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     Global Project Management
    
     Communication, Collaboration    and 
    Management Across Borders

                       George Liakeas, PMP
                                             Page 1
Preface
◘ Organizations        are     taking 
  advantage  of  geographically 
  distributed skills, round-the-clock 
  operations,  and  virtual  teams 
  while  struggling  to  obtain 
  acceptable  levels  of  efficiency 
  and quality from global projects.

                                         Page 2
Program Objectives (1 of 3)
◘ To journey into the world of 
  multiculturalism.
◘ To comprehend the global aspect of 
  interculturalism.
◘ To understand different cultures in this era 
  of global environment.
◘ To comprehend the challenges & 
  opportunities of intercultural negotiation.



                                                  Page 3
Program Objectives (2 of 3) 
◘ Identify opportunities strategies in a diverse 
  workforce.
◘ Manage to interact fruitfully with people of 
  unique values & backgrounds.
◘ Enhance your competitive positioning 
  through understanding the different 
  values of people.
◘ Expatriates: tips for adaptation in an 
  intercultural environment.
                                               Page 4
Program Objectives (3 of 3) 
◘ Enrich your organizational strategies 
  & outcomes.
◘ Improve interactivity in a cross-cultural 
  environment.
◘ Understand the religious beliefs & practices that 
  shape behaviors.
◘ Underline stereotypes & prejudices that take 
  place into our understanding 
  of other cultures.
                                                 Page 5
 Global Environment
 This is the era of global interactivity.


 Countries, businesses, institutions, organizations, &
  individuals interact nationally & internationally.

 Organizational management no longer runs as usual.


 Businesses, organizations, & institutions are delineating their
  management approach on global perspectives.



                                                              Page 6
Global Project challenges
◘   Distant Locations
◘   Number of different organizations
◘   Country cultures
◘   Different languages
◘   Time zones




                                        Page 7
Perfect communication can result 
        in total misunderstanding


•  A high context culture information is 
  either in the physical context or 
  internalized in the person with less 
  communicated in the explicit words 
  or message
• Leaders of global projects must be 
  bilingual

                                            Page 8
Use of the English language

  •   Restrict the use of English words to their most common 
      meaning
  •   Select words with few alternate meanings (e.g. accurate 
      instead of right, 1 vs. 27 meanings)
  •   Become aware of alternate spellings (e.g. organization, centre)
  •   Conform to basic grammar rules more strictly
  •   Avoid terms borrowed form sports (“can’t get to first base”) or 
      literature (“catch-22”)
  •   When addressing someone you do not know well, keep the 
      tone formal while expressing personal interest or concern




                                                                         Page 9
Build Intercultural Relations (1 of 9)

Consider This

 ■   Sense of Respect   ■   Observation
 ■   Patience           ■   Openness
 ■   Listening          ■   Divergence
 ■   Silence            ■   Minimize Antagonism 



                                              Page 10
“Culture Shock”
♦   This term was first introduced by Kalervo
    Oberg in 1954.
♦   Culture shock includes anxiety & feelings
    caused by surprise, uncertainty, confusion, &
    disorientation.
♦   Anxiety caused when people have to operate
    within a different & unknown cultural or
    social environment.
                                                Page 11
Trust Building
    The belief or confidence in a person or 
  organization's integrity, fairness and 
  reliability (Lipnack & Stamps)
• Identify the level of trust required based on 
  the  project  complexity,  project  schedule, 
  number  of  different  locations,  number  of 
  different  cultures,  number  of  different 
  organizations and number of new relations



                                                   Page 12
Diversity Activities and Ice-Breakers
•       Who I Am
        This activity allows the learners to share their 
        culture roots and to learn about each other.
    • I Want You To Know
        Share the experiences of various cultural 
        groups and listen to one another.
    • Getting To Know You
        To learn about each other.
    • The Herman Grid
              To discover that first impressions of people 
        are not always true.

