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HR Management

The document outlines key aspects of Human Resource Planning within project management, emphasizing the importance of effective team structure, communication, and leadership skills. It discusses the roles and responsibilities of project managers, the significance of emotional intelligence, and various organizational structures that impact project outcomes. Additionally, it covers conflict resolution, negotiation strategies, and the stages of team development to enhance project success.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views37 pages

HR Management

The document outlines key aspects of Human Resource Planning within project management, emphasizing the importance of effective team structure, communication, and leadership skills. It discusses the roles and responsibilities of project managers, the significance of emotional intelligence, and various organizational structures that impact project outcomes. Additionally, it covers conflict resolution, negotiation strategies, and the stages of team development to enhance project success.

Uploaded by

pacific.sword17
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Human Resources (HR)

Management

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Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License
Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Human Resource Planning
• Importance
• Skills required by PM
• Provide a framework by which insight can be gained
into some of the human resources issues that a project
manager will face
• Recognise the role of teams in achieving project goals
• Understand that how a team is structured has an
impact on the achievement of project objectives
• Keys to effective meetings
• Performance management

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
The HR Environment
• Recruitment/Hiring/Firing
• Employee Evaluation
• Laws
• Employment regulations such as wage legislation, holidays
• Health and safety
• Organizational Culture
• Organizational Standards
• Collective Agreements

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
HR Planning Principles
• The most important resource is people
• A key role of a project manager is managing people
• Select the right people
• Technically skilled
• Motivated
• Enhance their ability to contribute to the project by
providing them with the resources/training they need
• Foster individual growth by providing compensation
and recognition
• Deal with issues promptly and as directly as possible

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
What skills does a PM need?
• Leadership qualities
• Good Communication Skills
• Emotional Intelligence
• Capable Motivator / Ethical
• Understand people’s personality/work preferences
• Effective Negotiator
• Skilled at Conflict Resolution
• Delegator / Effective time manager

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Managing vs Leadership
• “Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the
right things” - Peter Drucker, author in management field
• Management – technical discipline of applying
authority over others which is given through formalized
structural arrangement of the organization. i.e. a
position
• Leadership – the quality of obtaining results from
others through personal influence based on the
individual skills and attitudes which the project
manager possesses
• Takes a special person to perform both roles

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Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License
Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Many Views on Leadership
• Tannenbaum & Schmidt (1958)
• leaders are either autocratic or democratic
• Leavitt (1986)
• leaders are pathfinders, problem solvers, or implementers
• Burns (1978)
• leaders are either transactional or transformational
• Fiedler (1971)
• contingency theory, the ability of leaders to adapt
• Maxwell (1999)
• 5 levels: Position, Permission, Production, People-
Development, Pinnacle

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Communication Skills
• Communicating with staff, clients, stakeholders
• Running meetings
• Making calls
• Sending emails/reports
• Active listening is striving not just to hear, but to
understand
• See example on p. 116/117 regarding client’s body
language

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Emotional Intelligence (EQ)
• IQ (Intelligence Quotient) - ability to reason and solve
problems
• EQ - ability to perceive, assess, and manage emotions
• Daniel Goleman (1995) – popularized the term EQ

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Project Management
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Motivation
• Think big picture – and shares that vision
• Enthusiasm and passion, makes people feel valued
• Works hard, and expects same from people around
them
• Know how to develop and use their employee’s talents
• Proactive, perseverance, optimistic -> trust
• Ultimately leads to higher productivity and engagement

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Ethics in PM
• Ethical dilemmas involve situations where it’s difficult to
determine whether conduct is right or wrong
• Is it acceptable to falsely assure a client that everything
is on track, when in reality you are just trying to keep
them from panicking and making things worse?
• 81% of PMs reported they encountered ethical issues
• Being pressured to alter status reports, backdating
signatures, approving shoddy work, compromising
safety to accelerate progress, etc.
• Ethical behavior is its own reward – both because you
can sleep at night but also affects your reputation
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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Personality Types/Preferences
• Myers-Briggs: four dimensions (yielding 16 types):
Extrovert <–> Introvert
Sensing <–> Intuition
Thinking <–> Feeling
Judging <–> Perceiving

• KOLBE Index: measures your instincts (how you work)


• Generally, a mix of personality/work instinct types on a
project brings strength
• Knowing your own type and the types of other team
members can help people work together

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Negotiation
• a process for developing a mutually acceptable outcome
when what’s desired by each party conflicts
• PM will be negotiating with clients, team members,
suppliers, other stakeholders
• Frequently, PMs have accountability to but may have
limited authority
• Matrix management structure, or subject matter experts (SME)
• A number of strategies exist - Compete, Accommodate,
Avoid, Compromise, Collaborate - but the goal is to
achieve the greatest value for the project

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Conflict Resolution
• Conflict is not a bad thing—it can be healthy for people
to be able to express differences about how to
approach the work
• Conflict-resolution styles (Cameron & Whetton (2005)):
• Avoiding, Forcing, Collaborating, Compromising, Accommodating
• Surefire ways to resolve conflicts:
• Have each side state the other’s position
• Brainstorm creative/unconventional solutions
• Use humor to ease tension
• Physically move discussion away from workplace
• Negotiate over a meal
• Have parties dress casually
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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Managing Time Effectively
• Personal management is a learnable skill!
• Working long hours and having your own work delayed
or interrupted leads to poor decision making (& stress)
• Working this way makes you feel useful but may not
make you effective
• Time categories: proactive, reactive, and inactive
• Any system used to better manage time will aim to shift
these amounts
• The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People (Steven Covey)

