask yourself (1) Do I know what is expected of me? (2) Do I expect I can perform that which is expected of me? (3) Do I expect a reward of value to me personally?

Stress

54. Use stress as an ally: Let stress work as the red flag that tells you to take action.

55. One key element in dealing with stress is taking control. A feeling of helplessness increases stress. So take some action that reflects that you do retain some amount of control over the situation – even if that little control is only over your reaction to the stressor.

Personal organization

56. Nothing beats being organized. Keep an organized filing system, for instance, even something as simple as storing documents chronologically will go a long way in saving you time and stress when you need to locate information.

57. Keep a daily journal where you jot down the day’s highlights. Then, set aside an hour on Saturday night/evening to analyze your week. What did you do wrong? What did you do right? What will you do differently the next time in a similar situation? This practice will help you grow professionally and personally in the long run.

58. Make daily lists and cross things off. Keep a personal scorecard and grade yourself weekly.

59. Buy a Daily Planner; now actually use it.

Planning

60. Plan ahead: Before you plunge headlong into work, spend some time planning your project.

61. Break down work into tasks: Breaking down the project into smaller tasks (and mini-tasks if required) ensures that you have a systematic approach.

62. Keep it visible and visual: Plotting a chart or graph about work progress and tacking it in a prominent place on your soft board (or keeping the softcopy on your desktop) ensures that your progress is visible to you.

63. Infrastructure: A reliable server lays the foundation for efficient work. Good infrastructure and equipment translate to smooth functioning for any task.

64. A step-by-step plan is the best way to ensure you know where you are going.

65. In project management, the bulk of the work happens after the planning phase. How well this implementation of the plan happens depends on how thorough and specific the planning and documentation was. Bad planning translates to bad implementation.

66. Good planning alone does not ensure good implementation. Follow-through becomes vital here. As the leader, the project manager ensures that the team sticks to the plan.

67. As a project manager, you need to check that everyone is following the functional spec and style guide, that they are using the proper naming conventions and version controls, and that backup files are being saved on the server. Rules are useful only insofar as they are implemented and followed.

68. Be prepared: Know your stuff front-wards, back-wards, and every way in between. This does not mean that you need to say everything you know. Being prepared helps you to quickly answer questions and convey that you know what you are talking about.

69. Understanding the goals: A project is truly successful only when you are meeting the need for which it was created. Identifying the scope and requirements at the outset and also acknowledging that in the real world, these can change is a good starting point.

70. Getting it right from the outset: The most important part of a project’s life cycle is the identification of its requirements.

Conflicts

71. Manage conflict (especially within the team) at an early stage – before it reaches crisis proportions.

72. The best way to side-step petty politics - nip conflicts in the bud.

73. Remember that no two people view the situation with the same pair of eyes – they actually see different things. This helps in understanding differences of viewpoints and eventually resolving conflict within your team.

74. Create the Team Charter; and keep it up-to-date: A team charter is a code of conduct developed by the project management team and later adopted or modified by the project team. It defines the mutual expectations of each team member of one another. As a project manager, hold yourself and others accountable to be consistent with this code.

Risk Management

75. There is no such thing as a zero-risk project: There is no such thing as a risk-free life.

76. If you want to understand a risk fully, identify its causes as well as its effects.

77. How do you respond to risks? There are four ways: a) Aggressive responses: You can achieve avoidance by removing or changing a cause, or by breaking the cause-risk link so that the threat is no longer possible. b) Third party: You involve a third party to manage the risk. c) Size: You can change the size of a risk, thus reducing a threat. d) Acceptance: You accept the possibility of the risk, and create a fallback plan to recover from negative impacts.

78. When a project is desperately troubled, first take action to contain the damage then worry about recovery, just the way a first aid or rescue teams first “contain the damage” and consider other options after the victim’s condition stabilizes.

79. Checklists for risks: Trouble sometimes stems from omissions. It is easy to “forget” key components of a work package. A checklist reduces the potential of leaving out important considerations.

Work / Life Balance

Naps, Breaks and Vacations: The rejuvenation trio

80. Take a break: When you feel overwhelmed, take a break; get your mind off work for some time. Chances are, you will be able to handle the situation better after a break.

81. Get enough sleep: There is no substitute for sleep. All else being equal, a well-rested person is better equipped to meet the challenges that the day presents, as compared to a person who has not had enough rest.

82. When you plan a vacation and want to really enjoy it, ensure that all the work-oriented nitty gritty is taken care of, and out of the way.

83. Manage your vacation as a project (a lot of planning) if you enjoy doing a lot of things rather than just lying around idly all day (which is also an excellent way to recharge your batteries, by the way).

What You Eat

84. Remember GIGO? Garbage in, Garbage out: Eat low-energy fast food and be prepared for irritability, mood swings, and blood sugar swings. Eat healthy, wholesome and nutritious meals to bring out the best in you.

Bonding and Loving

85. A healthy personal life translates to a well-balanced, healthy person. Make sure you are not succeeding at the workplace at the cost of your family and loved ones. Given enough time, they will learn to live without you around – without complaining about it. Tip: Pets are wonderful to shower you with (unconditional) love when nobody else will.

86. No job in the world is worth neglecting your kids for. Your kids will outgrow their strong dependence on you – the job will always be there (one or the other). If you are not there for them when they need you the most, don’t count on their unconditional acceptance and love for you later on.

Your clients and stakeholders

87. Keep the stakeholders updated: Keep the sponsors and stakeholders posted about the progress. This becomes more important when there are unforeseen problems or newer risks; like when there are delays.

