Top Ten Project Management Trends for 2009

by JLeRoyWard

[ add note for 2009 here ]
Image by Môsieur J. via Flickr

ESI International revealed the 2009 Top 10 project management trends that will impact both private and public sector organizations this year. Identified by a global panel of ESI’s veteran consultants and senior management, these trends point to organizational need for expertise while coping with tighter budgets, fewer financial and human resources, and change. The forecast suggests where project management will focus in 2009 to drive project and organizational success.

The Sandwich Generation: Middle Managers’ Emerging Role in Change

Seventy-five percent of all change management programs fail because of a lack of employee support. Today’s economy will force organizations to confront the important roles middle managers play in the success of change efforts. Middle managers’ roles will shift from simple messenger of directives ‘from above’ to creating a positive environment to enable change, accountability and ownership of change initiatives, achieving the full benefits of change and ensuring return on investment.

Navigating Virtual Teams through Change

As budgets tighten, the role of virtual teams will grow along with the demand for the skill sets to manage them, especially through change. Powerful communication, key management strategies and new rules of engagement will be required to manage virtual teams as organizations seek to effectively shift with the turbulent global economy.

Sharper Distinctions Between Project and Program Management

Many global organizations have managed programs with the same methods used to manage projects, with predictably disappointing results. Programs are not merely “bigger” projects, and program managers aren’t simply professionals who are one step up on the organizational ladder. This year will see an increase in the understanding of the cardinal differences between projects and programs and the utilization of strategies to boost program managers’ effectiveness and increase program success.

Leveraging Communities of Practice To Hone Skills

The number and importance of project management communities of practice will increase significantly in 2009. These informal communities will be highly prized for the lack of bureaucracy that increase the sharing and use of best practices, enabling increased dialogue to overcome challenges and growing future leaders.

Strategic Selling of the Project Management Office

Although the project management office has gained wide acceptance, it still needs buy-in at the senior executive level. 2009 will see an increase in the importance of quantifying the PMO’s value and how to present that data to the CFO to ensure funding in what promises to be highly competitive arena for organizational resources.

Back to Basics for Successful Project Portfolio Management

More than any year in recent history, 2009 will be a critical year for ensuring project success. Project managers will increase their emphasis on the basics, taking a first-things-first approach and address fundamentals such as gaining and sustaining executive commitment, addressing gaps in the alignment of organizational strategy and projects, project selection, and efficient measurement process while leveraging existing resources to increase project success.

Right-sizing Staff with Demand Driven Resource Management

The adoption of Demand Driven Resource Management will increase significantly in 2009. Its ability to right-size internal staff and draw on outside contractors when demand requires will be viewed as an essential cost containment approach leading to greater organizational performance and efficiency.

Improved Requirements Metrics

The economic need to accurately assess and evaluate the organizational and cost impact of project requirements will bring a greater role for requirements management and development. Also known as business analysis, RMD’s ability to provide quality metrics that project and portfolio managers can use to assess the economic, performance and feasibility value of each project component will become essential to organizations successfully maximizing the ROI of their projects.

People Will Come Before Technology

Organizations will increase their demands for smart third-party guidance that ensures technology investments deliver enhanced performance. This will result in greater recognition of the critical role people play, leading to increased recognition that employees need the right skills and knowledge before applying processes for consistency and adding technology to deliver increased efficiencies.

Risk Management for Governance

In 2009, many organizations will say goodbye to the ‘one number’ method for project outcomes and embrace a quantifiable range of potential results on which to base decisions. Recognizing that best governance hinges on the availability of quality information at the project level, education and leadership in risk management and best practices permeate organizations wanting to optimize project forecasting to deliver more effective governance.

While these trends are about doing more with less, they all speak to the concept of less is more. In 2009, more than any time in recent history, empowering people with the right skills, knowledge and tools to pick the right projects, ensure support for change and effectively track progress for smart governance will be key to project success – saving time and money while driving organizational success.111

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Leave a Comment


{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

Bill Duncan January 26, 2009 at 12:58 pm

Why am I not be surprised that these trends all suggest a need for the products and services that ESI sells?

Any fearless forecasters out there willing to suggest any substantive changes in project management in the coming year or two?