                                                              Page 13
Diversity Activities and Ice-Breakers




                                        Page 14
Long-term trust
      Depending  on  the  level  of  PM 
   maturity, either 
• Organize  a  lessons-learned  session  to 
   identify  aspects  that  contributed  to 
   increasing  the  level  of  trust,  or 
   reduced it.
• Organize  an  informal  event  and 
   identify  the  comments  that  relate  to 
   trust. 
                                                Page 15
Conflict

•  The  unitary  perspective  sees  consensus  as  the  ideal  state, 
   and  conflict  as  a  malfunction  with  harmful  effects  on 
   projects.  Resolution  consists  of  identifying  and  eliminating 
   the root causes of conflict
• People  from  individualist  societies  are  educated  under  the 
   pluralist perspective and see conflict as positive . Resolution 
   consists of reconciliation of different parties interests, using 
   plan, objectives and strategies
• The  interactionist  perspective  sees  group  cohesion  as  bad, 
   and  encourages  both  conflict  stimulation  and  management 
   of conflict 
(Buchanan and Huczynski)


                                                                         Page 16
Definition: Culture 



‘Culture is what is left if you
 ‘Culture is what is left if you
forgot all else’
 forgot all else’

Eduard Herriot
Eduard Herriot




                                   Page 17
Definition: Culture 


Collective programming of the mind
 Collective programming of the mind
which distinguishes the members of
 which distinguishes the members of
one group or category of people from
 one group or category of people from
another(…)The mind stands for the
 another(…)The mind stands for the
head, heart and hands -- that is, for
 head, heart and hands that is, for
thinking, feeling, and acting, with
 thinking, feeling, and acting, with
consequences for beliefs, attitudes and
 consequences for beliefs, attitudes and
skills(…) Culture in this sense
 skills(…) Culture in this sense
includes values (Hofstede, 2001)
 includes values (Hofstede, 2001)
                                           Page 18
Definition: Culture 



Our own culture is like water to
Our own culture is like water to
a fish. It sustains us. We live and
a fish. It sustains us. We live and
breathe through it (Trompenaars,
breathe through it (Trompenaars,
2005)
2005)




                                      Page 19
Cultural aspects basic model
•   Sense of self
•   Communicational language
•   Dress and appearance
•   Food and eating habits
•   Time and time-consciousness
•   Relationships
•   Values and norms
•   Beliefs and attitude
•   Mental process and learning
•   Work habits and practices
                                     Page 20
Culture and project management

• Symbols
• Heroes
• Rituals

• Values: Tendencies and preferences 
  over different aspects of social or 
  professional life. 


                                         Page 21
Cultural Dimensions (Hofstede)

• Power distance
  – How individuals from different cultures 
    handle the fact that people are unequal.
• Individualism and collectivism 
  – Classifies countries according to their 
    relationship between individuals and 
    societies. 
• Masculinity and femininity
  – Degree of gender differentiation. Ideals are 
    economic growth, progress, material 
    success and performance. 
                                                    Page 22
Cultural Dimensions (Hofstede)

• Uncertainty Avoidance
  – Reflects the resistance to change and 
    the attitude to taking risks
• Long-term Orientation
  – People from short-term oriented 
    cultures tend to give high importance to 
    values such as quick results and give 
    more attention to personal stability. 


                                                Page 23
Cultural dimensions matrix




                             Page 24
Page 25
Dilemmas

 "Imagine you're in a car driven by a close 
   friend of yours. He's speeding - going 
   50mph where you're allowed to go 
   30mph - and he hits a pedestrian. It 
   comes to court and the lawyer of your 
   friend says, 'Don't worry, you're the only 
   witness.' Two questions: first of all, what 
   is the right of your friend to expect you 
   to testify to the lower figure? And, 
   secondly, should you lie?"
                                                  Page 26
Cultural Dimensions (Trompenaars)

• Universalism vs. Particularism 
    – Defines how people judge the behavior of 
      their colleagues. 
• Individualism and Communitarianism
• Achievement vs. Ascription
• Neutral vs. Affective
• Specific vs. Diffuse
• Human-Nature relationship (internal vs. 
  external control) 
• Human-Time relationship
                                                  Page 27
Page 28
Cultural framework




