The Expectations Game
by Karl Walinskas
Did you ever take on an assignment at work, or try to implement something at
your company, that sounded so good—but turned out so wrong? I mean, you did
everything you said you were going to do, when you said you were going to do it,
and the boss--or the employees--or the client—was still dissatisfied. I have. In
fact, I just came from a meeting with a client who will probably cancel a
project that’s only halfway complete. It was painful. I walked into the meeting
room and ten or twelve people, hands folded and heads in their chests, stared
mutely ahead as if the methadone clinic had just made an office visit, while I
was figuratively toe-tagged and put on a slab. I squirmed for an hour and a half
while I heard how the software template that took me a year of work didn’t hold
any value for the company. To me those words sounded like Captain Quint’s
fingernails scraping across the chalk board at the town hall meeting; "Aye. You
gotta shark out there…a big one" ringing in my ears. Three weeks earlier I
thought everything was hunky-dory. I realized then that I had lost the
expectations game--mine, and theirs.
The basic project management problem illustrated above is, and will forever be,
a communication breakdown. You’re tasked with implementing a major change at
your company. The following four myths about the way you communicate, and to
whom, are smack dab out of the Implementation Failure Handbook.
Myth #1: Don’t Be Too Specific About the Outcome. "The more vague we are about
the outcome, the less we can be nailed down if things don’t go exactly as
planned. As long as we have a general idea about what we want out of the
project, we’ll be fine, right?" Wrong! Whether you’re a plant manager
implementing a new ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) system or a consultant
proposing a profit improvement job, you need to be extremely specific in the
outcomes you set.
Try to learn from my own recent mishap. I thought everyone knew what the
deliverables would be on a project designed to help the company measure their
true costs. I wrote what I thought was a pretty good proposal. We had about five
meetings prior to starting the project. So where did I screw up? Well, different
people at the table wanted different things out of the project. I heard them but
didn’t really listen. I told the customer what I would deliver, yet I wasn’t
specific on what would not be delivered. Consequently, at the completion of the
project, I was looking at disappointed faces and defending my position (the last
place you want to be if you’re a consultant). The customers thought they were
getting something more, or at least different, than what they received.
If you’re trying to improve your business and want to get people on board for
success, be specific about how life will change after the improvement. Your
employees are your customers. How much money will the company save? Exactly how
many people will you hire—or fire—if things go as expected? How is the bonus
plan being affected in dollars and cents? Put your projections in writing. It
gives people something to focus on, helps set realistic expectations, and
provides you with CYA material if your need it later on.
Myth #2: We Can Make Changes Over a Handshake. In the consulting profession
there is a bogeyman in any major project that is taken on, especially if the job
will be done for a fixed price. That monster is called "scope creep." Scope
creep is where goals, outcomes, and directives change during the course of the
project. Stuff begins to be included in your scope that was never intended to be
there. What’s worse, you might not be able to deliver it at all! I’ve seen
scores of projects go bad due to scope creep because the changes in focus were
handled with a handshake—a verbal commitment. The consultant didn’t put in
writing what the new deliverables were and he didn’t relate how this change
would affect the overall price of the project. Ultimately, the customer is
always right, so even if the consultant delivers, he ends up doing extra work
pro bono.
During any implementation of major significance at a company, changes in scope
are inevitable as you go along. Make sure these changes are clearly communicated
in writing to the resources, the people that are helping implement, and the
stakeholders, the people affected by it. The last thing you want when it’s all
over is to have surprises.
Myth #3: I’m Sure It Will All Come Together in the End. You may be thinking that
you could never fall into this one, right? You would be shocked if you knew how
many project managers and customers let situations spiral out of control in the
name of "not losing momentum." Consider this: if your objective is to drive from
Maine to Florida, and by New Hampshire your ten degrees off course, wouldn’t it
be better to know it then and make corrections? Of course it would, or else
you’ll end up with a lot of momentum in Texas!
If you’re making things happen at your company, and early on you or someone else
notices that you may be off course, it is incumbent upon that person to speak up
and call for an investigation. Re-group and re-think. This is usually the job of
the resources, advisors, and the people affected by the change. Often the leader
of the project is so immersed in the trees he can’t see the forest. He’ll
happily proceed along the path that looks right and is totally wrong. In a
country with a divorce rate approaching 50%, when you see something amiss at any
time during the big project, "Speak now or forever hold your peace."
Myth #4: They Don’t Need to Know. This is the biggest management mistake that
I’ve seen made during ten years of consulting. People surf the Internet. They
have a network of friends in high places inside and outside of the business.
Trust me, they’re going to find out! Problem is, if you didn’t tell them and it
affects their working lives, expect resentment and sabotage. If your making a
major change at your company, you cannot over-include people in the distribution
of information. This doesn’t mean you put too many cooks in the kitchen, it
means you tell everybody and solicit opinions and suggestions. This is in
chapter 1 of the Successful Projects book that I keep in my subconscious mind.
If you want buy-in, tell people what’s going on from the beginning. Put it in
the company newsletter, send it in corporate email messages, and shout it from
the highest mountain.
Back to my example. At the meeting where I was handed my head about missing the
project mark, several of the people holding the guillotine cord required an
introduction. The most vocal antagonist was a person I had met for the first
time when the project was over. He was never included in any discussions about
the project, had the results foisted on his plate, and was asked for critique.
What would you have done?
If you are responsible for implementing major changes where you work, one
measure of success is meeting or exceeding the expectations held by the people
those changes affect. Communicate specific outcomes, clearly identify changes in
scope, derail obvious problems early on, and leave nobody, and the columnist
means nobody, out of the information loop, and you’ll win the expectations game.
Karl Walinskas is the owner of The Speaking Connection. He provides seminars on
a wide variety of topics, and also acts as a coach to other speakers, beginner
or professional. Karl authored the Selling Solutions audiotape program, which
has 5 star ratings on Amazon.com, Borders.com, and BarnesandNoble.com. Visit his
web site at http://www.speakingconnection.com/ or email him at
TopSpeaker@pobox.com.
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