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THIS MONTH'S SELECTED ARTICLES
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The Modern CIO
Information Technology organizations continually struggle to build systems that meet their customer's needs. They work tirelessly developing solutions that are delivered late, difficult to use, or deficient in key features and functions. This is nothing specific to the last couple decades; it stretches back to the first systems developed. Fredrick Brookes eloquently underscores this in his recount of the 1960's software engineering project to develop the IBM 360 in his book The Mythical Man-Month (1975) and is required reading for all IT executives. For the Chief Information Officer (CIO) to solve this problem takes a new approach, one, nearly opposite from today's direction.
Read more... (http://www.ecaminc.com/index.php/blog/59-generalblog/249-2011-05-16)
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Executive's Contribution to Project Success
Few would question that executives are responsible for ensuring projects are aligned with the corporate strategy. They also need to ensure these initiatives remain in line with these goals as business conditions change. To achieve this, they have to be engaged with the project when it starts and maintain that context throughout its life cycle. This requires more than ensuring the project maintains its scope, schedule, and budget; projects must deliver value. Too many projects start with the inspirational support of upper management, but as the project (or company) drifts, the executives have long since disengaged from the project and are unable to straighten out the misalignment. This wastes company resources and hinders the company's ability to deliver.
Read more... (http://www.ecaminc.com/index.php/blog/59-generalblog/248-2011-05-09)
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The On-Again Off-Again World of Projects
Businesses exist to make money. To improve operations they create various initiatives with promises of improving the bottom line. Projects, though, cost money. They do not make a profit. The dichotomy in a strapped economy to spend savings on projects to improve future profits usually results in the conservation of cash. Many an argument has been had over whether it is better to run improvement projects, burning precious cash and heading off the competition, or taking the traditional approach and wait for times with better cash flow. Subsequent to 2008's financial folly, it is well known that most companies sat on their reserves and waited. That action may have some unintended consequences that are in the midst of surfacing.
Read more... (http://www.ecaminc.com/index.php/blog/59-generalblog/247-2011-05-02)
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I Want A Shining New PMO, Too

Last week I gave a presentation at the San Diego PMI Chapter's Tutorials conference. Flanking both sides of my ten o'clock presentation in the leadership track was Steve Romero. His two presentations were on IT governance. His energy, insight, enthusiasm, and passion (not to mention being the IT governance evangelist for CA Technologies) made him an excellent selection. And, what is so news worthy about that? Nothing. However, for someone that has little regard for adding one more layer of management to solve a problem, I was surprised that I sat through both of his presentations. He provided a three hours of information on governance—both PMOs and PPMs—crammed into two intense and valuable hours.
Read more... (http://www.ecaminc.com/index.php/blog/59-generalblog/250-2011-05-23)
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Leadership and Project Management
"I just want to be a project manager. I don't want all that responsibility." The room was silent, save a few exasperated sighs. We all looked around trying to figure out how we would handle the comment. However, there are many levels of project management maturity and only the highest levels require leadership. In fact, the prominent certification process—PMI's PMP®—has little to do with leadership. So where do we learn about leadership and how can we improve our leadership skills?
Read more... (http://ecaminc.com/index.php/blog/59-generalblog/239-2011-03-07)
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Cheers, Todd C. Williams President, eCameron, Inc. www.ecaminc.com Office: 1-360-834-7361 Cell Ph: 1-360-521-9051
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Interview by Andy Kaufman
Just released!
An interview by Andy Kaufman on Rescue the Problem Project.
Listen now!
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Events in 2011
People or Process: Which Has the Greater Effect on Project Success? August 19, 2011 (10:00 am - 11:00 am)
Central California Coast PMI: People or Process August 25, 2011 (5:00 pm - 7:00 pm)
Canadian West Coast PMI: Back From Red, Recovering Failing Projects October 19, 2011 (5:00 pm - 8:00 pm)
APICS Portland: People or Process: Which Has the Greater Effect on Project Success? October 20, 2011 (5:00 pm - 8:00 pm)
PMI Global Congress, Improving Project Inception By Enhancing The Supplier-Customer Integration October 22, 2011(9:00 am) - October 26, 2011 (1:00 pm)
Complete Event list
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Online Classes
Try our self-paced class! Back From Red, Recovering Failing Projects covers the basics of recovering failing project. In addition, upon completing the 1-hour course you earn 1 PMI PDU or 0.1 NMA CEUs. Only $29.99.
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