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60 PM NETWORK NOVEMBER 2015 WWW.PMI.ORG NOVEMBER 2015 PM NETWORK 61
BUILDING
RESILI ENCYWHEN DISRUPTION IS THE
NORM, SUCCESS FLOWS
TO ORGANIZATIONS WITH
AGILITY AT THEIR CORE.
BY DONOVAN BURBA
62 PM NETWORK NOVEMBER 2015 WWW.PMI.ORG NOVEMBER 2015 PM NETWORK 63
tor and respond to the external environment, the
ability to standardize change and risk management
practices throughout the organization, and the
ability to translate knowledge gained through these
practices into a better project portfolio.
PREVENTING PERIL
How all this drives increased agility is simple: It
prepares project and portfolio managers to make
the right decisions in rapidly changing environ-
ments. In a tightly regulated industry such as
banking, work on a deliverable often has to be
done before the exact nature of upcoming regula-
“In the past, project management was all about
efficiency and optimizing each process,” he says.
“Today, it’s more about flexibility and agility, because
market trends change during project cycles.” Under
such circumstances, change management at the
portfolio level is critical. “I can look across the port-
folio, and there’s a lot more outside influence on it
than there used to be,” Mr. Payan says. “If you don’t
have good change management in the portfolio,
you’re going to spend a lot of time managing chaos.”
The Pulse report bears his point out: Organiza-
tions with a highly developed culture of agility are
more effective at organizational change. Sixty-seven
percent are effective at anticipating changes in the
external environment, compared to just 10 percent
of organizations with an underdeveloped culture of
agility. And 61 percent of them can effectively imple-
ment responsive or adaptive strategies to the changing
environment, compared to 6 percent of organizations
with an underdeveloped culture of agility.
Mastering both change and risk management
boils down to three capabilities: the ability to moni-
projects and programs—their most strategic initia-
tives—to be completed faster and more efficiently
than ever before, they are better positioned to thrive
in uncertain economic conditions. According to the
Pulse report, organizations can accomplish this by
establishing a five-part, self-reinforcing framework
consisting of supportive culture, strategic flexibility,
collective leadership, capable people and adaptive
process. (See “Rapid Reactions,” page 66.)
But the real challenge for organizations looking to
increase their agility is figuring out how to ingrain
these capabilities so deeply in the project culture
that they become second nature. There’s no getting
around the time and conscious effort this requires.
PREPARED FOR THE STORM
The difference between managing projects, pro-
grams and portfolios now compared to 10 years ago
is the speed at which change and risk management
capabilities have to be used, says Herb Payan, PMP,
senior vice president, digital strategies, Sony Music,
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA.
competitive disruption is business as usual. Just
look at the airline industry: In less than 15 years,
four upstart “super-connector” airlines—Emir-
ates, Qatar, Etihad and Turkish—have surpassed
the reach of formerly dominant carriers based in
Europe. And they’re beginning to move into the
traditional turf of U.S.-based airlines.
How to respond to aggressive competitors and
navigate volatile markets quickly and successfully is
the crux of organizational agility. No longer a buzz-
word, agility is a must-have for project success in
rapidly evolving sectors—which these days is most.
“To be prepared for the future, you need both a
culture and an organizational structure that provide
the flexibility needed in a changeable environment,”
says Jorge Alberto Pérez Torres, PMP, organization
deputy director at insurance firm Allianz, Mexico City,
Mexico. “The word ‘resilience’—the ability of a system
to cope with change—fits very well in this case.”
PMI’s 2015 Pulse of the Profession®: Capturing the
Value of Project Management Through Organiza-
tional Agility in-depth report found that 75 percent
of organizations with a highly developed culture of
agility are able to quickly respond to market condi-
tions, compared to 12 percent of organizations with
an underdeveloped culture of agility.
The contrast was similar with customer satisfac-
tion ratings (85 percent compared to 23 percent).
Yet cultivating organizational agility isn’t easy.