Reply

Bill Duncan January 26, 2009 at 6:58 am

Why am I not be surprised that these trends all suggest a need for the products and services that ESI sells?

Any fearless forecasters out there willing to suggest any substantive changes in project management in the coming year or two?

Reply

Dr. Paul D. Giammalvo January 26, 2009 at 2:44 pm

Ya Bill, (And Hi Leroy!!)
Gong Xi Fa Cai!!!

We are seeing a LOT of our clients, who, only a few years ago considered project management to be a “core competency” OUTSOURCING project management.

I am seeing strong indications that many operational companies are fed up with project management and are more than happy to outsource it to specialty companies.

To get an idea of how big this market already is, and what the potential may be if IT, Telecommunications and other companies adopt the same approach, check out Engineering New Records Top 100 Construction Management firms.

For the top “CM for Fee” companies look to http://enr.construction.com/people/topLists/topCmFee/topcmfee_1-50.asp and for the top “CM At Risk” companies look to http://enr.construction.com/people/topLists/topCmRisk/topcmrisk_1-50.asp.

To see what kind of contract documents are appropriate for CM either at risk or on a fee basis, see the Construction Management Association of America, http://www.cmaanet.org.

My prediction is based on the fact that the total value of work we are bidding (mostly telecom but some oil and gas) has been steadily increasing for the past 2-3 years.

Another interesting applicaton of project management in an operational environment is “Job Order Contracting” (JOC or sometimes known as Indefinite Time/Indefinite Quantity- IT/IQ or SABRE) Right now, we are bidding 5 different projects for the oil, gas and mining sectors. While these are mostly maintenance and repair contracts, they require significant project management skills in order to make money at them.

BR,
Dr. PDG, Jakarta

Reply

Dr. Paul D. Giammalvo January 26, 2009 at 8:44 am

Ya Bill, (And Hi Leroy!!)
Gong Xi Fa Cai!!!

We are seeing a LOT of our clients, who, only a few years ago considered project management to be a “core competency” OUTSOURCING project management.

I am seeing strong indications that many operational companies are fed up with project management and are more than happy to outsource it to specialty companies.

To get an idea of how big this market already is, and what the potential may be if IT, Telecommunications and other companies adopt the same approach, check out Engineering New Records Top 100 Construction Management firms.

For the top “CM for Fee” companies look to http://enr.construction.com/people/topLists/topCmFee/topcmfee_1-50.asp and for the top “CM At Risk” companies look to http://enr.construction.com/people/topLists/topCmRisk/topcmrisk_1-50.asp.

To see what kind of contract documents are appropriate for CM either at risk or on a fee basis, see the Construction Management Association of America, http://www.cmaanet.org.

My prediction is based on the fact that the total value of work we are bidding (mostly telecom but some oil and gas) has been steadily increasing for the past 2-3 years.

Another interesting applicaton of project management in an operational environment is “Job Order Contracting” (JOC or sometimes known as Indefinite Time/Indefinite Quantity- IT/IQ or SABRE) Right now, we are bidding 5 different projects for the oil, gas and mining sectors. While these are mostly maintenance and repair contracts, they require significant project management skills in order to make money at them.

BR,
Dr. PDG, Jakarta

Reply

Alex Postnikov March 9, 2009 at 4:54 pm

Hi Leroy!

Thanks for your thoughts! Though, I do not agree about distinction between project and program management. Maybe, it’s not the right time, but most people still seek for both project management and overall business processes management. So the integrated solutions (or the solutions where border between projects and processes is transparent) will be still actual in 2009.

Reply

Alex Postnikov March 9, 2009 at 10:54 am

Hi Leroy!

Thanks for your thoughts! Though, I do not agree about distinction between project and program management. Maybe, it’s not the right time, but most people still seek for both project management and overall business processes management. So the integrated solutions (or the solutions where border between projects and processes is transparent) will be still actual in 2009.

Reply

Pauldgphd August 19, 2010 at 3:36 pm

Hi Leroy,
Just for curiosity has your ESI team revisited these trends to see if their prognostication abilities are better than those of Punxsutawney Phil (an American joke) and more importantly, are they going out on a limb for 2011?

BR,
Dr. PDG, Jakarta
http://www,build-project-management-competency.com

Reply

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