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Communicate! Communicate! Communicate!

Poor communication is one of the top ways to derail a project! Good communication includes identifying the right people and involving them up front, setting expectations, and providing timely and relevant status updates

What Defines Good Communication Content?

  • Gets the reader's attention.
  • Gets the point across in as few words as possible.
  • Is tailored to the specific audience. Only give them what they need. Make it brief but relevant.
  • Uses the medium that is most likely to cause the audience to read the communication. Consider organizational culture of the audience.
  • Clearly spells out actions the audience needs to take, if any.

Common Problems, Warning Signs and Resolutions

Problem

How it Happens

Warning Signs

Turning it Around

Key Take Aways

We didn't involve the right people

  • The people who can torpedo your project are not identified and managed.
  • Individuals who can help with project issues are not consulted.
  • There is no clear definition of who the customer is.
  • You are constantly getting questions from stakeholders that are not in your communication plan.
  • Uninvited stakeholders show up at project meetings.
  • Project issues are taking longer than expected to resolve.
  • Be open to adjusting your stakeholder list if you didn't involve the right stakeholders at the beginning of the project.
  • Make conscious decisions about who should be involved and to what degree. Not everyone who wants to be involved should be involved.
  • Get help from your project sponsor or other business owners
  • Know who your customer is and involve them up front
  • Identify stakeholders who can torpedo your project and manage the relationship with them
  • Don't try to do everything yourself; know who can help you get things done

We didn't communicate what we were doing

  • Audience groups are not clearly defined
  • You don't follow the communication plan
  • Communications do not cater to the specific audience group
  • The communication does not come from the right person
  •  Your audience asks questions you have already communication
  • You get lots of one-off questions and requests from people who are not in your communication plan
  • You send requests to your audience but don't get any response
  • Redefine your communication plan as soon as you become aware there is a problem
  • Communication is important! Follow your communication plan; don't let if fall by the wayside when 'more important' things come up.
  • Make sure your communications are specific to each audience - make it clear, relevant, succinct, timely
  • Make sure communications clearly state what you are asking for, who needs to respond, when you expect the response. Timely follow up and/or reminders may help to increase responses.
  • Create a communication plan with communication method that caters specifically to each audience group
  • Keep communications crisp, clear, relevant to each audience group
  • Follow the plan, even when things are not going well.

 

 

 

 

 

Source: The Project Management Advisor

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