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Tag: Project Management

Why We Want Project Failure

Although there have been huge advances in project management in the last 20 years, the issue of Project Failure is still the elephant in the room.

Success rates are not improving and the metrics surrounding project failure have been disturbing for decades — at least 50% of projects do not deliver on their promised results. These failures can have huge cost implications often ranging from hundreds of thousands of dollars into the millions, depending on the scale of the project. In addition, lack of program management can cost companies millions of dollars in cost deviation. This is important because, over time, the value of your corporate brand and enterprise success rate are related.

The causes of project failure are well known, predictable and have not changed over several decades. Projects and organizations continue to be impacted and do not seem to be able to create the environment in which projects can succeed. It would seem that organizations have a fundamental inability to learn the lessons of project failure.

There are many causes of project failure and every failed project will have its own set of issues. Sometimes it is a single trigger event that leads to failure, but more often than not, it is a complexly entwined set of problems combined.

This inability to learn from project failure is across all industries and sectors and includes many of the most successful organizations on the planet. The financials are staggering, and a complete industry has emerged to address the reasons for failure, which are as predictable as the next dawn.

We also often realize, with the benefit of hindsight, that most failed projects were exhibiting early warning signs and there was sufficient opportunity to respond, but the signs were not acted upon in a timely fashion.

The definition of success or failure is not as straightforward as was once imagined. We are now very aware that project success cannot be adequately defined within standard parameters: completion within time, cost and performance expectations.

Cost and schedule performance are still important but the perception of project success now also includes:

  1. Meeting the functional or technical specification
  2. Meeting the business case
  3. Engaging with stakeholders

Failure is not comfortable to embrace, but it can often be a catalyst for success, especially if it comes early in product development and is accepted by all involved as a way forward.

Research shows that about 50% of projects fail because of the lack of visibility over the entire spectrum of the project management process. Take, for example, software development or the creation of a new medical device. Management of the project may involve numerous teams, each dedicated to a certain aspect of the process. However, they are operating in silos, each with its own operational style and strategy for success. If these teams don’t communicate effectively, the result is often a failure to deliver a successful product, often due to cost overruns or relevance to the target market.

Why Projects Fail

When projects fail, hindsight often reveals that issues were bubbling up – but ignored. These issues may include a lack of hands-on project sponsorship, team leadership, lack of resources, inability to manage change, and lack of communication. Lack of communication is the basic culprit because, without communication among project teams and leaders, there’s no clear visibility into the development process and thus what we call no “single version of the truth.”

However, when a failure occurs early in the project lifecycle, it is because of clear communication among project teams, leading to that single version of the truth. Early failure triggers positive change management and the revamping of strategies, providing a window to a successful result before needless expenditure and wasting of precious resources.

Effective execution needs effective planning, which includes not only tools but most importantly, human interaction. This mixture of people skills and planning tools, which is the art and science of project management, gives total visibility to the entire process.

Developing Hybrid Methodologies and Organizational Procedures

Oftentimes organizations think they can simply choose an off-the-shelf methodology such as Lean, Six Sigma or Agile, and apply to the organization. While these are all good standard practice methodologies, by recognizing the relevance of each and applying them to internal procedures and the organizational toolbox, these ‘good’ methodologies become best practices and thus a hybrid approach.

There is no magic wand for good practice project management. It takes consistent effort, applying lessons learned from other organizations or international best practices. It takes the entire team, from the C-Suite right down to the project level, to drive success. Everyone must be involved.

Project governance needs senior management support. They must understand the basic tenets of project management and the specific role that they play in the strategy. This group becomes particularly important when change management is necessary. Change rarely occurs horizontally but must come from the executive board, which often gives the go-ahead to drive that change to all project teams. It is important, therefore, for the executive team to get on board with the project management scenario at the earliest stages and meet regularly with the teams. This provides the harmony and synergies necessary to manage risks, institute necessary strategic changes and eliminate unshared silos of information.

