On Friday the President signed a memo intended to simplify and consolidate how businesses connect to services and programs in the US. It is essentially creating a platform on USA.gov for all the things that can help small businesses and exports. I mention this only because this is the new project I am managing out of the eGov Office in the Office of Management and Budget.
This project is big simply because of its breadth. It impacts so many Agencies, I don't even know them all yet. It also has a very long list of stakeholders. Anyway, within 90 days the first phase of this project needs to be complete. I will try to make a few updates as I have interesting things to report. For now you can see the splash screen at http://www.business.usa.gov/.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Monday, October 17, 2011
Questions to be answered within a year
So OPM came out with a new On-boarding Model for Senior Executives. Fairly straightforward, not too many surprises except for the appendix at the end, which I have reprinted below. I think this is a really good starting point for any person in any new job. These are the things you need to know. It will take time to gather all of the answers, but this will be something that I'll be keeping with myself to look back on and make sure that I can answer.
Questions that must be answered.
| Ask themselves and/or their mentor | Ask other leader | Ask manager and/or key stakeholder | Ask direct reports | Ask others in order to access information about available training resource |
| What is the agencyvision and mission | What are the 3 things we should be very proud of as an organization, and why | Who are our customers | What is a recent management decision you did not understand | How can I advance in the organization |
| How are my goals and objectives tied to the vision | What are the unspoken norms | Why do customers do business with us | What does the leadership team do that gets in the way of you doing your job | How do I request training |
| What does the end state look like | Where do the great ideas come from in your organization | How and when have we made it hard for them to do business with us | How can we communicate management decisions more effectively? | How do I register for training |
| What is the state of the talent within my group | How is personal success measured | What do our customers need from us now | How do you feel at the start of the workweek | How and when can I initiate a leadership assessment process |
| What are the organization norms regarding dress and appearance | How do you encourage others to communicate the “core values” | What will our customers need from us in the future | How do you feel at the end of the workweek | Which organizations provide professional development opportunities for SES members |
| What are the organization norms regarding punctuality | How do you help a new employee understand the culture of the organization | What gets in the way of us doing our job | What are the key metrics to track progress and success | With whom should I discuss development opportunities |
| What is the process for requesting and documenting leave | When faced with two equally qualified candidates how do you determine whom to hire | What are the expectations for my role as a leader | What are the short term priorities | How do I find out about required training |
| Are there any quick wins | How do I locate information about agency departments and offices | How is departmental success measured | What tools are used to manage schedules(appointments)- paper, outlook? | How can I access available leadership training resources? |
| What support do I need to achieve success for my organization? | What is one mistake you witness leaders making more frequently than others? | What are the organizational taboos? | What is my role in emergency evacuation? | Where can I find recommended reading materials? |
| Where can I go to find the most recent Employee Viewpoint Survey(or other employee opinion survey)results for my organization | What is the one behavior or trait you have seen derail more leaders’ careers | What are some of the challenges that previous incumbents in this position have encountered | Where is the alternate operating location | When and where is the next SES Orientation Briefing? How do I register |
| What is my role in COOP | Why do people stay in this organization | Where can I find information about the current administration’s priorities | What process is used to collect our customers’ needs and measure their satisfaction | Are there any organizational leadership tools I should be aware of |
| What strategic relationships and internal networks should I be aware of? | What motivates senior management | What key policies should I be aware of in the first month and which ones do I own? | What are the short term priorities for the organization and my office | What are a few resources you would recommend to someone looking to gain insight into becoming a better leader |
| What do I want to be remembered for | What are the organizational norms about travel(not the GSA/official rules) | Who are my key partners and what do they do/provide | What are the results of the most recent third-party inspection (IG, GAO, etc.) | What are you doing to ensure you continue to learn and grow as a leader |
| What are the major risks associated with my positionto me, to my organization | In my first twelve months, what can I do to help you and your staff be successful | What are the results of the most recent employee morale survey | What are 3 capabilities we have that are under-developed or under-utilized and what should we do about that | What is one characteristic you believe every leader should possess |
| How does the work I do contribute to the overall success of the organization | Who are the “power players” | What is the current and future year budget outlook | What are the three things you would change around here and why | What skills do I need to be most effective |
| What is the organization’s commitment to telework and other work-life programs | What is one thing you would change about the organization | Which congressional committees are concerned with the organization’s mission and funding | What is the most pressing issue for me to address with our customers | When should I complete my Executive Development Plan(EDP) |
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Enabling Program Manager Mobility
I've previously written on a couple of points in the 25 Point Implementation Plan to Reform Federal IT. I wrote about Designing a Program Management Career Path and what I think the foundation of that should look like. I also wrote about Preventing Scope Creep and Data Center Consolidation. Today I'm going to think out loud about something that I am currently living, Program Manager Mobility, point #12.