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Project Management
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This work is licensed under a
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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Delegation
• A study of project managers showed:
• 49% spent time on tasks that could be done by admin staff
• 5% spent time on task that could be delegated to subordinates
• 43% spent time on tasks that could be delegated to peers
• 3% spent time which justify the input of their talents & abilities
• PM is not expected to do all the work
• Must identify & clearly assign work to others on team
• Make expectations clear
• Recognize performance
• Follow through

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Project Management
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Typical project team roles
• Project teams bring together people from differing
specialties as needed to accomplish project tasks
• These include:
• Project Manager
• Developer
• Engineer
• Subject Matter Expert (SME)
• Team members
• Customer / client representative

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Define Roles & Responsibilities

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Who does what? RACI Chart

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Staffing Management Plan

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Organizational Structure
• Objective: understand that how a team is organized
has an impact on the achievement of project objectives
• Structure used will depend on the size of group and the
needs of the business
• Terminology:
• Span of control -> number of employees
• Chain of command -> how instruction & communication
flows (from top > down)
• Subordinate -> who works for whom

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Hierarchical Structure

Pros: clear accountability, motivation by promotion


Cons: slower communication, high costs of manager salary
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Functional Structure

Grouped by function, product, or geography


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Flat Structure

Pros: fast communication, employees have more


autonomy, save $ on manager salary
Cons: little to no progression, only works with small #s
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Matrix Structure

Pros: rapid communication, highly collaborative


Cons: split across managers, takes time to gel with team
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Matrix Structure
• The strength of the matrix is based upon who has more
influence over the daily performance of the team
• Heavyweight (Strong) – PM in charge of team and team
members seconded to the team from their departments
for the duration of the project work
• Balanced Matrix – PM and line manager balance power,
team members will have dual responsibilities
• Lightweight (Weak) – Team members managed by their
manager. PM is a coordinator only, responsibility is
shared by the participating functional departments

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Project Management
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Managing Project Teams
• Synergy: “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts”
• Important to share a common focus
• Each member is willing to work towards that goal
• Team exerts energy toward problem solving, not conflict
• Differences of opinion are encouraged
• Encourage risk taking, mistakes not punished; learned
from
• Set high standards of performance and hold each other
accountable

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Project Management
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Factors Affecting Team
Development
High-performance teams are more likely to develop when:
• Fewer than 10 members
• Members serve full time, from start to end
• Members report solely to the PM for project duration
• Organizational culture fosters trust and cooperation
• All relevant functional areas are represented on the team
• The project has a compelling objective
• Members are located within conversational distance of
each other

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Building Teams
• Recruiting Members
• Conducting Project Meetings
• Establish Team Identity
• Crate a Shared Vision
• Managing Reward Systems
• Orchestrating the Decision-Making Process
• Manage Conflict
• Rejuvenate the Project Team

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Project Management
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Stages of Team Development
• Bruce Tuckman (1965)
1. Forming (Leader as Director/Guide)
2. Storming (Leader as Facilitator/Coach)
3. Norming (Leader as Collaborator)
4. Performing (Leader as Observer)
5. Adjourning (Leader as Rewarder)

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Project Management
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Conducting Project Meetings
• PM will often have to chair meetings, so good practice on
how they should be run is relevant
• A fundamental management skill that is assumed to be
easy, yet many meetings adjourn with no progress made
• Ever Meeting Ever

“If you don’t know where you’re going,


you’re liable to end up somewhere
else”
Yogi Berra
(Source: Usa Today)

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Types of Meetings
• Instructional - meeting leader lectures and group absorbs
material
• Informational - presents information then a discussion
period follows
• Developmental - develop policies/procedures. Members
offer ideas & opinions which are considered by the entire
group to reach a decision
• Soliciting Opinions - someone in authority arrives at a
conclusion and decision based on opinions of others
• Reconciliatory - leader is like a referee and allows parties
to freely express their side of an issue. Leader sums up
the meeting and arrives at a conclusion
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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
Meeting Best Practices
• Pre-meeting:
• Set a clear objective (list questions/topics you would like the answered or discussed)
• Identify required attendees, allocate time for each topic, and a speaker
• Assign meeting roles (organizer, facilitator, attendees, notetaker)
• Send location/time/agenda in advance

• Running the meeting:


• Provide a forum for constructive debate while limiting the scope to the matter at hand
• Do not allow repetition of points or any one member to dominate discussion
• Remember that the attention level of most people declines rapidly after 20 minutes and
after 2 hours it is unlikely that any constructive progress is made
• What the chair of the meeting is striving for is consensus, if everyone truly buys in then
carrying out the decision will be easier

• Post meeting follow up:


• Send minutes with action items and who is carrying them out
• This page then forms the early part of the next meeting to ensure that whoever said they
would carry out a task has done it

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Agenda
Template

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Employee Performance
Management
• Employee performance includes:
• employee’s work results such as quality (or quantity) of outputs
• work behavior (such as punctuality)
• job-related attributes (such as cooperation and initiative)
• After conducting performance reviews, managers should:
• provide feedback to employees about how well they have
performed on established goals, and about areas in which the
subordinate is weak or could do better
• take corrective action to address problems with employees
performing at or below the minimum expectations
• reward superior performers to encourage their continued
excellence

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning
HR Management Summary
• Includes all the soft skills that are required to manage
people (communicating, motivating, conflict resolution…)
• There are several theories of leadership; leadership is
more than issuing directives
• A number of models/structures can be used to help the
team work together – each with their own applicability,
pros, and cons
• Conducting meetings is an important PM role
• At the end of a project, conducting performance reviews
are an important step in fostering employee growth

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Project Management
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (CC-BY). Chapter 11: Resource Planning

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