                     Page 29
Cultural framework
•   Low Context: Be quick & to the point, Be prepared for rational 
    arguments 
•   High Context: There are many ways to get things done, respect a 
    person’s title, age, background connections
•   Predictability-oriented: Be specific and precise
•   Uncertainty-tolerant: Be prepared for vagueness, recognize that it 
    may take longer to make decisions
•   Monochronic: One activity at a time, schedule in advance, be 
    prompt, relationships are subordinate to schedules, follow initial 
    plans
•   Polychronic: Do more than one activity at a time, appointments are 
    approximate, schedules are subordinate to relationships




                                                                          Page 30
Cultural framework
•   Group focused: Show patience for time taken to consent, 
    negotiators agree tentatively & then consult with superiors, 
    Importance is on lasting relationships
•   Individual focused: Prepare for quick decisions, negotiators 
    can commit, importance is on meeting the objective
•   Equalitarian culture: Respect knowledge and information of 
    the counterparts even if they are short of influence, use the 
    title that reflects your competency 
•   Hierarchical culture: Respect the status and influence of the 
    counterpart, even if they are shirt of knowledge, use the title 
    that reflects your degree of influence in the organization. 




                                                                       Page 31
Corporate cultures
•   The incubator is both person oriented and egalitarian. It is 
    highly creative, incubating new ideas. 
    Sharing excitement with fellow innovators
•    The guided Missile : equalitarian, task oriented culture => 
    there is a multidisciplinary project, and the team work aims 
    at bringing it to a successful end. 
    Meeting team objectives and group goals
•   The family : the oldest form. It is hierarchical: the gap 
    between “parents” = owners and “children” = employees is 
    wide.  
    Fulfilling your obligations to colleagues
•   The Eiffel Tower : It does precise, detailed and routine tasks 
    without errors. 
    Fulfilling your job description as specified in advance
                                                                      Page 32
Cultural framework
Miyamoto Musashi & Nitoryu 




                              Page 33
How to integrate
•   Always use culture in the context of business
•   Start with the business issue and then look into its cultural 
    aspect
•   Frame issues into dilemmas. 
     – Chart the dilemma so that the line can be cracked
     – Make the dilemma as specific as possible 
     – Stretch the dilemma (positives & negatives)
     – Reconcile the dilemma (How can value X give more of 
        value Y)
•   Look into all levels and not only national
•   Create the process for constructive dialog
•   Celebrate the similarities while working on the differences
•   Work on key-issues and not all issues

                                                                     Page 34
How to integrate
•   Be sensitive to other ways of :
     – thinking
     – feeling
     – acting
 
•   To be able to deal effectively with:
     – customers
     – suppliers
     – clients
     – bosses
     – employees



                                           Page 35
Stakeholders
•   Persons and organizations whose interests 
  may be positively or negatively affected by 
  execution  or  completion  of  the  project 
  (PMI)
•     People  or  groups  who  are  interested  on 
  the  performance  and/or  success  of  the 
  project,  or  who  are  constrained  by  the 
  project (ICB)



                                                      Page 36
Stakeholders commitment framework

•   From ignorance to awareness
•   Understanding
•   Support
•   Involvement
•   Commitment



                                         Page 37
Project Knowledge base




                         Page 38
Communication templates

•   Colors
•   Drop-down menus
•   Automated filtering
•   Include legends and explanations
•   Allow identification of location



                                       Page 39
Communication requirements matrix
Stakeholder   Sponsor   Steering    PM   Project        Members   Customers   Partners
Information             committee        Coordinators




Project 
Status
WP status


Org


Logistics


Standards
Templates
Plan


                                                                                Page 40
Stakeholders communication channels




                                      Page 41
Communication techniques
• Project virtual room divided to levels 
  with hyperlinks
• Status meetings
  –   Stakeholders (changes on the register and their impact)
  –   Communication plan
  –   Validity of assumptions
  –   Schedule
  –   Issues & Corrective actions
  –   Risks
  –   Changes
  –   Quality
  –   Procurement
  –   Minutes
                                                                Page 42
Global Project structure
• Centralised 
• Distributed with local 
  Coordinators
• Distributed with functional 
  Coordinators
• Round-the-clock project 
  management

                                 Page 43
Global team member’s skills

•   Global communication
•   Global experience
•   Global thinking
•   Culture awareness
•   Technical capabilities in the communication tools
•   Self-discipline
•   Personal Confidence
•   Tolerance for ambiguity
•   Self-motivation
•   Self-efficacy
•   Organization
•   Concentration
•   Reduced social interaction
•   Openness and flexibility 

