Nice Try - Keynote - Critical Value of Project Risk Management10.13.08

After explaining the approach and the difficulties I have faced by compiling one of my first keynotes, today it’s about to share the video and the slides for that very keynote at the IQPC Project Risk Management Conference late September 2008.

Looking back, what went well:

  • The new slide concept (PresentationZen) worked out fine and was appropriate for the event. However, far more effort could have gone into it as not all the great features have been used and applied nor even tried.
  • 120 slides fit into 40 minutes and still some Q&A time at the end.
  • I felt very comfortable with the story line even if it is not my strongest habit.
  • I loved the opportunity (Thanks to IQPC), I loved presenting in front of a great audience, I loved to take myself out of my comfort zone.

What didn’t go so well

  • Even if I felt comfortable with the story line, I am not an expert in the field of why “The world is flat” and “The inconvenient truth”, therefore all the great stories that Thomas Friedman and Al Gore as the Authors of these fantastic books could and have to share are not in my repertoire and I can’t talk for years about these things. A headline, some side lines and that was it.
    Lessons learnt: You need to be ready for a topic, otherwise do not present.
  • I spent a long time in front of Power Point to produce the slide set. After three days, I couldn’t see Power Point anymore.
    Lessons learnt: Take your time or delegate. Garr Reynolds (PresentationZen) says, if the presentation is important its worth doing, so go for it.
  • The topic wasn’t probably the one that the crowd expected by looking at the program and the conference is a boutique conference and not a ‘real’ one with hundreds of participants.
    Lessons learnt: Do real keynotes just at a real keynote occasion.
  • My conclusions “What does that mean for us as Project Managers” have been thought through, however, I could have worked more on them, but I ran out of time.
    Lessons learnt: Finish you storyline to the end and put all the effort in, don’t stop 200 meters before the finish line (if you do a marathon).
I need to give this presentation more presenting options and try the concept more often as I really liked it even with the difficulties and challenges that came with it.
So watch the movie (You will not see me very often as I stood at the wrong place / the camera wasn’t positioned right)

and of course the slides (You can download the via slideshare)

What do you think? How did I go? What would you do different?

icon for podpress  The Critical Value of Project Risk Management: Download

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IQPC events - Worth going ?09.25.08

I have just returned from my first “conference” organised by IQPC. The question that I wanted to answer by looking closely at the event, whether it’s worth going.
The answer is -> if you can afford it -> Yes!
So the question is -> why ?

The Concept is a boutique conference that is targeting and audience of between 40 to 60 people for a niche topic like “Project Risk Management” or “Road & Rail Infrastructure” or “Negotiation Skills for Contracting”. So aiming at a very specialised Audience. The advantages that come with that is you will just see your peers in the audience which is a great networking opportunity and you are able to share experiences and issues and find resolutions or new ideas immediately. At regular conferences you have to identify your potential peers and topics to talk about as the audience is bigger and wider spread. The presentations are focusing on the particular topic and just on that.

Yes, IQPC is a marketing company, that’s there bread and butter, its all about bumps on seats and sometimes they take it a little bit to far as some of the participants fead back to me, in finding and identifying addresses to send their little flyers to with programs of upcoming events. Aggressive but positive for them. How ever, just with that concept they are able to taylor and identify the audiences required to fill an event and make it worthwhile for the participants.

The feedback forms will and can be used to identify high qualified speakers and make sure that they are speaking at the next event for a similar topic. And those feedback forms have been used a lot by the participants. Jacquie Bran, one of the General Managers for IQPC, stays in close contact with the presenters and makes sure that both parties are able to benefit from each other.

The Masterclass and the Workshops, which is somehow the frame for the conference, are intimate events that are great for sharing experiences and lessons learnt. And that’s because they are so small from an audience perspective and participants get a lot out of that approach.