Organizations aren’t monoliths; they’re made up of
people, and getting people to change their habits
of mind and behavior takes time and effort. When
organizations create a culture of agility that enables
IN THE
21ST
CENTURY,
“To be prepared for the future,
you need both a culture and an
organizational structure that
provide the flexibility needed
in a changeable environment.”
—Jorge Alberto Pérez Torres, PMP, Allianz, Mexico City, Mexico
64 PM NETWORK NOVEMBER 2015 WWW.PMI.ORG NOVEMBER 2015 PM NETWORK 65
comes, they need to be able to blend strategy, goals
and reality to make the right decision quickly.
The ability to adjust on a day-to-day basis to new
market challenges while keeping an organization’s
strategic goals in mind is crucial, says Ms. Walker.
“When challenges emerge, you have to ask yourself,
‘What’s the problem, and how can I solve it while
still meeting my own performance measures and
strategic goals?’”
Finally, she notes that assessing and calibrating
strategic goals quarterly or annually isn’t frequent
enough in the current business environment. Orga-
nizations must have the ability make changes when-
ever challenges emerge. That requires everyone in
the organization, particularly at the top, to acknowl-
edge that hewing to the status quo in a dynamic
environment won’t work.
When they do, they’ll see the benefits where they
matter most—on the bottom line. The Pulse study
found that increased organizational agility resulted
in faster responses to changing market conditions,
better organizational efficiency, improved customer
satisfaction and greater business results. At a time
when many organizations are treading water, those
are powerful reasons to start thinking—and act-
ing—differently. PM
overall agility: It can get products to market faster
and adjust them on the fly, avoiding long, costly
development cycles. In a dynamic market, this can
make the difference between beating a competitor
and being left behind.
But the road to agility can be bumpy. “Many man-
agers don’t want to deal with agility because [they
think] it is less governable and implies more freedom,
and thus risk, for their teams,” Mr. Torres says. Only
by trusting team members to deliver using essential
checks and balances can project and program manag-
ers make their organizations more agile, he says.
But the onus is also on project managers to create
an environment that fosters the ability to quickly
make changes while taking the big picture into
account. To implement organizational agility, “the
number one most important thing is communica-
tion,” says Becky Walker, PMP, government analyst
at the Florida Department of Revenue, Tampa,
Florida, USA. “In order for us to be our most effi-
cient, we have to be aligned with the organizational
strategy and have the resources to quickly respond
to external changes.”
That means project managers have to work hard
to build their knowledge—both of their own orga-
nization’s goals and capabilities, and also of industry
trends and market dynamics. And when the time
the-spot decisions to either maximize the benefits or
make sure we keep the bare minimum in the portfo-
lio in case of a stormy environment.”
STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION
Whether there’s a market meltdown or surg-
ing competitor, the ability to sail through the
storm successfully requires everyone from
the executive suite on down to be on board.
If only a few superstars at an organization
excel in change or risk management, for
example, opportunities will be missed.
For example, Mr. Torres notes that organizations
that rigorously follow a yearly budget struggle with
agility, because they are shackled to a fixed amount of
money that doesn’t change as the project advances.
“Having the intention to be agile is not enough if
the way we are organized is not profoundly changed
in terms of policies, procedures, team structures,
empowerment and trust,” he says.
At Sony Music, that has meant flattening the
organization so that everyone’s voice is equal. That
allows ideas, rather than titles, to drive the organi-
zation’s culture.
“The people with the everyday workload, they
know where the problems are. We have to listen to
them,” says Mr. Payan. “We have to go from, ‘If my
title is X, then I should have the answers,’ to ‘My job
is to make sure the right solutions are implemented.’”
The organization also has embraced an ethos
of “fail and fail fast.” Rather than investing a great
deal of time and effort in developing a prototype,
they put out an imperfect model, get feedback and
adjust. Identifying mistakes, he says, should be
both accepted and rewarded, an attitude that he
acknowledges requires a shift in mindset by typi-
cally risk-averse senior managers. The idea is that
by giving teams the freedom to take more agile
project approaches, the organization is growing its
tions are known, says Marc Burlereaux, PMI-ACP,
PMI-RMP, PMP, PgMP, business implementation
manager, HSBC Private Bank, Geneva, Switzerland.