                                                        Page 44
Global Collaborative networks

• Interests
• Corporate cultures
• Maturity levels on project 
  management
• Maturity levels on processes and 
  procedures
• Collaborative tools and 
  communication techniques
                                      Page 45
Global Collaborative networks

•   Establish the purpose of the program/project
•   Prepare team charter
•   Define roles and responsibilities
•   Agree on common systems, structures,  policies,t ools and 
    methods
•   Define a shared goal
•   Understand the different values and styles
•   Identify training an coaching needs
•   Organize social activities that allow relationship building and 
    the creation of informal networks
•   Monitor the effectiveness of the above 



                                                                       Page 46
Focus in communication infrastructure

• Ease of use and quality of 
  telephones , email, audio and 
  video conferencing, instant 
  messaging, web conferencing.  
• Documentation and procedures 
  of technologies used. 


                                           Page 47
Communication recommendations
•   Consider constant travelling, local holidays and vacations as 
    possible reasons for delays
•   Try to reply the important messages on the same day or provide an 
    estimate on the reply date
•   Remember to enable the ‘out of office’ message
•   Avoid acronyms, sarcasm, slang
•   Always state the time zone, date format you are referring to
•   Wait overnight to send emotional responses 
•   Be careful when replying to messages sent to a large group of 
    people
•   Always include a short signature with contact details
•   Always keep the original text intact when forwarding a message
•   “Be conservative in what you send and liberal in what you receive” 
    (Hambridge)



                                                                          Page 48
Communication recommendations
Avoid
• E-mail for urgent information or requests
• Adopting e-mails as the main communication tools, instead of 
   meetings, knowledge sharing tools and collaborative project 
   management systems
• E-mail as a file transfer tool
• Call after the e-mail
• Create as many informal events as possible, especially in difusse, 
   low context cultures 




                                                                        Page 49
Communication recommendations
Audio conferencing
•   Issue the meeting request in advance along with the telephone number 
    details
•   Limit the duration to two hours by dividing the meeting into logical sections 
    (3h for video)
•   Commence the conference facilities prior to the starting time
•   Confirm that every invitee has joined
•   Speak slowly and clearly
•   Use mute when not talking
•   Proactively engage participants, note who is not participating , and invite 
    them by name to confirm their agreement, or voice their opinion
•   Capture all action points, confirm their ownership, and expected completion 
    date
•   When the time allocated is not enough, ask all if all participants are able to 
    continue.
•   Take special care for video conferencing (Conference room telephone 
    number, participants mobile numbers, allow time for technical issues)



                                                                                      Page 50
Project management software

•   Network diagramming
•   Detailed schedule with colored indications
•   Milestone schedule
•   Risk log with automted warnings to owners
•   Issues log
•   Change control system
•   Progress report
•   Resources allocation
•   Integration with timesheet
•   Integration with financial systems
•   Schedule network analysis



                                                 Page 51
 Seven sins
        in a multicultural world
• Unawareness
• Ethnocentrism
• Amnesia
• Professional myopia
• Conceptual mix-up
• Academic polemics
• Level confusion


                                   Page 52
Project management fundamentals
 Be clear on the Business strategy including corporate 
  objectives, business unit objectives, mission statements and 
  vision 
 Have a concise elevator speech ready at all times
 Don’t waste time. It is the most precious resource
 Treat key projects as a portfolio of investments
 Clearly communicate key project deliverables and dates
 Clearly communicate and challenge key project assumptions. 
  They might be risks




                                                                  Page 53
Project management fundamentals
 Understand the project constraints 
 Begin detailed project planning with clear formulation of 
  what has to be accomplished (product scope) and what has 
  to be done (project scope)
 Remember the triple constraint of scope, schedule and 
  budget
 Spend some extra time to turn unknown unknowns into 
  known unknowns
 Ask the tough EV analysis questions to determine if we are 
  within budget and on schedule