Yes, its expensive, but as i mentioned in my previous post, if you have a company paying for it that’s great, if not and you find it to expensive, GO and SPEAK and PRESENT as you get the conference for free (beside the time you have to spend preparing and are out of your job). In other conferences speakers just  get a discount and need to pay that discounted price for the conference.

A lot of participants wondered that neither the Speakers nor the Chairman do get anything out of that (beside a potential compensation for travel and accommodation). The speakers expose themselves to the audience, will get feedback after the presentation by talking to people as well as based on the feedback forms and have a reason to prepare a topic and make it a presentation which forces preparation and research and as long as that concept works to engage speakers, why change. The only with that is, that many speakers from the Government are attracted as they do not have to take a day off for that as they can prepare the presentation during their “working time” as well as present as “working time”. Might be a reason why we had a lot of presentations from the Government.

What to improve:

Speaker selection and topic selection could be a little improved. Sometimes the speakers have been selected and the topic was already printed in the Program therefore the speakers had to squeeze their presentation into the topic. Also some of the speakers have not been exposed to IQPC before they have been selected, so no QA took place, which is quite a risk. How ever, Jacquie mentioned that this is the exception and almost everybody gets spoken to prior before they are selected, and the clear evidence of that was that Jacquie had to rush off one evening to do a telephone call with a potential speaker out of Denmark.

There should be the option to do networking in the evening, like a dinner function or networking at the bar. Most of the delegates stayed at the venue anyway, so would have been a good option to enforce that especially between the 1st and 2nd day of the conference. As most of us enjoyed talking to the peers this would provide another option to make the event even more valuable.

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Risk Management Conference - Looking back09.25.08

Just returned from the IQPC Project Risk Management Conference with Food for Thought and a Summary on all 4 days that I attended and participated in.

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1) Masterclass by Kathleen  Kuryl

A very well conducted and facilitated Workshop by Kathy (President of the Tasmanian AIPM Chapter) and even if she was that nervous that she had to get up at 0530 in the morning you could see a thing of that . We got a lot of insights of the Project Methodology that has been put together by her and her team and is fully available on their website. The session was very much focused on the Risk Management component of the method itself. Kathy printed a lot of material and provided that as a hand out for the participants (overall around 7). The Masterclass was very intimate due to the fact that we just had a small audience like this and Kathy got a very good discussion going which helped us to understand how Risk Management is being applied by other industries. Another perception was that Government and Construction was very well represented in the Masterclass and in the overall conference. 

In the Afternoon we focused on a couple of areas. 

  • How to present a risk profile to various audiences like stakeholders, steering group members, team members etc. (will have another post on that soon)?
  • How to practical apply Risk Management in you day to day project management work?
  • How to facilitate a risk assessment with an immature audience?

Another good point, that was raised, was that Lessons Learnt that you do after a project or a phase / stage has finished should drive and influence future risk assessments. So a two page summary of the outcome of a lessons learnt session was recommended (1. Area of project to get the reader to understand if they run a similiar project, set the context etc.; 2. Circumstances and Situation the project was running in; 3. Scope of project; 4. The Lessons Learnt summary)

2) Two days of conference

11 presentations and two interactive discussions, and each one of them scheduled for 45 minutes, plenty of time and opportunities to network was the structure for these days. Around 50 to 60 participants and everyone of them actively working in the Project Risk Management area, in one or the other role.

The three presentation highlights for me have been

  1. Liam Wallace from ASC - about Comprehensive Risk Identification, Analysis and Planning
    Liam came across very knowledgeable and for sure coming out of a mature organisation where Risk Management is enforced and embraced. He has given us practical examples of risk registers, presentation options of risk profiles, their risk appetite and how they change the risk appetite according to the project. The “Heat Map” was definitely a very valuable tool that ASC is using to present risks to board members. He also referred to that how to identify risks constantly and how you can keep that simple. The slides have been great in a way they can be used for further reference, depending on how much he was allowed to put on the CD that was handed out.
     
