“Kisses mark the minutes in the dial of love.
En el reloj del amor el beso marca los minutos.
Sull’orologio dell’amore é il bacio che scandisce i minuti.”Anonymous. One of those great quotes from Baci chocolates.
Photo credits: Sun Brockie.
“Kisses mark the minutes in the dial of love.
En el reloj del amor el beso marca los minutos.
Sull’orologio dell’amore é il bacio che scandisce i minuti.”Anonymous. One of those great quotes from Baci chocolates.
Photo credits: Sun Brockie.
Risk and Project Management
Whenever a disaster of major proportions occurs -like the one where British Petroleum’s oil platform is spilling thousands of gallons of oil in the Gulf of Mexico- people ask themselves, could anything have been done to prevent this?
As a Project Manager, I can say from experience that over 80% of risks are preventable. Now evidence of the Gulf of Mexico explosion shows that a $500K remote under-water emergency valve could have prevented this ecological disaster. These valves are mandatory in Norway and Brazil for under-water oil exploration but not in the US. Those $500K in savings now must seem ridiculous to BP which is facing over $6 Million dollars a day in cleanup costs, not to mention the damage to the affected areas in the Gulf.
What can we learn from this? First that we can not ignore Risk Management. It is a central part of successful projects. Second, mission-critical projects do require regulation, simply because too much is at stake when lives and environment are at risk.
For people in IT who are into Agile practices like Scrum is useful to remind ourselves that speed of execution is no replacement for risk management. We need to balance both of them to ensure success, we can’t just throw the PMBOK out the window. Ken Schwaber probably said it best:
…as organizations and projects flee the existing controls and safeguards of waterfall and predictive processes, they need to recognize the even higher degree of control, risk management, and transparency required to use Scrum successfully. I estimate that 75% of those organizations using Scrum will not succeed in getting the benefits that they hope for from it.
Happy 5 de Mayo! Viva el 5 de Mayo!
A time when many Mexicans and many friends of Mexico, celebrate an important historic victory where Mexico drove away an unexpected Napoleonic attack in 1862.
Cheers! Salud!
There is a new privacy setting in Facebook called “Instant Personalization” that shares your personal information with non-facebook websites without even asking you!
Once again Facebook has defaulted to a “over-share” setting, but you can fix this:
Go to Account > Privacy Settings > Applications and Websites > Instant Personalization > Edit Settings and uncheck “Allow”.
Tell more people about this. Zoom on the image here.
Like a painting makes an idea crystal clear, projects need a shared vision to inspire and motivate people to work together and make it happen.
Having a list of objectives, plans, and tools are good, but without vision it’s hard to excel, and put the power of imagination to work for us. Without imagination we will never get to excellence.
So how do we build a vision? Make a mockup, as detailed as you can, and share it. Make people improve on it, and embrace it. Then start building!
Good news those Easter eggs may be good for you!
A study by the European Heart Journal shows chocolate reduces blood pressure and risk of hard disease. All it takes is a small chocolate square a day. And by the way, dark chocolate and milk chocolate are the ones to get.