Creating a Structure for Success

Leading the effort should be an enterprise project and portfolio management approach, which provides structure (including gate reviews and milestones), standards, reporting procedures, training and team management. A Project Management Office (PMO) can be the backbone of a successful project management approach by assuring that project delivery is managed in a controlled way. Its focus is:

  • Governance – guidance that decisions are made properly by the right people with the best information in addition to audits or reviews that assure accountability
  • Transparency – accurate information to support the “single version of the truth”
  • Quality Assurance – eliminating bureaucracy, providing training and mentoring, therefore, making it easier for teams to do their jobs
  • Eliminating redundancy – creating a knowledge base for templates, best practices and lessons learned
  • Reporting – management of documentation, project history, and risk analysis

While structures may differ depending on the organization, there does need to be a central point of management that fits easily into the organization’s culture, takes into account the resources available and is the guardian of enterprise portfolio management tools. There may be one or more experts in the PMO who supports project managers and their teams with project management software.

This office may also manage a portfolio level dashboard that provides a type of helicopter review of the project as it moves forward. This dashboard plays an essential role in transparency, providing a comprehensive look at the myriad of details that are involved in project success and how each of those areas are moving forward, or not, in seeking achievement of the end strategies.

Setting up a PMO can be a large undertaking and a considerable upfront investment that must eventually prove its worth, meaning a thoughtful approach is the best one. Depending on the time available, it may be helpful to begin the process slowly by offering key services and building up as necessary to support projects in the pipeline. This is not unlike the approach taken in developing projects by phasing in activities in order to gain buy-in from stakeholders and identify problems early before they become unmanageable, i.e. embracing failure as a way to move forward with a more successful strategy.

As previously mentioned, gaining support from the executive level is key, but only one part of the equation. Seeking support from stakeholders is also critical. Clear communication as to the benefits of the office and its tools is a must and can be delivered in team meetings or one-on-one interactions with important influencers. If there are stakeholders who don’t seem to agree with the way forward, a special effort needs to be made to create a positive attitude for the benefit of the entire team.

Clear processes are essential but a recognition that these processes may change over time in response to new information or direction reveals the need for a focus on change management. Rather than a flurry of changes that users need to absorb on an ad hoc basis, a preferred approach is setting up a recurring plan for review of processes, amendments that ease transitions, and makes for a smoother implementation.

Finally, stakeholders need to be aware of the long-term benefits of the office, but it’s also helpful to show immediate benefits of the PMO to the organization. Depending on the complexities of the projects, it may take some time to assess the full value of the office, but there are a few ways to show progress. For example, introducing templates to standardize processes makes it easier for users to report their activities and gain visibility. Gaining buy-in from project managers on software solutions can also help elevate a positive view of the PMO.

Early Failure Builds Success

Early failure builds a pathway to success. However, early failure can only occur if a strong transparent PMO is in place that focuses on leveraging organization tools, dynamics and culture and that recognizes the importance of human interaction. Communication, transparency and clear direction are key to a successful implementation that’s built on knowledge transfer and pipeline visibility.

About the Authors

JohnMcGrathJohn McGrath, PMO Consultant and Project Management Lecturer at Dublin Institute of Technology
John has over twenty years’ experience teaching, coaching and consulting on project management issues. His track record includes over 150 global companies, government agencies, state enterprises, Engineers Ireland, the United Nations, the London and Rio Paralympics and the World Bank.
With a particular interest in developing PPM competency within organisations, John assists in gaining true visibility of the project/program pipeline., a process that he commonly refers to as “searching for a Single Version of the Truth”.
20+ years of experience has taught John that excellence in project execution rarely happens without first achieving excellence in project planning. He develops master schedules for large programs of work and acts as an expert witness for forensic schedule analysis and delay claims. He has deployed Microsoft Project and Project Vision for projects in excess of €100 million.
John is now a full-time Project Management & Consultancy lecturer at the Dublin Institute of Technology.

philipmartinPhilip Martin, CEO, Cora Systems
Philip Martin, CEO, founded Cora Systems in 1999. Prior to Cora, Philip worked for a decade in engineering and management roles, primarily for the telecommunications industry.