I have paid for some hard knocks in my time, and while some of those knocks were probably harder than I would have liked, I would not trade them for anything. Getting things wrong has provided me with opportunities to learn from my mistakes. Even when projects go well, I still take the time to learn about how the things that didn't go well can be improved and how I can better leverage the aspects that went well.
If I'm going to take this time to better understand these aspects, I believe that I have a responsibility to share the knowledge gained from these experiences. But my point here is that the way this particular point is written, I believe it is too narrow. It seems to indicate that the only way those good ideas get around is by allowing people to spread that knowledge by working on details with other teams. For sure, that is one really good method. But I would ask that you keep your eye on the goal. The goal is the dispersion of knowledge about what works and what doesn't. Detail assignments are one way to achieve that, but the fact that you are reading this is evidence that there are many other opportunities to achieve that same objective.
Don't misunderstand, I am a big proponent of mobility. I am currently working on a detail (and loving it btw) and I'm planning to go on another, 5-month detail at the conclusion of this one. So, yes, detail opportunities are valuable for both the detailee as well as the organization hosting the detail. Both stand to learn from their previous experiences.
This also ignores conferences which I have found to be quite valuable over the last few years. I've written about a number of topics from the CMITs I've attended as well as some others. Though it wasn't the focus of the content, that is where I learned about Prezi, which I still love.
Finally, I would strongly suggest that everyone should have a mentor. Regardless of your position, you should at least have a mentor and possibly a mentee as well. First, just go ahead and accept that you don't know everything, and that there is at least one thing out there in which you could benefit from bouncing ideas off of someone else. That person can help you to make connections that you weren't aware of before. Picking up a mentee as well provides you with a tremendous opportunity to see problems in new ans interesting ways and look at solutions without the bias that we sometimes bring.
Anyway, I agree that details present a really good opportunity to spread the knowledge around, I just think that there are other really good ways of accomplishing that as well and we should encourage all of them.
Monday, October 3, 2011
Facebook should read their own literature
So the week before last, Facebook made some changes. They created some new thing where your highest priority friends are on top. The problem is that Facebook rolled out this change without any heads up or notification. It was not there one day, and is there the next.
I don't want to sound like Andy Rooney, who incidentally retired today, but what's up? Facebook got a bloody nose last year when they rolled out a bunch of privacy changes without any heads up. So my first concern is that the organization seems to have a difficult time learning from their mistakes. Or, dare I say it, that they think they know what is best for us regular people and aren't interested in what users think.
But here we are with the application that put social networking on the map and they keep pissing off their users. I know that I'm not alone on this, but users can only take so much of this before we decide to go somewhere else. The baffling thing is that the social network creator can't devise a social solution to this problem.
Why do they not have some sort of forum by which the masses identify the type of changes people may consider making? Then they could implement or illustrate these changes somewhere and put them out there for people to vote on. Then you leave it for people to vote and wait. The purpose of voting is to see whether the masses sign on for that change or not. Let the power of the social platform work in your favor.
Instead they are doing the converse. They push these changes out and then wait to see how many status change to tell people how much they hate the changes. If the hate mail rises to a certain level they roll back the change.
Hey, Facebook, hire a Project Manager.
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