                                                                Page 54
References
•   Buchanan D. and Huczynski, A. (1997) Organizational Behavior : An 
    introductory Text – third edition (Prentice Hall Europe, UK)
•   Hambridge, S. (1995) Netiquette Guidelines (IETF)
•   Hofstede G. (2001) Culture’s consequences: Comparing values, behaviors, 
    institutions and Organizations across nations (Sage Publications, UK)
•   Lipnack J. and Stamps J, (1997) Virtual teams: reaching across space, time, 
    and organizations with technology (John Wiley and sons, USA)
•   Somers M. (2007) Coaching at work: Powering your team with awareness , 
    responsibility and trust (John Wiley and sons, UK).
•   Trompenaars F. and Hampden-Turner C. (2005) Riding the waves of culture: 
    understanding cultural diversity in Business (Nicholas Brealey, UK)
•   Trompenaars F and Wooliams P. (2003) Business across cultures (Capstone, 
    UK)
•   Kerzner H (2004) Advanced project management: Best practices on 
    implementation (John Wiley & sons, USA)
•   Morrell M, and Capparell, Shackleton’s way (Penguin Books, 2001)
•   The world is flat, Friedman, T. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006
•   Managing cultural differences, Moran R. Harris P. and moran S. 2006

                                                                                   Page 55

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Global project management

  • 2. Preface ◘ Organizations  are  taking  advantage  of  geographically  distributed skills, round-the-clock  operations,  and  virtual  teams  while  struggling  to  obtain  acceptable  levels  of  efficiency  and quality from global projects. Page 2
  • 3. Program Objectives (1 of 3) ◘ To journey into the world of  multiculturalism. ◘ To comprehend the global aspect of  interculturalism. ◘ To understand different cultures in this era  of global environment. ◘ To comprehend the challenges &  opportunities of intercultural negotiation. Page 3
  • 4. Program Objectives (2 of 3)  ◘ Identify opportunities strategies in a diverse  workforce. ◘ Manage to interact fruitfully with people of  unique values & backgrounds. ◘ Enhance your competitive positioning  through understanding the different  values of people. ◘ Expatriates: tips for adaptation in an  intercultural environment. Page 4
  • 5. Program Objectives (3 of 3)  ◘ Enrich your organizational strategies  & outcomes. ◘ Improve interactivity in a cross-cultural  environment. ◘ Understand the religious beliefs & practices that  shape behaviors. ◘ Underline stereotypes & prejudices that take  place into our understanding  of other cultures. Page 5
  • 6.  Global Environment  This is the era of global interactivity.  Countries, businesses, institutions, organizations, & individuals interact nationally & internationally.  Organizational management no longer runs as usual.  Businesses, organizations, & institutions are delineating their management approach on global perspectives. Page 6
  • 7. Global Project challenges ◘ Distant Locations ◘ Number of different organizations ◘ Country cultures ◘ Different languages ◘ Time zones Page 7
  • 8. Perfect communication can result  in total misunderstanding •  A high context culture information is  either in the physical context or  internalized in the person with less  communicated in the explicit words  or message • Leaders of global projects must be  bilingual Page 8
  • 9. Use of the English language • Restrict the use of English words to their most common  meaning • Select words with few alternate meanings (e.g. accurate  instead of right, 1 vs. 27 meanings) • Become aware of alternate spellings (e.g. organization, centre) • Conform to basic grammar rules more strictly • Avoid terms borrowed form sports (“can’t get to first base”) or  literature (“catch-22”) • When addressing someone you do not know well, keep the  tone formal while expressing personal interest or concern Page 9
  • 10. Build Intercultural Relations (1 of 9) Consider This ■ Sense of Respect ■ Observation ■ Patience ■ Openness ■ Listening   ■ Divergence ■ Silence ■ Minimize Antagonism  Page 10
  • 11. “Culture Shock” ♦ This term was first introduced by Kalervo Oberg in 1954. ♦ Culture shock includes anxiety & feelings caused by surprise, uncertainty, confusion, & disorientation. ♦ Anxiety caused when people have to operate within a different & unknown cultural or social environment. Page 11
  • 12. Trust Building     The belief or confidence in a person or  organization's integrity, fairness and  reliability (Lipnack & Stamps) • Identify the level of trust required based on  the  project  complexity,  project  schedule,  number  of  different  locations,  number  of  different  cultures,  number  of  different  organizations and number of new relations Page 12