  2. Eddie Stewart from Newcastle City Council - about Applying Project Structure
    Eddie was talking about how Project Management Frameworks and Risk Management Strategies go together and his slides were just great as they provide a great reference to how the Newcastle City Council does Project Management and how they run projects and, most interesting, what projects they are running, which for somebody like me out of the private business environment was quite interesting. From an asset management side of thinks IT people often just think about PCs and Monitors and that such as assets, but for the City Council there are more than 70.000 trees and every tree is treated as an asset with additional information about size and age etc. Make sure you get a hands on the slides as they provide a good point of reference.
     
  3. Rob Loader - Analysing the complexity of stakeholder management
    Rob was talking about the difficulties as well as critical success factors around Stakeholder Management in the context of risk management and was referring to the challenges how to understand your stakeholder, why you need to understand them and how. So referring to the question how you can understand a stakeholder that you never get exposed to he gave a couple of examples like waiting at the elevator until he shows up and give him the “elevator pitch” or wait for him at the car park near his car and give him the “car pitch” or just go and constantly ask for 15 minutes of his time. But clear advice was, you need to understand him and do everything to achieve that. His slides are another good point of reference. Clearly visible that Rob has done plenty of presentations in his career.

Regarding the interactive discussions about budget forecasting and software for risk management I dont know whether the delegates got much out of that. Haven’t had and heard much feedback around that area, but at least the crowd was engaged and shared experiences to the audience. Which helped for the networking as you knew whom to talk to about specific topics.

3) The Workshop - How to Identify, Measure and Manage Risk Throughout the Life Cycle of the Poject

We had a couple of cases prepared for this conference plus a short introduction of the Diamond Model based on the book “Reinventing Project Management” by Aaron J. Shenhar and Dov Dvir and how it could be used as tool to start facilitating a risk assessment and to present a risk profile of a project. A great discussion we had, around the model its use and how different industries and their projects are related to the model and how the projects could be mapped with the model. After that we had another very good discussion around how to embed a simple risk process in your day to day work and how to present risks to various audiences and several great ideas got shared between the attendees. Again, a very intimate workshop which was probably the biggest asset as this helped to facilitate a good discussion and sharing of ideas amongst the participants. The area around how to present risks created so many ideas that i need to summarize them later on in a different post.

Bottom Line

I perception is that the concept of a boutique conference style focused on niche topics really works. You find your audience (Gavin Halling for example is selling a risk management tool and he cant get a better audience than this for selling it), you find your peers to talk about issues and getting ideas how to resolve them, you build your network to be able to be more successful in your role and depending on the topics and speakers you might get great content and knowledge you can walk away with. The only downside is, that the conference has a price which some might not be willing to or even cant afford. Thats why we havent seen many people out of IT and other industries beside Construction, Engineering and Government. So here is my advice, if you have your Company paying for it -> GO, if you do not or you cant afford it your self -> PRESENT as you are able to get to the conference for free.

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Off to Project Risk Management Conference09.21.08

Just another couple of hours and i am off to the IQPC Project Risk Management Conference at Southbank in Brisbane. that i was referring to earlier already. My duties during the conference includes chairing the conference, facilitating the interactive discussions, the keynote about “The critical value of Risk Management”, a presentation about “Effective Health Checks” and facilitating a workshop together with Molli Ong on Thursday. So tomorrow i will attend the so called Master Class about “The A-Z of Project Risk Management” to get my mind in the space of where it needs to be for the next 4 days.

Project Risk Management Conference 2008

So what will happen over the next 4 days:

Day 1, Monday: Masterclass ”The A-Z of Project Risk Management”

According to the program, Kathleen Kuryl, a Programme Manager at the Tasmanian Department of Premier and Cabinet will talk about that the concept of managing risk within project delivery is not new in the project management field. However, it is still broadly misunderstood or ineffectively managed. We as participants will explore innovative ways to implement and/or improve your risk management frameworks in order to achieve optimum project performance.

