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Delegation and Coaching Examining the responsibilities in the previous section reveals a significant fact: none of the activities mentioned involve running a project! The Program Manager relies even more significantly on delegation than does the project manager. Certainly, the project manager has to delegate items - especially technical items - to team members with specialized skills. However, the program manager relies on individuals to perform those specialized skills, but also must call upon others to actually manage the projects, coordinate status reporting, detect and resolve project-level issues and handle customer interactions. The Program Manager must be sensitive to the abilities of others as a means of knowing when to intervene for the sake of the overall program, without demeaning the individual project manager. Coaching is the key, without imposing specific approaches or styles the Program Manager would use. Coaching is pivotal to the success of the Program
Manager. Successful program management involves capitalizing
on the skills of the
staff you bring together – which means fully utilizing
people with drastically varying styles in the role of project
management for the program’s projects. Understanding these
styles, being able to select the right people for the right roles
and making each individual feel as if they have the ability to
run their own piece of the program is a task that can be more
art than science. A “Change Perspective” Managing change is one of the first concepts
presented to new project managers, so it shouldn’t be different for program
managers, right? Well…think again. Project managers have
to assess, handle and determine if change is appropriate and
beneficial for their projects. Program managers however have
to embrace change in a much different way. Programs are usually
much more encompassing than projects, have much longer lifetimes
and “touch” a much broader cross-section of the business.
In a quickly changing competitive world, change for a program
is inevitable versus something that must be assessed for it’s
short-term value, as in a project. This being the case, program
managers must design their programs to handle change from both
a business and a technical perspective. |
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