For many years, Your Clear Next Step has been bridging gaps and bringing people closer together so that we can have better, more successful work days. Between Project Managers and Business Analysts, traditional Waterfall and more iterative, Agile approaches, there have been some divisions over the years, but the common ground is pretty abundant. It turns out they’re not as far apart as some may want you to think, and they’re directly applicable to what many of us do in our day jobs.
Friends, the art and science of business analysis and project management are two sides of the same coin. You don’t have to be a “Business Analyst” to be interested in the work of business analysis, nor do you have to be in the role of a “Project Manager” to care about the work of project management. If you are in either of these roles formally, I have found that the better you understand the other role, the more successful you’ll be in your own role.
Without our customers, we can’t survive. Even if you never meet your customers face to face, that doesn’t make them any less important. In any business or organization, we deliver a product or service to our customers - without those customers, we’d be without a purpose or a mission.
Now more than ever, it’s critical that we identify our customers, figure out what they need, and help them see the value that we as an organization bring to them, and that we deliver on that value to them.
Application: What can you do right now for your customers?
Collaboration is better than isolation. Whether we’re facilitating a meeting, understanding a problem, or creating a solution, we’re better together, and our collaboration and interaction skills are honed in the practice of these two disciplines.
In the current environment, collaboration requires a different level of technical savvy and creativity, a new level of patience, and a new sense of humor. Now more than ever, it’s important that we sharpen our skills in our interpersonal interactions!
Application: What can you do right now to improve collaboration with your colleagues?
Failing to plan is planning to fail. Whether we’re delivering a solution in a traditional waterfall project approach or using a more iterative approach like Agile, whether we’re folding an origami frog, building a dog house, or entering into a multi-million dollar service market, making time to plan keeps us from unnecessary pain by ensuring we’re all on the same page and we’ve anticipated the biggest hurdles.
Right now, in our current environment, the time-range for planning is different from what it was, but that doesn’t make planning any less important. Making adjustments to the plan based on the realities of the situation is critical, and things around us keep changing. Anticipating and planning for risks should be part of our daily habits right now, regardless of what role we play.
Application: What can you do right now to address a risk that could impact you or those closest to you?
“Ok, Sinikka, but who should really be tasked with key work that makes the functions of Business Analysis and Project Management great?”
And to that, I say:
Anyone who cares about your customers.
Anyone who collaborates with others to help understand the stakeholders and their needs.
Anyone who collaborates with others to deliver solutions.
Anyone who plans for where we’re headed, how we’ll get there, and helps monitor and maintain control along the way.