Complicating matters, the project team often has
to take into account regulations by both local and
pan-European authorities.
Even when the pressure comes from within—
decreasing time to market, for example—the
importance of risk management remains. “In all
these contexts, risk management is crucial to ensure
delivery without putting the company at risk,”
says Mr. Burlereaux. “With too much pressure
from management, there is a strong tendency to
minimize risk impact. We then need a strong opera-
tional risk manager who is able to be vocal.”
Organizational agility also requires all project
teams to work from the same playbook. The 2015
Pulse report found that organizations with highly
developed cultures of agility focus on project man-
agement training and development far more than
those with low agility (66 percent compared to
13 percent of organizations with underdeveloped
cultures of agility). The new 2015 study notes that
organizations with highly developed cultures of
agility succeed by embedding foundational prac-
tices across the business, including aligning busi-
ness capabilities to strategy and integrating the
voice of the customer into projects.
For Mr. Burlereaux, having standardized prac-
tices such as fully documenting projects has proven
the key to managing initiatives in an industry—
banking—that hasn’t exactly lacked volatility and
uncertainty in recent years.
“The main advantage of having a well-documented
portfolio of projects was to be able to keep, shorten
or stop initiatives, depending on simple criteria like
cost to complete, benefits awaited versus benefits
realized, or ‘do or die’ projects,” he says. “An updated
projects portfolio database is essential to make on-
“In the past,
project
management
was all about
efficiency and
optimizing
each process.
Today, it’s
more about
flexibility and
agility, because
market trends
change during
project cycles.”
—Herb Payan, PMP, Sony
Music, Fort Lauderdale,
Florida, USA
“An updated projects portfolio database is essential
to make on-the-spot decisions to either maximize the
benefits or make sure we keep the bare minimum in
the portfolio in case of a stormy environment.”
—Marc Burlereaux, PMI-ACP, PMI-RMP, PMP, PgMP, HSBC Private Bank, Geneva, Switzerland
“In order for
us to be our
most efficient,
we have to be
aligned with the
organizational
strategy and
have the
resources to
quickly respond
to external
changes.”
—Becky Walker, PMP, Florida
Department of Revenue, Tampa,
Florida, USA

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Contribution to PMI article

  • 1. 60 PM NETWORK NOVEMBER 2015 WWW.PMI.ORG NOVEMBER 2015 PM NETWORK 61 BUILDING RESILI ENCYWHEN DISRUPTION IS THE NORM, SUCCESS FLOWS TO ORGANIZATIONS WITH AGILITY AT THEIR CORE. BY DONOVAN BURBA
  • 2. 62 PM NETWORK NOVEMBER 2015 WWW.PMI.ORG NOVEMBER 2015 PM NETWORK 63 tor and respond to the external environment, the ability to standardize change and risk management practices throughout the organization, and the ability to translate knowledge gained through these practices into a better project portfolio. PREVENTING PERIL How all this drives increased agility is simple: It prepares project and portfolio managers to make the right decisions in rapidly changing environ- ments. In a tightly regulated industry such as banking, work on a deliverable often has to be done before the exact nature of upcoming regula- “In the past, project management was all about efficiency and optimizing each process,” he says. “Today, it’s more about flexibility and agility, because market trends change during project cycles.” Under such circumstances, change management at the portfolio level is critical. “I can look across the port- folio, and there’s a lot more outside influence on it than there used to be,” Mr. Payan says. “If you don’t have good change management in the portfolio, you’re going to spend a lot of time managing chaos.” The Pulse report bears his point out: Organiza- tions with a highly developed culture of agility are more effective at organizational change. Sixty-seven percent are effective at anticipating changes in the external environment, compared to just 10 percent of organizations with an underdeveloped culture of agility. And 61 percent of them can effectively imple- ment responsive or adaptive strategies to the changing environment, compared to 6 percent of organizations with an underdeveloped culture of agility. Mastering both change and risk management boils down to three capabilities: the ability to moni- projects and programs—their most strategic initia- tives—to be completed faster and more efficiently than ever before, they are better positioned to thrive in uncertain economic conditions. According to the Pulse report, organizations can accomplish this by establishing a five-part, self-reinforcing framework consisting of