  • 13. Diversity Activities and Ice-Breakers •       Who I Am This activity allows the learners to share their  culture roots and to learn about each other. • I Want You To Know     Share the experiences of various cultural  groups and listen to one another. • Getting To Know You     To learn about each other. • The Herman Grid           To discover that first impressions of people  are not always true. Page 13
  • 15. Long-term trust       Depending  on  the  level  of  PM  maturity, either  • Organize  a  lessons-learned  session  to  identify  aspects  that  contributed  to  increasing  the  level  of  trust,  or  reduced it. • Organize  an  informal  event  and  identify  the  comments  that  relate  to  trust.  Page 15
  • 16. Conflict • The  unitary  perspective  sees  consensus  as  the  ideal  state,  and  conflict  as  a  malfunction  with  harmful  effects  on  projects.  Resolution  consists  of  identifying  and  eliminating  the root causes of conflict • People  from  individualist  societies  are  educated  under  the  pluralist perspective and see conflict as positive . Resolution  consists of reconciliation of different parties interests, using  plan, objectives and strategies • The  interactionist  perspective  sees  group  cohesion  as  bad,  and  encourages  both  conflict  stimulation  and  management  of conflict  (Buchanan and Huczynski) Page 16
  • 17. Definition: Culture  ‘Culture is what is left if you ‘Culture is what is left if you forgot all else’ forgot all else’ Eduard Herriot Eduard Herriot Page 17
  • 18. Definition: Culture  Collective programming of the mind Collective programming of the mind which distinguishes the members of which distinguishes the members of one group or category of people from one group or category of people from another(…)The mind stands for the another(…)The mind stands for the head, heart and hands -- that is, for head, heart and hands that is, for thinking, feeling, and acting, with thinking, feeling, and acting, with consequences for beliefs, attitudes and consequences for beliefs, attitudes and skills(…) Culture in this sense skills(…) Culture in this sense includes values (Hofstede, 2001) includes values (Hofstede, 2001) Page 18
  • 19. Definition: Culture  Our own culture is like water to Our own culture is like water to a fish. It sustains us. We live and a fish. It sustains us. We live and breathe through it (Trompenaars, breathe through it (Trompenaars, 2005) 2005) Page 19
  • 20. Cultural aspects basic model • Sense of self • Communicational language • Dress and appearance • Food and eating habits • Time and time-consciousness • Relationships • Values and norms • Beliefs and attitude • Mental process and learning • Work habits and practices Page 20
  • 21. Culture and project management • Symbols • Heroes • Rituals • Values: Tendencies and preferences  over different aspects of social or  professional life.  Page 21
  • 22. Cultural Dimensions (Hofstede) • Power distance – How individuals from different cultures  handle the fact that people are unequal. • Individualism and collectivism  – Classifies countries according to their  relationship between individuals and  societies.  • Masculinity and femininity – Degree of gender differentiation. Ideals are  economic growth, progress, material  success and performance.  Page 22
  • 23. Cultural Dimensions (Hofstede) • Uncertainty Avoidance – Reflects the resistance to change and  the attitude to taking risks • Long-term Orientation – People from short-term oriented  cultures tend to give high importance to  values such as quick results and give  more attention to personal stability.  Page 23
  • 26. Dilemmas  "Imagine you're in a car driven by a close  friend of yours. He's speeding - going  50mph where you're allowed to go  30mph - and he hits a pedestrian. It  comes to court and the lawyer of your  friend says, 'Don't worry, you're the only  witness.' Two questions: first of all, what  is the right of your friend to expect you  to testify to the lower figure? And,  secondly, should you lie?" Page 26
  • 27. Cultural Dimensions (Trompenaars) • Universalism vs. Particularism  – Defines how people judge the behavior of  their colleagues.  • Individualism and Communitarianism • Achievement vs. Ascription • Neutral vs. Affective • Specific vs. Diffuse • Human-Nature relationship (internal vs.  external control)  • Human-Time relationship Page 27
  • 30. Cultural framework • Low Context: Be quick & to the point, Be prepared for rational  arguments  • High Context: There are many ways to get things done, respect a  person’s title, age, background connections • Predictability-oriented: Be specific and precise • Uncertainty-tolerant: Be prepared for vagueness, recognize that it  may take longer to make decisions • Monochronic: One activity at a time, schedule in advance, be  prompt, relationships are subordinate to schedules, follow initial  plans • Polychronic: Do more than one activity at a time, appointments are  approximate, schedules are subordinate to relationships Page 30