Philip brings to bear almost 30 years experience in the enterprise portfolio, program and project management (EPPM) industry. He has a singular vision for the company’s product, having delivered award-winning solutions and services to government agencies and large-scale global organizations, including life sciences, healthcare, and engineering & construction.

At present, there are over $10 billion worth of projects being managed on Cora’s platform. Philip’s goal has been to provide clients’ management teams with a single version of truth across diverse project programs and portfolios, which often straddle dozens of locations and countries, and across thousands of projects. This enables them to make correct, timely decisions.

Philip is an electronic systems engineering graduate of Ulster University (Northern Ireland) and holds several management and leadership diplomas.

Tips to manage personal life effectively while preparing for PMP

Are you a PMP aspirant struggling to manage time? Do you find yourself compromising necessary deliverables to extract time for PMP?

PMP preparation requires a dedicated time slot, if you are a busy person trying to fit in PMP in your existing schedule, you may end up messing up your personal or professional life.

Today, time management is the most complicated task; it requires really effective planning to divide your time and energy between work and the other important aspects of your life. Try one week following your plan religiously, with a week unplanned; you would found great difference regarding productive activities done or not done. Effective planning reduces the stress, and you can find sufficient time to prepare for your PMP Exam.

Plan and Re-Plan

Studying for the PMP certification requires a plan. The best way to prepare a plan for your studying is to know your strengths and weaknesses. Run through your study materials once or twice. Acquire a testing simulation application or find a simulation website in which to test your knowledge in a realistic way. Take the test and determine which questions you got wrong. For the questions you got wrong, determine the topic or knowledge area for the questions. Write those topics and knowledge areas on a list. These are your focus topics.

Rinse and repeat. Focus studying on the knowledge areas and topics where you were the weakest when taking the exam. When you think you have them fully understood, take the simulated exam again. Did you get questions related to those knowledge areas right? Then cross it off the list. Still didn’t answer those questions related to a knowledge area or topic correctly? Keep them on the list and determine why you are not able to answer the questions correctly.

Plan and re-plan your study topics and knowledge areas to focus on those areas where you don’t have a solid comprehension. Reading over topics and knowledge areas where you have a strong understanding is not a good use of your time. If you know it cold, you don’t need to keep reviewing it.

Most test simulation tools have a way only to take questions from a specific knowledge area. This can help you focus your studying. You can focus on each knowledge area one at a time and study until you are very comfortable with the test simulation questions and are getting them right.

Don’t shoot for 100% accuracy on test simulations. Get your score to around 80-90% correct for a knowledge area. Then move on to the next one.

Once you are getting 80 – 90 % accuracy on individual knowledge areas then run the ENTIRE test or take the test for ALL knowledge areas. At this point, keep track of the questions you answered incorrectly. Focus your studying and understanding why those questions were answered wrong. Keep a study list of topics.

Keep taking the entire full set of knowledge areas until you feel comfortable. You’re not going to get 100% of the questions right every time, but you should try to get to 90% correct as a goal.

Managing Daily Routine

Observe yourself for a week to determine the time you are spending for both personal and professional commitments.

  • Start by making the list of household activities
  • Prioritize the tasks in order of their importance
  • Identify tasks which are important and can be out-sourced, for example; you can send the clothes for ironing, pay your maid extra for additional work only for short duration till your exam
  • Remove three least important tasks, with a long-term backup plan

Find a Dedicated Study Space

It is equally important to identify a comfortable study area for yourself. You need a dedicated study space, with everything readily available. Try keeping your phone and internet out of reach during your PMP study.

Find the “happy place” where you can focus and concentrate on studying and learning. The kitchen table is a popular place to get things done, but you will most certainly be distracted by all your family members. If you don’t have a study space, then it is time to create one at home or at another location. Would the local library work? Are there study rooms at the local library that you could use? Can an area inside your home be set aside or blocked off for you to study? Could you use a conference room at work over lunch or after work?

You really need to work on your “happy place” area and try to figure out the distracting factors during your preparation. Eliminate the distractions as best you can.