supportive culture, strategic flexibility, collective leadership, capable people and adaptive process. (See “Rapid Reactions,” page 66.) But the real challenge for organizations looking to increase their agility is figuring out how to ingrain these capabilities so deeply in the project culture that they become second nature. There’s no getting around the time and conscious effort this requires. PREPARED FOR THE STORM The difference between managing projects, pro- grams and portfolios now compared to 10 years ago is the speed at which change and risk management capabilities have to be used, says Herb Payan, PMP, senior vice president, digital strategies, Sony Music, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA. competitive disruption is business as usual. Just look at the airline industry: In less than 15 years, four upstart “super-connector” airlines—Emir- ates, Qatar, Etihad and Turkish—have surpassed the reach of formerly dominant carriers based in Europe. And they’re beginning to move into the traditional turf of U.S.-based airlines. How to respond to aggressive competitors and navigate volatile markets quickly and successfully is the crux of organizational agility. No longer a buzz- word, agility is a must-have for project success in rapidly evolving sectors—which these days is most. “To be prepared for the future, you need both a culture and an organizational structure that provide the flexibility needed in a changeable environment,” says Jorge Alberto Pérez Torres, PMP, organization deputy director at insurance firm Allianz, Mexico City, Mexico. “The word ‘resilience’—the ability of a system to cope with change—fits very well in this case.” PMI’s 2015 Pulse of the Profession®: Capturing the Value of Project Management Through Organiza- tional Agility in-depth report found that 75 percent of organizations with a highly developed culture of agility are able to quickly respond to market condi- tions, compared to 12 percent of organizations with an underdeveloped culture of agility. The contrast was similar with customer satisfac- tion ratings (85 percent compared to 23 percent). Yet cultivating organizational agility isn’t easy. Organizations aren’t monoliths; they’re made up of people, and getting people to change their habits of mind and behavior takes time and effort. When organizations create a culture of agility that enables IN THE 21ST CENTURY, “To be prepared for the future, you need both a culture and an organizational structure that provide the flexibility needed in a changeable environment.” —Jorge Alberto Pérez Torres, PMP, Allianz, Mexico City, Mexico
  • 3. 64 PM NETWORK NOVEMBER 2015 WWW.PMI.ORG NOVEMBER 2015 PM NETWORK 65 comes, they need to be able to blend strategy, goals and reality to make the right decision quickly. The ability to adjust on a day-to-day basis to new market challenges while keeping an organization’s strategic goals in mind is crucial, says Ms. Walker. “When challenges emerge, you have to ask yourself, ‘What’s the problem, and how can I solve it while still meeting my own performance measures and strategic goals?’” Finally, she notes that assessing and calibrating strategic goals quarterly or annually isn’t frequent enough in the current business environment. Orga- nizations must have the ability make changes when- ever challenges emerge. That requires everyone in the organization, particularly at the top, to acknowl- edge that hewing to the status quo in a dynamic environment won’t work. When they do, they’ll see the benefits where they matter most—on the bottom line. The Pulse study found that increased organizational agility resulted in faster responses to changing market conditions, better organizational efficiency, improved customer satisfaction and greater business results. At a time when many organizations are treading water, those are powerful reasons to start thinking—and act- ing—differently. PM overall agility: It can get products to market faster and adjust them on the fly, avoiding long, costly development cycles. In a dynamic market, this can make the difference between beating a competitor and being left behind. But the road to agility can be bumpy. “Many man- agers don’t want to deal with agility because [they think] it is less governable and implies more freedom, and thus risk, for their teams,” Mr. Torres says. Only by trusting team members to deliver using essential checks and balances can project and program manag- ers make their organizations more agile, he says. But the onus is also on project managers to create an environment that fosters the ability to quickly make changes while taking the big picture into account. To implement organizational agility, “the number one most important thing is communica- tion,” says Becky Walker, PMP, government analyst at the Florida Department of