Posts tagged team
Moving to IT Operations 2.0? – Using Web 2.0, for managing 24×7 IT operations
Feb 2nd
Do you manage the teams that work 24×7 across the shifts? Especially on 12 hour/day shift and 4 days/week model? If yes, then I would really be interested to know how manage to have team meetings and to the team collectively?
Getting everyone together for a briefing, team meeting, gathering, round table etc., has been a great concern because of the lack of people in office (due to their shift working). Almost half of the team is off on weekly offs every day while half of remaining work in day and rest in the night shift. Thus at any point of time, I have access to only 1/4th of the team at wok (again due to shift working).
Since most of the team members are not available having a team meeting is really out of question and does not really add value. So I would need to develop some method of getting the offline updates across to everyone and make them equally participant in the decision process, which, may last longer than usual one / two hour meeting. It could actually take 1 week depending on the shift schedule.
Few things I have been contemplating of implementing are,
- A discussion forum – Creating an online discussion forum where each discussion topic is listed and kept open for a period of 1 week. Offline reminders are sent to the team to go through the discussion forum and the comments / questions are invited and are answered through further replies / comments over the forum.
- Offline recording of meetings – Record the meeting discussions in audio / video formats and again share with the team offline. Invite comments over the recording & engage them into question / answer session offline. Create a Question Basket where you invite questions and get them answered through email replies / audio recordings or video sessions.
- Issue tracker & project update acknowledger – Create an online application where the important decisions are stored and compel the team members to acknowledge that they have read and understood these decisions. If they have issues, they can raise queries back to the manager via online application.
There might be few more things I could possibly do, but I would really like to know if you have any good suggestions which I could take on board and try and implement them so as to work even more effectively.
Please leave a comment, a feedback or a note on my blog if you could help.
… and the reward goes to ..?
Sep 14th
Ohh .. wait a minute !
This article has nothing to do with any award / reward function you would see on a television, cinema, but its more to do with the way awards and rewards are judged within an organization and how sometimes it puzzles me.
Today, I had been to a rewards committee meeting as a guest judge and at the end of meeting, I left the room with lots of thoughts to ponder with.
Few days before the meeting, I was sent an excel sheet with good detailed nomination information about 6 candidates from whom I needed to judge the top two candidates. The top two would be rewarded a certain amount as per the company policy. There is a quota of the monthly / quarterly awards which are distributed at the end of every month / quarter.
Normally, the rewards committee has few fixed judges and few guest judges. I was one of the guest judge this time and was asked to voice my inputs on who would, in my opinion, win the award and why. During the discussion, I observed that the rewards committee makes a good effort and attempt to discuss each case and try to give their opinions on the face value of the nominations they are presented.
On a whole, the process of inviting nominations from Project Managers and having a meeting in which a representation from Sr Management, HR & few guest judges would decide who wins, is good enough in most of the cases.
Most of the decisions, unless the judges know the nominee well, are made on the basis of what is written in the nomination form and how well the arguments are written.
The whole discussion made me wonder, in the end, who actually gets rewarded?
Is it the person who has done a great work or the person who has actually written a great nomination form with appropriate arguments?
How do you ensure that the right person gets the award?
What I have also seen, is the fact that the award normally goes to the person who has come out of adversity and saved a project from a serious escalation or from a difficult situation. Example of this could be someone who has just handled a business critical Priority 1 problem and resolved it within the SLA timings.
Then there is one person who makes an effort all year to keep a consistent performance and ensures that escalations do not happen and also ensures that the crisis situation never arises. This person, although gets nominated for the award, but would never get it, because his nomination form would be a lightweight, compared to the first one.
Typically in the support project, what I have seen is the team or the individual that resolves most problems or most crisis situations is rewarded the most. While, in a positive way it is correct to appraise a person who has gone extra mile to resolve the crisis and save the project from any potential penalty.
However, on the other hand, few people who are proactive, keep wondering what they need to do to get a recognition? In few discussions with the teams previously, we used to joke that we have got the project to such a stable phase, that there is no more challenge left which would give the team a chance to shine above the rest. !!
In a nutshell, there are quite a few factors that would determine whether a project or a person would get a reward or not and few of them I could list as follows,
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Type of project – If a project is stable and all processes are matured, then there is a less likely chance that the project would be considered for any award. Eventually, all the people working in the project have less chance of getting recognized for their work. Effectively, since the project itself does not offer any challenges, even outstanding person would struggle to get a recognition for the work there.
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Nature of work – If someone has saved the project some costs, efforts or time, then the person would be worthy candidate of being nominated for the rewards. Whenever the nomination is given, its important that all the necessary details are furnished properly. Moreover, the benefits must clearly come out of the nomination form. The words such as costs reduction, resource reduction, automation, efforts saving, crisis resolution should come out appropriately and should be emphasized.
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Glorify the work - As I mentioned above, irrespective of how many judges know your work quality personally, the decision is made on the basis of what is written in the nomination form. So its very important to glorify the work and presented accordingly.