Set Aside Dedicated Time

You may have to miss out some important family functions, some weekend parties, and few coffees with friends, but this is a small price for a larger goal. Keep people informed in advance about your commitment to minimize the diversions.

Schedule study time. Block time on your calendar for a set period every day. If you are unable to block a specific period every day, then schedule regular study sessions when your schedule allows. Scheduling the time ensures you will have the time set aside for studying. Communicate to your family and others that this time is needed for studying. Let them know you might not respond to them during these times so you can focus on studying.

Measure Your Daily Outcomes and Small Wins

Keep track of your simulated test results. Are you getting better or worse? What knowledge areas trip you up? Keep a focus list or study list that outlines the topics you are not answering correctly. Focus your study on that list.

If your results on the simulated exam go down repeatedly, then think about taking a break from studying to re-group your thoughts. Getting time to unwind and remove stress is important to helping you study effectively.

Celebrate your small successes. Sounds silly but it’s a good way to motivate yourself. Celebrating a small success can be anything from giving yourself a small chocolate bar. Celebrate by just having a movie night with your family and telling them the good news. Pick a celebration the works for you and go for it.

Find Your Ideal Pace

Most PMP aspirants start the preparation with the mindset that they can still cover the entire content in 2 weeks time, as they could do it in their student life. It is important to understand that both energy and caliber is much less now. So first analyze your actual ability in few days of your preparation. Then make a realistic study plan for yourself.

The key to success is creating a goal based approach for you and follow it very religiously come what may. In the case of unforeseen deviation in your plan, try to get back on track as soon as possible to maintain your plan.

Make sure that you keep some relaxing time for yourself every day, and try to enjoy your preparation by relating the topics with real world examples. A high-quality environment at home will boost your morale and speed up your preparation.

Rescuing a Troubled or Failing Project

Project Managers from time to time are called in to help rescue projects that are failing. Here are a few areas a Project Manager…

could focus on when determining the corrective action needed to bring a project back on track.

Background to the Problem

The first action is to understand why you have been called in to support or help rescue the project– what is the nature of the problem or problems? – Have the issues been defined? What was the trigger that caused the client to take action? How did the client recognize that there was a problem?

What is the project problem statement?

Understanding the background and current situation of the project allows the project manager to formulate a more effective corrective action plan to bring the project back on track. Some questions to ask are:

  • Has the issue been clearly understood?
  • What has lead the client to recognize that there are problems with the project?
  • How is it known that there are problems?
  • What evidence is available? Assume nothing here.

When did the issue first occur?

Understanding the timeline of when issues and problems occurred within the project can also assist in putting together a root cause of the issues and problems the project is facing.

When was the problem first recognized?

When did the project stake holders officially recognize that the project is failing and needed help? When posing this question, it is important to understand the difference between the symptom and the underlying cause. A symptom is the effect of the problem, and although related to the problem, the focus should remain on the reasons behind or the cause of the symptom.

The first symptom may have manifested itself sometime after the root cause event that triggered the symptom. Therefore – How did the problem first manifest itself? What evidence is available to substantiate the claims?

Looking at the key performance indicators of most projects – these include:

  • Schedule
  • Cost
  • Scope

Is the project late on a number of key milestones?

Is the project greatly over budget?

Has the scope of the project changed?

What controls are in place to monitor these KPIs? When were they first flagged and by whom and why?

Understand Key Process Indicators or Project Health Indicators that are used on the project. It is helpful to understand how these indicators are calculated, how frequently they are reported, and the history of indicator results over a period of time.

Previous Action Taken

Previous attempts at taking corrective action should also be fully understood. Ideally, you don’t want to try to take a corrective action that had previously failed. You can also learn as to why corrective actions failed so that that corrective actions that you put in place don’t fail. Some questions to consider:

  • What action has been taken so far?
  • What has been done by whom and when in the initial stage of the investigation into the failing project? This needs to be understood because early action without research or careful thought I have made the issue worse.
  • Has someone recorded what he or she have done and recorded the impact of what he or she have done?