And the bullet points sound pretty interesting and i will blog tomorrow evening about this and let you know what i got out of this.

Day 2 and 3, Tuesday - Wednesday: “The conference”

Beside speakers out of the Government and private environment that all sound very senior some good talks are on the agenda about

  • how to apply the right project structure to manage your risks accordingly
  • how to identify an analys your risk upfront
  • the effective contigency planning and idenitify the right strategy
  • strategies for effective risk governance and ongoing risk control
  • turning risks into opportunities
  • The correct budget forecasting
  • analysing the complexity of effective stakeholder management
  • managing expectations
  • managing contractual relationships to optimise your risk strategy

and two interactive Discussion about

  • Budget forecasting
  • the role of software packages managing risks 

Day 4, Thursday “The Workshops”

Two workshops are lined up for Thursday, the first one is “How to Identify, Measure and Manage Risk Throughout the Life Cycle of the Project” talking about that risk management is a process that should last as long as the project to which it is applied. During this workshop, the participants will be able to find out how to effectively manage risk and learn how various risks affect each other throughout your whole project life cycle. And the second is called “How to Engage and Manage Stakeholders to Ensure Successful Project Delivery” talking about that successful project delivery is often dependent on the contribution of others, be it an internal or external contribution. In accordance, risk management within project delivery also requires the active involvement of various stakeholders to be successful. In this workshop, learn to develop your stakeholder management skills as a strategy for ensuring optimal management of risk throughout the life of your project. 

Bottom Line it looks like a very good 4 days with lots of opportunities to learn. How ever, i am really looking into to understand the concept and value of IQPC hosted and organised “Conferences”. Two reasons why.

  1. The number of audiences doesnt really justify the term “Conference” as we expect 60 people for this one
  2. How speakers are selected and quality checked before presenting
  3. How the program has been compiled and changed in the last couple of days

I will talk more about this after the conference once i have a better understanding and talked to some participants and the organizer.

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Three conferences coming up09.14.08

There three conferences coming up late September and early to mid October in Australia and New Zealand that I am currently aware of.

Brisbane, September 22nd to 25th, Project Risk Management Conference

First of all in late September the IPQC organized Project Risk Management Conference 2008 is coming up. Claimed to be the one and only Conference in Project Management focusing on Risk Management it will take place in Brisbane starting on the 22nd of September with a Master Class, 2 day conference afterwards and workshops on the 4th day.

The price ranges from $2.999+GST for the conference only to $5.995+GST for the whole lot plus another $799+GST for the DVD incl all the papers.

Canberra, October 12th to 15th, AIPM Conference 2008

Starting with a welcome reception on Sunday the 12th, leading into a packed conference program from the 13 th to the 15th. Framed into Keynotes in the morning and the afternoon an inspiring program has been put together. Keynote Speakers like Andrew Look, John Lloyd, Rodney Turner and Miriam Baltuck have been locked and the program is full of industry recognised speakers.

The price ranges from $650 for a student to $1.295 for a non AIPM member for the full conference.

Auckland, New Zealand, October 06th to 08th, PMI NZ Natyional Conference 2008

PMI NZ is well know for the conferences with a great inspiring attitude, a great social program and great speakers. This years Conference will drive that perception even further. The conference will start of on Ocotber 6th with Workshops on eXtreme Project Management, Agile Project Management and a radical Bootcamp for Project Managers, a On Site Visit Programme in the afternoon and the registration for the conference opens in the evening plus the icebreaker cocktail function. Tuesday and Wednesday are fully packed with great keynotes and presentations. Have a look at the programme.

The Social Prorgamme will focus on the “Carnival” Conference Dinner with a

superb three course dinner, interspersed with award presentations and more stunning entertainment. Following the formal part of the evening we will be dancing the night away to live music from one of New Zealand’s bands.

The price ranges from $395 to $1.325 for the conference plus $150 for the dinner function.

More on the programs to come as we are moving closer to the events.

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