Last Stop on SPARTA Trip: ACCOUNTABILITY
We've had quite a project rescue and recovery trip through SPARTA this week. To get the full context of these points, I welcome you to read Race Through The Forest. To recap,
- We STOPPED all work to regroup
- We set PARAMETERS around the recovery work effort
- We identified and documented ASSUMPTIONS and risks meaningful to our recovery
- We tagged relevant ROLES based first and foremost upon skill sets
- Lastly, we planned and estimated the TASKS that were important to our recovery effort
So what's left? The most important piece: ACCOUNTABILITY (the last letter in the SPARTA acronym). Former U.S. President Harry S. Truman had a plaque on his desk that said "The Buck Stops Here." Unlike almost every president we've had since, Truman understood the key element of his role was accountability. No excuses. No whining. No finger pointing. No spin-doctoring. It ended with him (are you paying attention, Clinton and Bush???!!!). When I am managing a project, I tend to keep reporting simple. I provide all of my resources with a 2-3 week look-ahead report (on a weekly basis) so they know what is coming up. I also publish a "late task" report. That one single report lets EVERYBODY know what tasks are late and who is responsible for those tasks. When I say "publish," you can translate that as the corporate equivalent of shouting it from a mountain top. Every relevant stakeholder knows what is late and who is accountable. It's an objective yet powerful motivator to get tasks done on time.
Sometimes accountability can take a simpler tone, though. Last month, Steve Farber posted a great story about a Sleep Country delivery driver. His take on accountability provides lessons for all of us. When I'm in a restaurant, I tip my server based on one primary issue: how well did they keep my beverage glass full. That is truly the one thing that I know they are wholly accountable for. Simple follow-through. It's really not that hard.
Well, folks, I hope you've enjoyed this trip through SPARTA as much as I have. Good luck recovering and rescuing your challenged projects. Carpe Factum!
Technorati Tags: Project Rescue, Project Recovery, Project Management, SPARTA, Race Through The Forest, Harry S. Truman, The Buck Stops Here, Accountability, Steve Farber

In rescuing a failing project, eventually a new project plan needs to be constructed. TASKS (the 'T' in SPARTA) need to be defined (or redefined). In building a project plan for a project rescue, tasks will probably need more scrutiny than they were given the first time. There is a lot of skeptism regarding the ability of the team to execute the project successfully. Your recovery team's credibility is on the chopping block, as well as your reputation as project manager.
At one client site, there was another project manager who was working on an imaging system implementation. Most of the imaging infrastructure was outsourced to the vendor, and the project manager was there to ensure that the requirements and standards were in place and that the data structure was ready to interface with the new imaging system once it was installed.
OK, so with all the hullabaloo about the re-release of The Omen on 6-6-6 (clever marketing, regardless of the quality of the movie), it stands to reason that somebody should take to task the Damien of project management, the demon of Carpe Factum, the true 666 of accomplishment: Scope Creep.

When is it appropriate to call it quits on a "bad" project and give it a decent burial? Ah, 'tis a question for the ages, one that has befuddled many a project manager and executive sponsor. If you've thrown $10 million after a project over the past eight years that has produced only an itty-bitty teensy-weensy sliver of the grandeur originally promised, is that enough to keep the project on life support to allow it just one more chance to make good on its promises?