Problem Impact

An another critical component of understanding the project’s current situation is to understand the extent of the project and how the project’s failure to meet expectations is impacting the business. Project failure has a cost to the business and understanding that cost can assist in creating a meaningful response to bring the project back on track. Some questions to consider:

  • What is the impact of the project problems to the business?
  • Where should the project be now in terms of progress?

Additionally, understanding the extent to which the project is off course. In order to make corrective actions, understanding of the projects current deviation from plan is important to understand. Some questions to consider:

  • Where is the project now in terms of percentage complete?
  • Is there are metric available on Earned Value against Planned Value? Are these figures reliable?

Review the Original Objectives and Scope

Before taking corrective actions on a troubled project, a project manager should understand the project’s scope and deliverables. The project charter outlines the scope and deliverables for the project as a starting point, but changes most often have occurred in the scope. Project scope and deliverables might no longer be valid because of changes in the business. Some questions to consider:

  • Are the original Objectives and Scope of the project still valid?
  • Have the objectives and goals of the project changed?
  • Has the scope changed enough to significantly derail the project?

Review the Project Performance to Date in Detail –

List all of the key deliverables, milestones and assess:

  • Where should they be in terms of completion / delivery?
  • Where are they (status)actually in terms of completion / delivery?

Assessment of the original plan against current status in detail is critical, and there is no shortcut to completing this assessment. The assessment will \will take time, and the devil is in the details. There can be a huge number of deliverables in a large project, so this process is not for the faint-hearted.

It is recommended to be as binary (yes or no and complete or not complete answers) as possible during this review so that the results are honest. It is important to note that you will not make any friends during this process so try to take the emotion out of discussions by focussing on the facts. Some clients may hire in external resources with no personal history on the site in order to get to the facts and remove the possibility of any personal influence.

If a task is late or has had to be repeated has this resulted in an increased cost? Is this substantial? How is this being measured on an hourly/daily basis?

The resulting report from this review process will arm you with the factual data from which you can get to the root cause of the problem(s) and re-plan the project to get back on track for a successful outcome.

Project Risks

Review the original project risks to assess if they are still valid. Have the project risks been updated? Are there any new risks that need to be assessed? How will they affect the project? Have any of the original or new risks been realized? Have they had any impact on the project delivery?

Analyze the Data

Are there any patterns emerging from the review data. Using these results – look for patterns such as consistent issues with departments, people, vendors – that are consistently late or repeating tasks not completed correctly.

If there is an obvious pattern with a delivery and this is identified back to a person or a department, look for further evidence. Is the person experienced enough? Are they the right person for the job? Is there role in the project clear to them and everyone else? Are they doing other work that is preventing them from focusing on project work? Are they capable of the work assigned to them? How was this person or department originally assessed for capability? How was individual performance being monitored?

Are there other factors influencing delivery -e.g. personal behaviors, interdependent service inefficiencies, process issues, system issues, late equipment/software material delivery, procurement issues?

Are operations based resources being allocated enough time to work on the project? Has the client prioritized the project to reflect the required delivery times?

The purpose of this analysis should not be a witch hunt but an honest review of the data recorded in order to get to the real issues.

Do not overlook here to review the controls processes if they fail to capture an issue early enough to control the issue.

Report

Produce a report of your work that should include but not be limited to:

  • Background to the Problem
  • Findings
  • Results
  • Conclusion
  • Recommendations

Utilizing the data that you have collected and the conclusions that you have drawn, based on evidence -communicate the results and recommendations to your main point of contact at the client site on a 1:1 basis.

Present the raw facts to them on confidence and seek their advice on:

  • What would they prefer to do next?
  • How should this information be released to the wider audience?

This will be a good measure of the politics on site and how it should be managed. Remember this is the client’s choice on how they wish to manage the situation.

Although it is rare -it is not unknown for clients not to do anything following such an investigation as corporately the “right thing to do” would step on too many toes and may not be the politically correct course of action.

Take Corrective Action

In order to get the project back on track you will need to do the following based on what you have learned:

  • Define the Scope
  • Perform a Project Risk Assessment
  • Re-plan the activities with new milestones
  • Re-work the budget to reflect the new plan
  • Select the project team (typically some original -some new members)
  • Create a proposal outlining the Project be delivered and what will be different his time in order to prevent a recurrence of issues.
  • Make this presentation to the key stakeholders and seek support and approval to move forward.
  • Kick off the project and implement the necessary controls.

