Elements
   
 

 

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Index section

1. Welcome to Elements!
2. When is it a Project and why does it Matter?
3. Sample Guidelines for a Project
4. Project Management for Real Life Projects
5. Links: Kids, Funny, Virtual Teams, Home Inventory, Scams
6. Coaching Notes: Niche or Not?                                                       7. Newsletter Notes

 

Welcome to Elements!

Life and business activities continues on as the holidays approach. The way of the world changes for a season, and it becomes brighter, and we are more grateful and alive.

However, with the change of season, stress escalates as the need to do, to buy, to go, to visit and to accomplish is determined by certain dates!

When I find myself in that hurricane of activities I need to remind myself to do less and just be.   I have to step back and ask, "Why am I doing this activity?" That simple question can create a whole new perspective and focus.   If the activity is part of a something with a larger goal, it is beneficial to identify it as such. An article in this month's Elements describes what a project is and describes the generic stages for managing projects.

I have a large list of interesting websites to share with you.   I almost held back to save some for next month's edition.   I am going to trust and be grateful that you will continue to share your emails, books, conversations, and photos with me and that I'll hear about your concerns, interests and goings-on's.    You may see bits and pieces of them show up in Elements.

When I celebrated the one-year mark of my title change to Coach/Consultant from Consultant, I categorized the types of active coaching I am now doing. I've placed them this month's section called Coaching Notes.   See if you recognize yourself in any of these. I do.

Happy Holidays,

Star

 
 

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2. When is it a Project and why does it Matter?

Gardening, employee moral, gift shopping and vision creation--which one is a project?

It is a project if the answer is "YES" to these questions:

- Is there a clear beginning and end?
- When it's completed will you have created or accomplished something unique?

It might NOT be a project if it is:

-Ongoing, without an end, or a process
-Repetitive; e.g., a task, such as doing dishes or logging information
-A milestone; e.g., a birthday or having funding approved

It depends on your perspective or the external perspectives of the items listed above. Knowing the difference can be key to effectively managing a project or to approaching an activity, milestone, or task in a satisfactory and conscientious way.

My gardening is an example of perspective.   My gardens are haphazard, ill planned and not bountiful. They always have been that way. After several seasons of letting the bounty rot on the vine and not even liking the vegetables I planted, I finally realized why I garden.   I enjoy being outside, digging in dirt and seeing things grow.    For me, gardening at my house is an ongoing evolution of nature. With my gardening, watching things grow and being outside, there is no unique or desired end result or clear start and end.   When I realized that gardening is not a project for me, I enjoyed it more. It wasn't about getting things done. 

Acknowledging that something is not a project can take the stress away from those of us who are driven to accomplish and complete things. It allows us to approach it differently and to be more aware of what we want out of it, for instance: investigating, learning, observing, connecting, enjoying, or just being.

However, gardening can be a project to others. I have friends who garden with clear and desired outcomes, such as the look they want to achieve, the vegetables they want to grow and how they will use them. For them it's also about achieving their desired end results.

It ended up that I did have a garden project. In order to grow anything edible for humans, and not for rabbits, I had a garden project to install a fence by June 1st.

Addressing employee morale may be considered as a project or an ongoing concern of an internal culture, or both. At first, the project may be  required to instilling certain behaviors.   If it is to be considered a project, there must be measurable goals over a defined period of time. Employee satisfaction surveys are one way of creating a baseline so change can be measured.  If it is not a project, then employee morale will show up  antidotal and as ongoing traits and behaviors--something that is always there and continually addressed.  The reality for most organizations is that dealing with employee morale consists of projects and a cultural way of being.

 


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3. Sample Guidelines for a Project

Declaring something a project forces focused thinking and planning which can be helpful for effective management and delivery.   Once something is declared a project, here are the four generic stages used to manage it, which are called a Project Lifecycle:

1. GOALS:  Setting measurable and specific end results
  Defining WHAT the project is

2. PLAN:  The Blueprint to accomplish the Goals
  Determines HOW it will be done, and what tasks and milestones must be done
  Includes a schedule and states how much money, time, resources are required

3. ACTION:  Jumping into the land of commitment
  Puts the plan into action and assesses progress as you go towards the Goals

4. DONE: Did you meet your goals? Time to Review, Celebrate, and Learn
  For the next time, determine what did you do well and what you need to improve or do differently?

To learn more about formal project management standards used worldwide by industries including construction, manufacturing, hardware and software, checkout the Project Management Institute's Website, http://www.pmi.org/     Their standards committee publishes, "The Project Management Body of Knowledge" book from which certification and training programs are built on.

 

 

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4. Project Management for Real Life Projects

I am offering an Adult Education Course in Acton, MA starting in March 2002 called Project Management for Real Life Projects.   The course teaches professional project management techniques and coaching skills that can be applied to your real life projects. The class will select a sample project. Examples might be: career change, job search,  personal skill building, home remodeling, or purchasing decision.

I am looking for 8-10 volunteers for one night to run a free pilot of this course from my house and it will be video taped.   You will get a project notebook, have fun, learn and be fed!   Contact me if you are interested.   I will schedule it based on our availability for sometime before March.

