Project Leadership within Project Management
For those who have been a project manager for
some time understand that the qualities needed to effectively lead a project
are very similar to those required to lead any team within a business. As
project managers are responsible for overseeing and delivering assigned
projects. There are time Project Managers need to select the right tools and
techniques for a particular job. Manage, lead, and motivate project team
members. Providing stakeholders with and overall view of progress on all the
different elements. It is obvious to understand that effective project
management requires various different sets of skills.
There are three necessary types of skills, as
presented by Robert Katz in the 1974 article titled "Skills of an
Effective Administrator." The three categories of skills necessary for
effective leadership:
• Technical Skills
• Human Skills
• Conceptual Skills
Technical skills address the hands-on, direct
skills necessary for accomplishing certain types of tasks. This means having
knowledge about and being proficient in a specific type of work or activity.
Technical skills include specialized competencies, analytic abilities, and the
use of appropriate tools and techniques. These kinds of skills involve hands-on
ability with processes, products, and equipment.
Human skills refer to the people skills
necessary to lead and manage. This means having knowledge about and being able
to work together with others. Good human skills mean being aware of one’s own
perspective and the perspectives of others at the same time. A skilled manager
can assist group members in working cooperatively to achieve common goals.
Conceptual skill is the ability see, and
understand, the big picture. It is knowing how all of the various parts of an
operation or organization work together and affect each other. A leader with
conceptual skills works easily with hypothetical notions and abstraction. This
kind of capability is necessary in creating and articulating a vision and
strategic plan for an organization.
How are these skills applied in Project
Management when delivering projects of different types? In project management,
technical skills can be further divided into two categories; technical skills
required to understand and manage the project and the actual technical skills
of project management itself. The Technical skills required to address the
"How To" details the discipline area a project is involved with. For
example, if the project at hand is to develop software applications, then the
project manager should have a certain level of understanding for software
development.
If it involves implementing new medical
processes and procedures, the PM should have some medical knowledge. Even when
working with subject matter experts as a part of a project team, a project
manager needs to have a base level of knowledge in order to effectively manage
the project, this to have a comprehension of project delivery time frames, so
there is a level of understanding on what is required to deliver, and when a
Project Manager has no fundamental understanding on the technicality, the team
would quickly understand this and undermine time frames.
Technical skills of project management address
the ability to utilize project management tools and techniques. These are the
hands-on skills of project management and involve everything from scheduling,
to planning, to execution, monitoring and controlling, resource analysis, and
all of the other skills need to successfully deliver projects.
The human skills, is an important factor in any
project, the way we communicate, both written, verbal and listening within the
team, stakeholders, customers and the business as a whole. Human skills are the
various abilities in dealing with the people involved in projects. Sometimes
this involves negotiating. In other cases, it means acting as a motivator. The
vast majority of projects involve more than one person in some way, so human
skills are a central part of managing most projects.
Projects involve a lot of moving parts.
Different areas, both inside and outside of a project organization, need to be
connected and coordinated in order for projects to run smoothly and achieve
success. Schedules need to be coordinated with available resources, budgets
need to be maintained, and equipment and resources need to be procured. The
list of items that come together goes on and on. In technical terms, this all
refers to the knowledge area of Project Integration Management. A skilled
project manager needs to understand the different parts of the project. They
need to understand how to coordinate, communicate, and integrate all of the
interconnected elements.
There are as many variations of the three
skills in practice as there are projects. Identifying the needs of each project
requirements and skill area can be a good starting point when matching a
project to the project manager. For highly technically oriented projects such
as construction, biomedical, engineering, and ICT projects, those with the
necessary specialized skills in these areas should be considered for
engagement. For wide ranging projects that involve sweeping changes for large
organizations, higher levels of administrative and conceptual skills are
necessary and so project managers with these skills should, therefore, be
selected.
Each skill is as important as the other, so if
there is an aspect of the skill which is not a project manager’s strong point,
then it is a good idea to focus on it, build up on that skill’s shortfall so
there is more selection on assignment opportunities.
Also, as skill shortfalls are developed in all
three skill areas, the better we will be at managing projects of all types.
During this time of lock down, it may be a
consideration to develop any skill shortfalls and any further professional
development.
Part of the IT industry for over 30 years,
working in many varied and challenging organisations. The last 24 years have
been directly working as a Project Manager, complemented with certifications.
Article source: https://articlebiz.com
Author Daniel Cerone
Published May 27, 202
Article image: Pixabay



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