Add Trend Analysis to Your Project Portfolio Reporting

Executing projects is a time-related activity. Well managed projects will have regular review dates where project progress data is gathered, collated and reported.

These periodic snapshots show how well each project is doing and, with the passage of time, their performance trends can be used to predict the eventual project outcome.

It starts with project estimates being quantified and then profiled over time. On approval, these task-level estimates become the project’s time-phased baseline and the yardstick for measuring subsequent progress.

The prudent project manager will be keen to identify deviation from the plan early on; are we likely to hit the first milestone? (schedule variance), are we spending more than we should? (cost variance). Early warning gives more time for corrective action to be taken.

The results from reporting periods over time provide useful data for analyzing performance trends. Are the forecast milestone dates continuing to drift? Is the early cost overrun being recovered? This article looks at two aspects of trend analysis:

  1. How project performance measurement can show trends on individual projects, so that likely outcomes become much more visible. 
  2. The usefulness of trend analysis across the project portfolio is then discussed, particularly in tracking the resource utilization levels attained by different teams.

Performance Measurement for Individual Projects

In many cases, project progress is assessed simply by comparing the project baseline with the effort booked on timesheets. But this can give very misleading results. Without an independent assessment of what has actually been achieved, there is little chance of meaningful measurement such as earned value.

The chart below shows the ingredients needed for effective measurement of progress:

Muir 032117 1

The three curves are:

  1. Project baseline, which shows the cumulative curve of the anticipated effort.
  2. Actual effort to date is the hours booked to project tasks using timesheets.
  3. Earned value (EV) is a measure of what’s been achieved, for the effort spent to date. This could be referenced as Budgeted Cost of Work Performed or BCWP. EV and BCWP are the budgeted cost of work that has been performed in carrying out a scheduled task during a specific period.

For a project to be on track, each curve should overlap. When gaps emerge, as in the above example, there are a couple of useful variance calculations:

  • Schedule Variance = Earned Value – Actual effort
  • Cost Variance = Earned Value – Project Baseline

The schedule variance shows how well you are doing against the project timeline, and cost variance against the project budget. Negative numbers are bad, and this project is in serious trouble. Whether the situation is improving can be seen by tracking the changes in the two variances over time, as shown below:

Muir 032117 2

Both variances are getting progressively worse, with a steepening rate of decline., Any argument by the project manager that the project is getting back on track is open to challenge, with this view being strong supporting data for the case against.

Trend Analysis for The Project Portfolio

Managing a portfolio of projects with a fixed pool of resources can be a lively ride. You’ve just got the skills capacity in balance with the demand when a project change causes new bottlenecks or periods of spare capacity. The challenge is to maintain high levels of utilization of your project resources when each project has its own skills requirements, priority and timeline.

Maintaining the right balance is not simple. Whilst there must be sufficient spare resource to reinforce a project if a key date is in jeopardy, too many just hanging around will erode utilization percentages and can severely impact overall profitability.

Getting it right can bring a rich reward. The UK Association of Consulting Engineers, in a member’s survey of 2011, concluded that a 2% increase in billable time (i.e. staff utilization) could increase member’s profits by up to a third. For such a modest improvement, this is a rich reward.

Consistently achieving these utilization levels requires:

  • Meaningful reports that inform re-training, hiring and firing decisions
  • The underlying data being current, complete and accurate.
  • Effective demand management and resource allocation processes, which are consistently adhered too.

These three aspects will be addressed in a separate article. This one concentrates on trend analysis, and tracking the trends in team utilization is very beneficial. As the example below shows, such views will question staffing levels in some teams and highlight threatening bottlenecks in others. Striking the right balance is not easy, but trend analysis is a good way of seeing how well individual teams are doing, and whether their utilization levels are improving or not.

Muir 032117 3

This view shows the utilization levels achieved by various departments over the preceding 12 months. You can see that the headcount for HSE Design has been reduced part way through the year to get closer to the target.

