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2008-12-23

Save the juicy stuff for a phone call, right?

You have matters to deal with for your project, you're short on time, and you want to make a big splash into a long couple weekend. So, drop a bunch of long winded VM's to your clients; they'll love it, right? Nonsense! They'll hate you for it. a voice mail full of information and demands makes no one comfortable, especially when we've all got a lot going on, perhaps managing multiple gigs, and find it easier to react to an email than to deciphering someone's unplanned, gibberish on the phone.

...and while you're at it...

Spend quality time getting the week's status report out for your projects via email. Give your team a high five for a job well done - make 'em feel loved and excited for some much needed down time. Do you know where all of your folks are going? Who's working which days? Who's on point to provide any support, if needed? You did inject non-working days into your contract, yeah, if you intend to disappear for the rest of the week...and lastly, don't be a slimy Holiday junkie, spamming every client you've ever known with another Happy Holidays mail.

Those of us who really do intend to step away, hang up the iPhone, and chill will have enough emails to attend to on Mon morning.

Happy Holidays!
-Paul

2008-12-18

Crafting the SOW

I've always been a big proponent of the Project Manager being engaged early during the Opportunity phase when onboarding a client and wrapping a project around the need. This is a fun, sometimes overwhelming, and utterly detail-oriented that could bring on the need for some Aspirin after a few heavy days of brainstorming, whiteboarding, and most importantly listening and asking questions.

Fast forward to the development of the Statement of Work (SOW), our formal, contractual list of demands, assumptions, risks, and a schedule that binds the project with your Customer...for software gigs, as a PM you simply must understand the inputs, outputs, and adjacent systems of your project. And if expected to honor the SOW, as a PM, there's no better way to honor the contract then to craft it yourself. Contract negotiation experience, contract law experience, and a technical understanding of the project are all nice to haves, but there's simply no substitute to having written hundreds of them yourself, and having a keen legal review body to watch your back. As a PM in a software consulting house, I believe a serious value-add in such an org where Account Mgmt and Project Mgmt are merged is having a PM that can speak the technical language, has strong business and Customer-facing skills, and who has produced loads of SOW's him/herself with an understanding of what will stand up and what will fail. Profitability in a software consulting org depends on careful project planning, complete extraction of Customer demands, thorough commnication, and finally, a rock solid SOW.