knowledge, people and projects

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http://appel.nasa.gov Knowledge, People, and Projects Dr. Ed Hoffman and Dr. Jon Boyle NASA Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership

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Page 1: Knowledge, People and Projects

http://appel.nasa.gov

Knowledge, People,

and Projects

Dr. Ed Hoffman and Dr. Jon Boyle

NASA Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership

Page 2: Knowledge, People and Projects

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I. Global Trends in Project Management

Page 3: Knowledge, People and Projects

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In 2008, the Academy began annually

tracking trends in project management.

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Talent Management

Team Diversity

Transparency

Complexity Sustainability Frugal Innovation

Project Mgmt Certification

Portfolio Management

Smart Networks

Project Academies

Virtual Work

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Four years later, we see patterns.

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Complexity

(CE

RN

)

(DOD)

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Sustainability

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Dr. Nick Johnson, NASA Chief Scientist for Orbital Debris, on the evolution of sustainability for space operations

(Click above to play audio)

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Transparency

(New York Times, Dec. 22, 2010)

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Frugal I

imitation

increments

cost containment

open platforms

LCROSS

“Cost discipline is an intrinsic part of the process, but rather than simply cutting existing costs, frugal engineering seeks to avoid needless costs in the first place.”

Strategy & Business, “The Importance of Frugal Engineering,” May 2010

Innovation

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Talent Management

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Portfolio Management

PROGRAMS

PROJECTS

AERONAUTICS RESEARCH

HUMAN EXPLORATION AND OPERATIONS

SCIENCE

Integrated Systems Research Program

Mars Science LaboratoryEnvironmentally Responsible Aviation Project

MPCV

SPLASH

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Project Management Certification“Companies say the certifications are proof that their current or prospective employees meet an industry-wide standard. And, some companies say a growing number of their clients insist on dealing only with employees who have earned industry designations.”

- Wall Street Journal, April 1, 2010

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A world shortage of top class managers to run increasingly complex projects and programmes, and the requirement by project-led companies for consistent standards across worldwide activities, is fuelling a global trend for organisations to develop talent through their own internal academies.

- Project (Association for Project Management)

Project Academies

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“We possess incredible capacity to think differently. These differences can

provide the seeds of innovation, progress, and understanding.”

- Scott Page,

The Difference

Team Diversity

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(Time, May 25, 2009)

Rob Carter, CIO of Fed Ex, on learning from “World of Warcraft”

3

MSS Control

St. Hubert, Canada

MSS Control

St. Hubert, Canada

POIC

Huntsville, AL

POIC

Huntsville, AL

ISS Mission Control

Houston, TX

ISS Mission Control

Houston, TX

Shuttle Launch Control

KSC, Florida

Shuttle Launch Control

KSC, Florida

Columbus Control Center

Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

Columbus Control Center

Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

ATV Control Center

Toulouse, France

ATV Control Center

Toulouse, France

Ariane Launch Control

Kourou, French Guiana

Ariane Launch Control

Kourou, French Guiana

ISS Mission Control

Moscow, Russia

ISS Mission Control

Moscow, Russia

Soyuz Launch Control

Baikonur, Kazakstan

Soyuz Launch Control

Baikonur, Kazakstan

H-IIA Launch Control

Tanegashima, Japan

H-IIA Launch Control

Tanegashima, Japan

JEM/HTV Control

Center Tsukuba, Japan

JEM/HTV Control

Center Tsukuba, Japan

NASA and International Partner OperationsVirtual Work

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Smart Networks (then…“… the somewhat frightening prospect of man’s new capability to store a mass of information and, on signal, send it anywhere in the world.”

– Letter from the Publisher on the launch of Intelsat 1 (“Early Bird”), TIME, May 14, 1965.

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…and now)

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Today’s trends require

a change in mindset.

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Image from Voyager 2 (1981)

2. Exploring Saturn and Its Moons:A Case Study in Complex Project

Management

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Cassini-Huygens U.S. - European mission to explore Saturn

NASA and Italian Space Agency: Cassini spacecraft

European Space Agency: Huygens probe

Launched October 1997

6.7 year voyage to Saturn

$3.27 billion total cost to date

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Cassini and HuygensCassini

• Delivered Huygens probe to Titan

• Remained in orbit around Saturn for detailed studies of the planet, its rings and satellites (moons)

Huygens• Released by Cassini to land

on surface of Saturn’s moon Titan

• Investigated characteristics of Titan’s atmosphere and surface

Cassini

Saturn

Titan

Huygens

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The Complex Project Environment