For both individual projects and the entire portfolio, performance measurement requires regular project reviews. Charting these individual snapshots over time highlights trends and indicates the eventual outcome. Analyzing these trends will substantially improve the effectiveness of both project and portfolio managers.

10 Traits of the Indispensable Team Member

If you were building a team and could hand-pick its members, what are the key traits or attributes you would look for?

What are the behaviors and actions necessary for them to perform at their best and the team to perform at its best? In other words, what makes a team member valuable and indispensable?

This article reveals a set of key behaviors and actions that every leader would like to see in each of their team members. Of course, members cannot be expected to know already or practice these tenets. These behaviors and actions must be revealed as the team is forming and reinforced throughout the project.

Praise should generously be bestowed on those members who demonstrate these tenets notably. But members not performing to an acceptable level will need coaching and nurturing so they can become proficient as well.

Let’s now look at the behaviors and actions of the indispensable team member.

1. Fully participate

Voluntarily speak up in meetings and get-togethers. Contribute ideas, even if they may be unconventional—many times thinking out of the box brings the team to the best solution. Your opinion is important and can help identify or move an issue closer to resolution. Be forthcoming to both ask and answer questions.

2. Be truthful

Be honest and timely when revealing your progress and issues. When you make a mistake, admit to it and take accountability. When you are faced with making a commitment, make only good commitments.

3. Be reliable

Meet your commitments. Always do what you say you are going to do and when you said you would do it. A team is only as strong as its weakest link—don’t be a weak leak. Consistently provide quality work. Demonstrate personal pride in fulfilling your commitments.

4. Maintain a positive attitude

Adopt a can-do spirit. Be thankful for and even look forward to the challenges and opportunities before you. Place a constructive view on issues—seek out the sun during cloudy and stormy moments. Don’t take or make things personal.

5. Focus on solutions

The most professionally mature members do not engage in finger-pointing and the blame game. Instead, they are busy focusing on solving issues and moving forward. Be a problem solver. Recognize that we all make mistakes and that we need to learn from them and not repeat the same mistakes.

6. Practice being proactive

Don’t just focus on the task at hand, also look at the tasks coming up to help ensure you and your team’s readiness. Make it a standard practice to think one or more steps ahead.

7. Share knowledge

Yes, knowledge is power. But the best performers give it away—they don’t hoard it. They recognize the benefit of this behavior in strengthening the team and raising their own value and reputation in the process.

8. Demonstrate personal initiative

Practice self-reliance when appropriate. Require minimal leadership. Ensure you understand your assignment and domain of responsibility. If you are unsure about taking action, then seek appropriate counsel. Make things happen.

9. Practice continuous improvement

Seek ways to continually improve your skills as well as the processes and procedures that you and your team engage in. Become and remain the subject matter expert in your chosen domain. Be open and accepting of constructive criticism. Don’t just correct a problem; seek to correct the process that allowed the problem to occur. Encourage feedback on your performance. Adapt to change.

10. Promote team success

Place the team first. See yourself as there to serve your team to the best of your ability. Show that you care about the welfare of the team and its success. Look out for the team as if its success is defined by your actions each and every day. Look for ways to make the team and its leader look good.

Shared values

This list could be a great starting point for team discussion as each trait is described and examples shared to reinforce the benefit to each member and the team as a whole. Of course, other traits can be added and discussed. I cannot overstate the importance of a team embracing a set of traits—shared values—that can serve to bond and strengthen the team members along with their journey.

In Closing

I have listed these 10 behaviors and their brief descriptions in a 1-page PDF document that you are free to download and make copies.

Team members who are tenacious and diligent in demonstrating these behaviors and actions will serve as outstanding role models for other members. There’s nothing better than an example to inspire and spur the members of a team to be their best.

Almost all team members want to perform well and to support the success of the team. They want to mimic behavior that will help the team and, in the process, make them look good as well. If you are a project manager or other leader, don’t overlook your personal duty to set a consistent example for your team members.

Now, go become your imagined self!