Revenue, Tampa, Florida, USA. “In order for us to be our most effi- cient, we have to be aligned with the organizational strategy and have the resources to quickly respond to external changes.” That means project managers have to work hard to build their knowledge—both of their own orga- nization’s goals and capabilities, and also of industry trends and market dynamics. And when the time the-spot decisions to either maximize the benefits or make sure we keep the bare minimum in the portfo- lio in case of a stormy environment.” STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION Whether there’s a market meltdown or surg- ing competitor, the ability to sail through the storm successfully requires everyone from the executive suite on down to be on board. If only a few superstars at an organization excel in change or risk management, for example, opportunities will be missed. For example, Mr. Torres notes that organizations that rigorously follow a yearly budget struggle with agility, because they are shackled to a fixed amount of money that doesn’t change as the project advances. “Having the intention to be agile is not enough if the way we are organized is not profoundly changed in terms of policies, procedures, team structures, empowerment and trust,” he says. At Sony Music, that has meant flattening the organization so that everyone’s voice is equal. That allows ideas, rather than titles, to drive the organi- zation’s culture. “The people with the everyday workload, they know where the problems are. We have to listen to them,” says Mr. Payan. “We have to go from, ‘If my title is X, then I should have the answers,’ to ‘My job is to make sure the right solutions are implemented.’” The organization also has embraced an ethos of “fail and fail fast.” Rather than investing a great deal of time and effort in developing a prototype, they put out an imperfect model, get feedback and adjust. Identifying mistakes, he says, should be both accepted and rewarded, an attitude that he acknowledges requires a shift in mindset by typi- cally risk-averse senior managers. The idea is that by giving teams the freedom to take more agile project approaches, the organization is growing its tions are known, says Marc Burlereaux, PMI-ACP, PMI-RMP, PMP, PgMP, business implementation manager, HSBC Private Bank, Geneva, Switzerland. Complicating matters, the project team often has to take into account regulations by both local and pan-European authorities. Even when the pressure comes from within— decreasing time to market, for example—the importance of risk management remains. “In all these contexts, risk management is crucial to ensure delivery without putting the company at risk,” says Mr. Burlereaux. “With too much pressure from management, there is a strong tendency to minimize risk impact. We then need a strong opera- tional risk manager who is able to be vocal.” Organizational agility also requires all project teams to work from the same playbook. The 2015 Pulse report found that organizations with highly developed cultures of agility focus on project man- agement training and development far more than those with low agility (66 percent compared to 13 percent of organizations with underdeveloped cultures of agility). The new 2015 study notes that organizations with highly developed cultures of agility succeed by embedding foundational prac- tices across the business, including aligning busi- ness capabilities to strategy and integrating the voice of the customer into projects. For Mr. Burlereaux, having standardized prac- tices such as fully documenting projects has proven the key to managing initiatives in an industry— banking—that hasn’t exactly lacked volatility and uncertainty in recent years. “The main advantage of having a well-documented portfolio of projects was to be able to keep, shorten or stop initiatives, depending on simple criteria like cost to complete, benefits awaited versus benefits realized, or ‘do or die’ projects,” he says. “An updated projects portfolio database is essential to make on- “In the past, project management was all about efficiency and optimizing each process. Today, it’s more about flexibility and agility, because market trends change during project cycles.” —Herb Payan, PMP, Sony Music, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA “An updated projects portfolio database is essential to make on-the-spot decisions to either maximize the benefits or make sure we keep the bare minimum in the portfolio in case of a stormy environment.” —Marc Burlereaux, PMI-ACP, PMI-RMP, PMP, PgMP, HSBC Private Bank, Geneva, Switzerland “In order for us to be our most efficient, we have to be aligned with the organizational strategy and have the resources to quickly respond to external changes.” —Becky Walker, PMP, Florida Department of Revenue, Tampa, Florida, USA