More specific attributes of Complex
Project Managers are ascribed to each Element of the Special Attributes.
Some of those attributes are descriptive of finely-tuned internal
processes which differentiate excellence from average performance.
For example, one of the
attributes under Action and Outcome Oriented is the subtle process
described as: Is perceptive to very faint signals that everything
is not right before it is visible to others, and takes action. In my view, the Special Attributes section is the
single most important section of the competencies. Without those
attributes, the other 9 Views and their respective Elements and
Actions are less likely to succeed.
Key to success of the Competency Standard: The Complex
Project competencies are based on the experience of eleven very
experienced project managers (the Fellows of the College of Complex
Project Managers) who between them have managed major infrastructure,
defence, engineering, aerospace, resources, IT, technology, change
and social projects around the world.
The competencies are, by definition, general descriptions
of what those Fellows do, and how they do it.
The measure of success for the Standard will be to
develop the other 80% - 90% of Complex Project Managers that are
urgently needed around the world.
The key to doing that is to elicit the know-how of
the eleven Fellows to a greater depth.
Each Fellow has a depth of knowledge and skill that
can be captured and modelled. Their knowledge and skills are invaluable
resources that can be used to fast-track the development of the
required Complex Project Managers.
The models that are developed
from that process can be used as a basis for designing the necessary
learning activities that transfer the knowledge and skills. For
instance, how do the Fellows ’search out opportunities that
link project values to outcomes to create new symbols of behaviour’?
How do they ‘use the creation of myths as a key tool in cultural
change’?
As they are successful in the way they do those things,
and they do it in a different way to traditional project management,
it is essential that those ways be identified and added to the
repertoire of behaviours that up-coming Complex Project Managers
can learn.
Some of the subtler Actions described in the Competencies
have a high dependence on the Fellows’ ability to process
information/data internally. But even those subtler processes can
be modelled, e.g.: How do the Fellows perceive very faint signals
that everything is not right before it is visible to others?
Those subtler aspects have little meaning (other
than conceptually) to anyone who has not experienced them, and
they need to be identified, because they are crucial to being able
to adapt rapidly to a dynamic, evolving situation.
Even people who have experienced them often have
difficulty describing the specific internal processes they use
to, e.g.
notice the very faint signals,
make meaning out of what are often seemingly unconnected data,
notice any mismatch between desired outcomes and the meaning of the signals.
From the perspective of the upcoming Complex Project Managers, the question
is: how do I notice the faint perceptions; how do I create meaning out of unrelated
data: what do I do with my awareness to notice the mismatch?
The specific way that one person develops and applies,
e.g., increased perceptivity to faint signals, may well differ
from how another person does so.
But there will be common factors. For instance, the
model for ‘noticing very faint signals’, is likely
to include being able to: |