  • 31. Cultural framework • Group focused: Show patience for time taken to consent,  negotiators agree tentatively & then consult with superiors,  Importance is on lasting relationships • Individual focused: Prepare for quick decisions, negotiators  can commit, importance is on meeting the objective • Equalitarian culture: Respect knowledge and information of  the counterparts even if they are short of influence, use the  title that reflects your competency  • Hierarchical culture: Respect the status and influence of the  counterpart, even if they are shirt of knowledge, use the title  that reflects your degree of influence in the organization.  Page 31
  • 32. Corporate cultures • The incubator is both person oriented and egalitarian. It is  highly creative, incubating new ideas.  Sharing excitement with fellow innovators • The guided Missile : equalitarian, task oriented culture =>  there is a multidisciplinary project, and the team work aims  at bringing it to a successful end.  Meeting team objectives and group goals • The family : the oldest form. It is hierarchical: the gap  between “parents” = owners and “children” = employees is  wide.   Fulfilling your obligations to colleagues • The Eiffel Tower : It does precise, detailed and routine tasks  without errors.  Fulfilling your job description as specified in advance Page 32
  • 34. How to integrate • Always use culture in the context of business • Start with the business issue and then look into its cultural  aspect • Frame issues into dilemmas.  – Chart the dilemma so that the line can be cracked – Make the dilemma as specific as possible  – Stretch the dilemma (positives & negatives) – Reconcile the dilemma (How can value X give more of  value Y) • Look into all levels and not only national • Create the process for constructive dialog • Celebrate the similarities while working on the differences • Work on key-issues and not all issues Page 34
  • 35. How to integrate • Be sensitive to other ways of : – thinking – feeling – acting   • To be able to deal effectively with: – customers – suppliers – clients – bosses – employees Page 35
  • 36. Stakeholders •   Persons and organizations whose interests  may be positively or negatively affected by  execution  or  completion  of  the  project  (PMI) •     People  or  groups  who  are  interested  on  the  performance  and/or  success  of  the  project,  or  who  are  constrained  by  the  project (ICB) Page 36
  • 37. Stakeholders commitment framework • From ignorance to awareness • Understanding • Support • Involvement • Commitment Page 37
  • 39. Communication templates • Colors • Drop-down menus • Automated filtering • Include legends and explanations • Allow identification of location Page 39
  • 40. Communication requirements matrix Stakeholder Sponsor Steering PM Project Members Customers Partners Information committee Coordinators Project  Status WP status Org Logistics Standards Templates Plan Page 40
  • 42. Communication techniques • Project virtual room divided to levels  with hyperlinks • Status meetings – Stakeholders (changes on the register and their impact) – Communication plan – Validity of assumptions – Schedule – Issues & Corrective actions – Risks – Changes – Quality – Procurement – Minutes Page 42
  • 43. Global Project structure • Centralised  • Distributed with local  Coordinators • Distributed with functional  Coordinators • Round-the-clock project  management Page 43
  • 44. Global team member’s skills • Global communication • Global experience • Global thinking • Culture awareness • Technical capabilities in the communication tools • Self-discipline • Personal Confidence • Tolerance for ambiguity • Self-motivation • Self-efficacy • Organization • Concentration • Reduced social interaction • Openness and flexibility  Page 44
  • 45. Global Collaborative networks • Interests • Corporate cultures • Maturity levels on project  management • Maturity levels on processes and  procedures • Collaborative tools and  communication techniques Page 45
  • 46. Global Collaborative networks • Establish the purpose of the program/project • Prepare team charter • Define roles and responsibilities • Agree on common systems, structures,  policies,t ools and  methods • Define a shared goal • Understand the different values and styles • Identify training an coaching needs • Organize social activities that allow relationship building and  the creation of informal networks • Monitor the effectiveness of the above  Page 46