Complex Project-Based Organization

Functional Organization

Problems Novel Routine

Technology New/invented Improved/more efficient

Team Global, multidisciplinary Local, homogeneous

Cost Life cycle Unit

Schedule Project completion Productivity rate

Customer Involved at inception Involved at point of sale

Survival skill

Adaptation Control/stability

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Zero room for error:

Journey to Saturn included “gravity assists” (slingshot acceleration effects) from Venus, Earth and Jupiter - incredibly precise timing

Cassini orbiter would “insert” Huygens probe in orbit of Titan (one of Saturn’s moons)

Complex communications among Cassini, Huygens, Deep Space Network, and ground system

Technical Complexity

Huygens descent to surface of Titan

Cassini trajectory to Saturn

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Italian Space Agency ESA

Cassini high-gain antenna; radio subsystemequipment

Organizational and Strategic Complexity

NASA

Cassini orbiter; launch vehicleand associatedintegration & test

Huygens probeand associatedcommunications equipment on Cassini orbiter

International partnerships affect organizational and strategic complexity

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Organizational Complexity

The science mission:• 260 scientists

• 17 countries • 10 time zones

• 18 scientific instruments (payloads) with Principal Investigators

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Project Management ChallengeAll 18 payloads had reserves- Cost ($ per fiscal year) - Mass (kg)- Power (watts)- Data rate to the spacecraft bus (kilobytes/sec) Overruns would lead to de-scoping (instruments cut)

Problem:How would you manage the reserves to increase the likelihood that all instruments would fly on the spacecraft?

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Challenge Resolved

Solution:

Electronic trading exchange for Principal Investigators to trade reserves in cost, mass, power, and data rate.

• Governed by project management team (incl. veto power)• Created win-win incentive for all• Gave PIs ownership / assured buy-in

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New Way of Thinking and Learning

To cope with a challenging world, any entity must develop the capacity ofshifting and changing—of developing new skills and attitudes; in short the capacity of learning.

Arie De Geus, The Living Company

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Adaptive Organization1. Elephants in the room are named.

2. Responsibility for the future is shared.

3. Independent judgment is expected.

4. Leadership capacity is developed.

5. Reflection and continuous learning are

institutionalized.

Source: Grashow, Heifetz, & Linsky, The Practice of Adaptive Leadership

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Project-Based Environment

• Adaptable to changing circumstances

• Customer orientation

• Focus on product, not organization

• Multidisciplinary teams

Strengths Weaknesses

• Diffuse authority / lack of direct control

• Tunnel vision

• Organizational cohesion Decentralized

learning Knowledge sharing

across community

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3. Developing Project Managers

at NASA

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Why Projects Fail Factors that Drive Program Costs and Technical Risks

(1992 Jack Lee Study)• Inadequate Phase B definition (i.e., before Preliminary Design

Review)• Unrealistic dependence on unproven technology• Annual funding instability• Complex organizational structure, including multiple unclear

interfaces• Cost estimates that are often misused• Scope additions due to “requirements creep”• Schedule slips• Acquisition strategy that does not promote cost containment

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“7 Deadly Sins”

1. Vague roles, accountability, and delegated authority.

2. Team leaders in over their heads / ineffective.

3. Poor acquisition planning with poorly incentivized / structured

contracts. (Or contractors doing the wrong work.)

4. The defined scope is not doable within available resources.

5. Structures don’t support efficient systems engineering.

6. Ineffective risk management process.

7. Broken project team context.

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Review Boards and ExpertsChallenger “… signals of potential danger … were repeatedly normalized … at the intersection of the social and technical …. “Normalization of Deviance.” (Diane Vaughn)

Hubble “A leadership failure was the root cause.” (Lew Allen)

Mars Climate Orbiter “Communications failure was the root cause.” (Noel Hinners)

Columbia “In our view, the NASA organizational culture had as much to do with this accident as the foam. Organizational culture refers to the basic values, norms, beliefs, and practices that characterize the functioning of an institution.” (Doug Osheroff)

PMI “… ultimately projects fail or succeed on the basis of the individuals assigned to the project team, the culture and the leadership.” (Eleanor Haupt)

Technical expertise and process excellence are necessary but not sufficient for success.