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Awareness – One of the most important aspect of being rewarded for outstanding work, is being aware of rewards process and ensuring that the information is proactively sent with some good details as I mentioned above. During few discussions I had with the teams, it was observed that the team ‘expect’ the managers who work with you to ‘recognize’ their work automatically without the team expressing willingness and desire to actually have one awarded. Its a misconception that the work would automatically be awarded without any advertisement or internal marketing. Unfortunately, its one of the most difficult part for teams to understand and practice.
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Due attention by project managers – Its very easy for project managers to put the blame on the rewards committee about lack of reward to the team. The rewards committee is the soft target by many project managers who fill up the nomination form just because its mandatory and lack ‘awareness’ as I mentioned above. The project managers should ideally go all out to ensure that all correct details are furnished, glorified and presented accordingly for the rewards meeting.
These are just some of the tips you could use to assist yourself in presenting your case better. Finally, a quick word on what I believe,
There is only one alternative to hardwork, its name is ‘smart work’ !
Team work !
May 26th
Team work is an important aspect of high performing and successful teams and its all the more important to to achieve it consistently.
In my new project since I took over, I have been trying to instil the feeling of one team as a one large family. Prior to me taking over the project has been consisting of several teams bound by scope, processes & and more notably (in my view) the excuses!
Thus when I took over the project, one of the challenges that was put in front of me was to break the moulds and recede the boundaries to create a more cohesive unit and turn that unit into a high performing team.
I have taken the challenge and have started working towards it. How much success I would get, would really be visible in coming months but few visible differences have started to come along the way and most notably people have started to notice the difference in the team. Hopefully this is a good sign for coming times.
One of the very old videos that used to be on “Doordarshan” is very apt to display the power of togetherness & team work which I would like to embed here in my post.
The video was apparently created in 1985 when the colour television was relatively new in India.
The video is in Hindi language and it simply tells you how powerful the teamwork could be if all the team members have same heart beat !
HeartQuotes website mentions a very good collection of quotes on Team Work and few of my favourite quotes are as follows.
It is amazing how much you can accomplish when it doesn’t matter who gets the credit.
Teamwork: Simply stated, it is less me and more we.
Henry Ford
Coming together is a beginning.
Keeping together is progress.
Working together is success.
For more such quotes, visit the reference site at HeartQuotes.
Career progression guide – 3p process
Mar 4th
I thought it might be sensible to publish a post giving the links to all the four posts I put on my blog together so it would be easy for readers to track and view them properly. So here you go,
Guide for career progression – 3Ps process is a series of FOUR posts. Other posts on this could be found below.
Part ONE – Overview
Tells about what the process is all about and what are the important phases in the process.
Part TWO – Prepare yourself
Tells about how to prepare yourself and what are the important things that you should keep in mind.
Part THREE – Practice hard, become a key player
Tells about how to become a key player in the project and carry out important responsibilities and showing results on the job.
Part FOUR – Pass it on & progress
Finally, tells about how to move on and be ready for next step.
Thanks for reading.
Guide for career progression – 3Ps process – Part FOUR – Pass it on and progress
Mar 4th
Pass it on and progress ahead
In the previous two posts I mentioned how to get into a project and become a real dependable and key project member. If you have not read them, I recommend you to check at the bottom of this post to get the links for them.
Assuming you have actually become the key player within the team and enjoyed your time at the top of your capabilities, for a good while, then you should really look forward to ‘start unlearning’ your knowledge in the project and start to build a back up for yourself so you could try and make yourself ready for next step.
When I essentially say ‘unlearn’, you need to ensure that following things are met,
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Identify the person who could take your role within the project
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Start personally training the person over the project
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Ensure the knowledge you have gained on the project is shared / understood and practiced by the second level person you chose
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Make yourself available to your manager for the work that he need to get done (After all, you are after his job, aren’t you?)
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Start to make yourself redundant in the project
You might question me on the last point I wrote here, and ask me when the second phase tells me to be a key player in the project, why do you suggest to make yourself redundant in the project now?
Well, valid point but a very very important one. The answer is, unless you make yourself redundant to the work and make project work independent of you, how would you step up to the next role? Got the point !
It is essential to build a good team and good resources in the project when you leave it behind. It shows a good legacy and a good track record of yourself as a professional, manager and good leader. Another thing you need to do in this phase is to engage with your manager more often than you used to do in the earlier phase, see if you could try and understand what work he does, how he does and understand the job expectations.
Secret tip: Your manager also needs to move up the value chain, so help him do so and claim his throne. Give him space to move up and you could move up too !
If you get good luck along the way, you might see a good result in your next performance review, and then you can start applying the phase 1 to your role again ! As I said earlier in my first post, the entire cycle lasts for approx 2-3 years to you got to have patience during the process and show a good willingness to put hard work and show resilience.
Hope this series would have helped you the corporate cycle of career progression. All your comments are welcome as usual.
Cheerio and all the best
This is a series of FOUR posts on Guide for career progression – 3Ps process. Other posts on this could be found below.
Part ONE – Overview
Part TWO – Prepare yourself
Part THREE – Practice hard, become a key player
Part FOUR – Pass it on & progress