  • 47. Focus in communication infrastructure • Ease of use and quality of  telephones , email, audio and  video conferencing, instant  messaging, web conferencing.   • Documentation and procedures  of technologies used.  Page 47
  • 48. Communication recommendations • Consider constant travelling, local holidays and vacations as  possible reasons for delays • Try to reply the important messages on the same day or provide an  estimate on the reply date • Remember to enable the ‘out of office’ message • Avoid acronyms, sarcasm, slang • Always state the time zone, date format you are referring to • Wait overnight to send emotional responses  • Be careful when replying to messages sent to a large group of  people • Always include a short signature with contact details • Always keep the original text intact when forwarding a message • “Be conservative in what you send and liberal in what you receive”  (Hambridge) Page 48
  • 49. Communication recommendations Avoid • E-mail for urgent information or requests • Adopting e-mails as the main communication tools, instead of  meetings, knowledge sharing tools and collaborative project  management systems • E-mail as a file transfer tool • Call after the e-mail • Create as many informal events as possible, especially in difusse,  low context cultures  Page 49
  • 50. Communication recommendations Audio conferencing • Issue the meeting request in advance along with the telephone number  details • Limit the duration to two hours by dividing the meeting into logical sections  (3h for video) • Commence the conference facilities prior to the starting time • Confirm that every invitee has joined • Speak slowly and clearly • Use mute when not talking • Proactively engage participants, note who is not participating , and invite  them by name to confirm their agreement, or voice their opinion • Capture all action points, confirm their ownership, and expected completion  date • When the time allocated is not enough, ask all if all participants are able to  continue. • Take special care for video conferencing (Conference room telephone  number, participants mobile numbers, allow time for technical issues) Page 50
  • 51. Project management software • Network diagramming • Detailed schedule with colored indications • Milestone schedule • Risk log with automted warnings to owners • Issues log • Change control system • Progress report • Resources allocation • Integration with timesheet • Integration with financial systems • Schedule network analysis Page 51
  • 52.  Seven sins in a multicultural world • Unawareness • Ethnocentrism • Amnesia • Professional myopia • Conceptual mix-up • Academic polemics • Level confusion Page 52
  • 53. Project management fundamentals  Be clear on the Business strategy including corporate  objectives, business unit objectives, mission statements and  vision   Have a concise elevator speech ready at all times  Don’t waste time. It is the most precious resource  Treat key projects as a portfolio of investments  Clearly communicate key project deliverables and dates  Clearly communicate and challenge key project assumptions.  They might be risks Page 53
  • 54. Project management fundamentals  Understand the project constraints   Begin detailed project planning with clear formulation of  what has to be accomplished (product scope) and what has  to be done (project scope)  Remember the triple constraint of scope, schedule and  budget  Spend some extra time to turn unknown unknowns into  known unknowns  Ask the tough EV analysis questions to determine if we are  within budget and on schedule Page 54
  • 55. References • Buchanan D. and Huczynski, A. (1997) Organizational Behavior : An  introductory Text – third edition (Prentice Hall Europe, UK) • Hambridge, S. (1995) Netiquette Guidelines (IETF) • Hofstede G. (2001) Culture’s consequences: Comparing values, behaviors,  institutions and Organizations across nations (Sage Publications, UK) • Lipnack J. and Stamps J, (1997) Virtual teams: reaching across space, time,  and organizations with technology (John Wiley and sons, USA) • Somers M. (2007) Coaching at work: Powering your team with awareness ,  responsibility and trust (John Wiley and sons, UK). • Trompenaars F. and Hampden-Turner C. (2005) Riding the waves of culture:  understanding cultural diversity in Business (Nicholas Brealey, UK) • Trompenaars F and Wooliams P. (2003) Business across cultures (Capstone,  UK) • Kerzner H (2004) Advanced project management: Best practices on  implementation (John Wiley & sons, USA) • Morrell M, and Capparell, Shackleton’s way (Penguin Books, 2001) • The world is flat, Friedman, T. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006 • Managing cultural differences, Moran R. Harris P. and moran S. 2006 Page 55