"Nothing is particularly hard if you divide it into small jobs" - Henry Ford

"All that I have accomplished...has been by that plodding, patient, preserving, process of accretion which builds the ant heap particle by particle, thought by thought, fact by fact." - Elihu Burrit


 
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5. Links: Kids, Funny, Virtual Teams, Home Inventory, Scams

http://www.fastcompany.com/online/36/firstsite.html
Fast Company magazine reviews software application tools that help virtual teams.  This is provided as a follow up to last month's article on Virtual Teams.

http://www.netlibrary.com/
E-Books. They are here, almost. This site is for libraries, corporation and the public.
My local library has a subscribe service to it.   You must down load a book reader and then "reserve" the book you want to read.   The list of books available is limited; however, it's really convenient and addictive for the armchair reader.   Somehow, nonfiction seems better for e-books. I don't know how to or want to curl up with my laptop.

http://www.ag.uiuc.edu/~vista/abstracts/ahouseinv.html
This site contains a book of forms you can download and print to help you record your house inventory.   It is very complete.   I've started it.   It is published the University of Illinois.

http://www.statefarm.com/consumer/homeinvt.htm
This is web site is a shorter form of a home inventory from State Farm Insurance.

http://www.snopes2.com/
http://hoaxbusters.ciac.org/
http://www.hoaxkill.com/
http://www.scambusters.org/
http://www.virusbtn.com/Hoax/hoaxlist.html
Hoaxes, Scams, Urban Legends Sites
If you've ever wondered about an email you received, if it was a hoax, if you should pass it on, this collection of sites has tons of urban legends, myths and scams that are found on the Internet.   I browsed all of them and recognized a handful that has ended up in my email box.   NOTE: Sensitive readers should stay away.

http://www.funbrain.com/
This claims to be the Internet's #1 site for kids and teachers.   I learned about it from my eight-year-old son, who plays it at school.   This is now his site of choice; he likes the math-baseball and the location game.

http://www.gotlaughs.com/
I always wondered where all that email humor stuff came from that people forward.   Here's some of it. You can see pigs and apes doing WHAAZZUP and George Bush and Colin Powell doing the Banana Boat song with new lyrics for Osama bin Laden. CAUTION: this site may be offensive to some.   My source of information for this site is a teenage boy.

 

 

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6. Coaching Notes: Niche or NOT?

 I've resisted declaring a niche for my coaching and consulting business. I'm fascinated and intrigued by all people and businesses, their lives, their histories and the challenges.

Over the past year, four types of coaching clients and topics have emerged, with each situation and person bringing a unique perspective to it.

1. Directors, Project and Product Managers, Technical Leaders and Managers

Skills Improvement:
Identify skills you want to work on for your job, career or personal growth
Create a plan with weekly review for progress and awareness.

Being more Proactive, rather than Reactive:
Getting clarity on the most important things to focus time on. 
Figuring out what the daily, weekly and monthly priority tasks are and how to incorporate them into the stressful and crises-driven workday.

Decision Making and Unblocking
Tackling and getting forward movement on tough, multifaceted, sticky, emotionally-charged core issues.

Communication:
Being more effective and accurate in the moment.
Understanding others' perspectives and your own assumptions.

2. Business Owners, Consultants, Senior Level Management

For successful business owners and leaders that are stuck or wanting to take the next steps in their business:
They are usually dealing with multifaceted, complex, no clear next steps, and with thorny and abstract problems.
Lots of objective and instinctive information is gathered and brought into the discussion. Historical perspective, industry information and models, new idea
development and brainstorming are used to shape and develop actions that will move them and their business forward.
These people are experienced in business, considered experts, and are already successful in at least one or two areas.

3. Job Seekers and Career Changers

Network:
Learn how to effectively network. A major placement firm estimates that for professionals, 70-80% of successful job searches are from networking, 10-20% from using a placement firm, and 5-10% from responding to advertisements.

Clarity:
Be very clear in all written and oral presentations about what are job and career needs and what are not. Ensure that the receiver of the information understands it the way it is intended it to be.

Focus:
Consider a career or job search as a project. 
Have specific measurable goals, a plan with milestones, actions, and feedback loops and end points.   A milestone might be to investigate 5 other types of careers in the next 3 months.

Balance:
Create a structure and time guidelines for the job or career search and conscientiously use the other available time.
Spending 24x7 on a job search is too stressful.

4. "What do I want to do When I Grow up?"

I love the creativity, energy, excitement, hard work and fun that this type of coaching client is willing to share with me.  Where we start and where our journey takes us, is always a surprise. The answer is slippery and elusive and evolves over time.  Eventually we create a personal mission statement or a vision of their future self.   In conjunction with that, we focus on aligning activities and values to reflect the core or center of the person.

If you are interested in any of these are areas, call me let's explore it!

 

 

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7. Newsletter Notes

Elements    November 2001
Written by: Star Dargin
Edited by: Ruth Gleba, gleba@aol.com

Advertising will be accepted.
Contact Star for rates at: stars@stardar.com

Personal submissions will only be published with permission from the submitter, who is responsible for ensuring rights to the material. Based on your preference, submissions can be published anonymously.

Elements will be published 12 times a year.
The deadline for the next issue is December 7, 2001


To subscribe or unsubscribe send email to stars@stardar.com

The opinions expressed in Elements are the author's viewpoint.    While every effort has been taken to verify the accuracy of the content, such information is
subject to change without notice.   Elements is not responsible for inadvertent errors.

Star Dargin
34 Robinson Road, Littleton, MA 01460
978486-4603

Star Dargin is an independent coach, consultant and trainer and is a partner of Shared Learning International: www.sharedlearningint.com
As a professional coach she collaborates with individuals and teams to provide focus and balance in achieving personalized results. As a consultant, she specialized in bringing software methodologies and project management to life for business, teams and individuals.

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