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Learning from Failure (Part 1) Responses to Failures Examples

Standards and policies Revised procedures and requirements for project management; revised governance model

Communications Procedures to encourage dissenting opinions; case studies on lessons learned; senior leadership focus on communications

Training and development NASA Academy (individual training, team support, organizational learning)

Technical excellence NASA Engineering and Safety Center; NASA Safety Center; technical authority

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Learning from Failure (Part 2)

“NASA's current organization…has not demonstrated the characteristics of alearning organization.”Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report

Challenger accident

Mars failures

Columbia accident

1986

1999

2003

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Meeting Multiple Needs

COMPETENCIES

PROJECT SUCCESS

SUSTAINABILITYORGANIZATION

TEAM

INDIVIDUAL

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Integrated Competency Model

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The 4 A’s

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Academy Roles and Responsibilities

Project workforce development

Advocacy for the learning requirements of practitioners

Defining key concepts and vocabulary for the project community

Alignment with corporate strategy

Alignment with external stakeholders

Promotion of communities of lifelong learning

Promotion of sustainable organizational capability

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Key Assumptions and Biases

Practitioners know best.

85-90% of learning takes place on the job.

Learning is contextual — different career stages have

different requirements.

Optimal performance and learning come together at the team level.

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TEAMINDIVIDUAL

Individual, Team, Organization

• Training curriculum• Development programs

• core

curriculum• in-depth

offerings• hands-on

opportunities

Direct support to

project teams

• online

assessments • workshops• mentoring /

coaching• expert practitioners• team building• technical support

Knowledge sharing

• forums • publications• case studies• multimedia• communities of practice

ORGANIZATION

APPROACH

ACTIVITIES

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Individual

Training curriculum

- Core for 4 career levels

- In-depth offerings

Hands-on opportunities and

developmental assignments

PMI Registered Provider of Professional Development Units

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4-Level Career Development Framework

ENTRYPROJECT TEAM MEMBER OR TECHNICAL ENGINEER

MID-CAREERSMALL PROJECT MANAGER OR SUBSYSTEM LEAD

MID-CAREERLARGE PM OR SYSTEMS MANAGER

EXECUTIVE LEVELPROGRAM OR VERY LARGE PROJECT MANAGER

Core: Foundations of Aerospace at NASA

Obtain mentor

Join professional associations

Core: Project Management & Systems Engineering

In-depth courses; team lead assignments; Project HOPE

Attendance at technical conferences or knowledge sharing activities

Core: Advanced Project Management & Systems Engineering

Mentoring

In-depth courses; rotational assignments

Participation in knowledge sharing activities

Core: Executive Program

Mentoring; Administrator’s Executive Forum

Leadership by example in knowledge sharing

Non-traditional and hands-on learning experiences

Developmental assignments

APPEL core curriculum

Cohort selected by NASA senior leaders

Performance enhancementfor teams

Knowledge sharing forumsKnowledge sharing forums

Performance enhancementfor teams

LEARNING STRATEGIES

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Core Curriculum

Foundations of Aerospace at NASA

Advanced PM & Advanced SE

Project Management & Sys. Engineering

Executive Program

Guiding Principles:

3. Competency-based.

5. Focuses on building NASA-specific expertise and capability in project management and systems engineering, making extensive use of NASA case studies.

8. Intended to supplement academic and professional work experience.

PMI Registered Provider of Professional Development Units

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Team

Direct support to project teams

Online assessments Workshops Mentoring and coaching Expert practitioners and technical

lifecycle support Team building and process

support

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Direct Support to TeamsAvailable at any point in the project life cycle for:

• Team and Leadership Development • Requirements Development• Planning and Scheduling• Program Control Analysis• Systems Integration Support• Risk Management• Software Management• Technical Review Support

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NASA Team Results Summary

BottomQuintile

n = 198NASA 7'08

1st Assessment

2nd Assessment

3rd Assessment

4th Assessment

198 teams with multiple assessments grouped by quintiles. The image below is the ~40 teams beginning in the bottom quintile.

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Progress Per Team Reassessment

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Knowledge sharing Forums for project managers,

systems engineers, and

principal investigators Publications Case studies Multimedia Communities of practice

Organization

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Developing Excellence

In a world of complex projects, adaptability is critical.

Project excellence depends on capability and knowledge at the individual, team, and organizational levels.

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Stories in pictures.

Quick, timely updates.

Transferable knowledge.

On-the-go learning.

Share and discuss.

Connect and Learn with the Academy

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@NASA_APPEL

NASA Academy of Program/Project & Engineering Leadership

Find Us Online

http://appel.nasa.gov

NASAappel

NASA APPEL

NASA APPEL