No, I’m not angry and no, I’m not going postal. Anyway, we don’t have weapons up here in Canada. Do you need a chief killing officer? is the title of an article I read a couple of day ago in The Globe and Mail.
The main premise of the article is that you need to clear out the clutter, the accumulated baggage. And that applies to products, product features, people, standing (as in regular) meetings, reports, investors (partners), processes, HR practices, and software code. Give it a little thought and I’m sure you can’t find other things that are in need of a good pruning; for example the project that doesn’t end and for which all hopes of an ROI have long since evaporated.
A couple of anecdote that illustrate the topic:
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In Steve McConnell’s book Code Complete he mentions the case of a lady who cuts the ends of a roast before cooking it. She does that because he mom did it and mom did it because grandma did it too. Looks like a best practice to me… Eventually the lady asks grandma why she used to cut the ends of the roast; grandma’s answer? Because my roasting pan was not big enough. As I said, looks like a best practice to me…
- A couple of years ago I took a couple of courses with Dr. Harold Kerzner. Let me go in a tangent to say that it feels pretty good when a guy with 40+ years of project management says the things that you think about in your little corner of the world. Anyway, Dr. Kerzner was advocating periodically weeding out best practices libraries and doing the same with project portfolios. That sounds like a job for the CKO although the tendency is for project manager to reuse best practices and fight to complete their projects at all cost. I don’t advocate giving up easy but you don’t want to have your own “Charge of the Light Brigade”; somehow the cry of “For the glory of project management” does nothing for
Now, I’ve always said that I didn’t want to be a CxO; I’d rather be a NOO (that’s a NO O), but I might just change my mind. Elect me Chief Killing Officer; I promise to be ruthless…
What do you think? As always comments are welcome.
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funny and good points ..
Posted by: beth simpson | 2010.07.24 at 14:42