88. Understand the need: When working on the project, it helps if you understand what need your project will fulfill. Sometimes (make that often) your client’s description the project will not match his need. Ensure that what you are doing will serve the purpose that it is meant to serve.

89. When to give in and when to hold your ground: Once a project has started, the client will almost always want you to incorporate changes and add tasks. Sometimes requests are legitimate, and it is possible to incorporate them without throwing the project off track. But when the client’s demands require significant changes, you need to take a call. Michelangelo Buonarroti’s ceiling of the Sistine chapel project is a classic case in point. The original project involved creating twelve paintings. By the time the project was completed, over 300 paintings had been created, costing the artist his health and youth.

90. When stakeholders do not respond to information or do not respond in an expected manner; create alternative, proactive communication mechanisms to avert trouble.

91. Don’t forget to ask, “What does my client want to be able to do as a result of this project?” Translated to real life situations, every time you work on something, ask yourself what you (or someone else) hope to accomplish from that activity. The answer can be as simple as “feeling refreshed and rejuvenated” to something as complex as “moving towards my dream of contributing to a cleaner and healthier planet”.

Across Borders - It's a global world!

92.

Whether working with offshore teams or just a diverse group at home, today's project environment is multicultural. Be open to and aware of your project stakeholders' cultures. Not only should we respect our colleagues' cultures, but we should understand and EXPERIENCE them. Go out for Dim sum with the team or learn a new phrase in another language. (allpm.com)

93. Cross-cultural global relations: (courtesy Elizabeth Larson, PMP and Richard Larson, PMP) a) Plan extra time to model requirements when working cross-culturally.While modeling is an excellent tool for overcoming some cross-cultural communication issues, multi-cultural project management may still take extra time to get the requirements and ensure that important facts are captured. b) It is important to plann more time for capturing requirements when working in multi-cultural environments. c) Meeting in Person to Develop Relationships Saves Time and Money in the Long Run. In some cultures tasks are completed based on established relationships and, ultimately, trust, rather than simply being driven by schedules. Attempting to forge ahead with tasks before spending social time with clients can well lead to incomplete requirements. While it may not be standard practice all over the world, when PMs are working in some other cultures taking the time to meet face-to-face can save time and money for your project and organization.

The Zen of Project Management - George Pitagorsky's tips

94. Zen is a form of self-investigation that has its roots in China and Japan. It is a merging of Indian Buddhism and Taoism. The Zen approach is one that cuts through complexity to go straight to the heart of a matter. Zen promotes knowing through inner experience. It promotes discipline from within. In the Zen way, the individual comes to fully know his or her own nature by cutting through intellectualism, cultural barriers, conditioned responses, rules and any other “extras” that get in the way of seeing the essence. One who sees the essential nature of things has wisdom. Wisdom leads naturally to compassion. Wisdom and compassion are at the heart of our essential nature.

95. What is a wise approach? It is an approach that gives us the ability to see things clearly and minimize the probability that we will be reactive and ineffective in achieving our goals and objectives. Wisdom is the synthesis of knowledge into active, practical use. A wise person moves through life with equanimity, un-phased by the chaos surrounding her. A wise person has choices. He is not unconsciously driven and reactive.

96. "Only the person who learns to relax is able to create, and for them, ideas reach the mind like lightning." Even in face of chaos, pressure and stress, relax! How? Relaxation is not the same as tuning out and turning off. It is not somnabulence. Learn to rest in the moment. Cultivate the ability to quickly focus on your breath and body just long enough to find your "center". Then engage.

97. Serve someone. Serve everyone. That is the secret of wise leadership. There is a difference between a leader who serves and one who just leads. "The difference manifests itself in the care taken by the servant-first to make sure that other people's highest priority needs are being served." Such a leader asks if "those served grow as persons; do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to become servants?" When the motivation is to serve, posturing, politics and self-serving gains are replaced by useful effective action.

98. Mental models are deeply ingrained assumptions, generalizations … that influence how we understand the world and how we take action. ” They may be useful, or they may lead to habitual, reactive behavior. What paradigms condition your behavior? Do they help or hinder you? Do you have the courage to question them? Do they provide established basis for analyzing problems, or do they limit your ability to act in the way that is best for the current situation.

99. Desiring the impossible gives rise to suffering It is also the root of many failed projects. When undertaking a project, you have the duty to question authority, to push back. Ask questions, rather than voice objections. Why is this the deadline? What if it isn't met? What do you really need, and by when? What assumptions are you making? What would you give up to get what what you really need? Will we have the right resources at the right time?

100. The Good, The Bad, The Continuous Improvement: We learn at least as much from bad experience as we do from good. Yet, blaming, fear of punishment and models like “I’m so smart, how can I make mistakes” lead us to avoid looking at and learning from our mistakes. Continuous improvement begins with the candid acceptance of the existing situation, particularly its flaws. If you don’t accept what is, you can’t change it.

101. How to Push Back when Negotiating: When pushing back to negotiate a rational schedule and budget you need solid footing. Come to the table with a well articulated plan, complete with assumptions. Use your communication, task definition, estimating, scheduling, and risk management skills and knowledge to offer realistic alternatives. Seek win-win solutions. What if you are forced to accept an irrational schedule or budget? Try to do your best to negotiate expectations that can be met given the project’s scope, resources, and risks. Do your best to work within the project’s real-world conditions.

http://www.projectmanagementsource.com/2006/08/lessons_from_pr.html