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If you have found yourself in a situation where the process seems to change, accountabilities are uncertain and deadlines are missing, then perhaps you have a people, process and technology problem. Getting all 3 aligned is absolutely essential to ensuring a change process will work.
And they have to be resolved in that order.
1. People – what are the key issues: who owns the process, who is involved, what are their roles, are they committed to improving it and working together and importantly are they prepared to do the work to fix the problem
2. Process – a process can be defined as starting with a trigger event that creates a chain of actions that results in something being prepared for a customer of that process. Starting at high level and identifying the key big steps is important to see the process from end to end. Then moving into more detail to capture the various layers involved and various exceptions. Focussing on the high frequency (Pareto principle) transactions can have significant benefit to standardising the process. But also remember that it can be the non-standard transactions where service is slipping most or the potential for significant failure in the process may exist.
3. Technology – Now that people are aligned, and the process developed and clarified, technology can be applied to ensure consistently in application of the process and to provide the thin guiding rails to keep the process on track – to make it easier to follow the process than not do so.
Of course there is much more to getting a technology project right – but get the above 3 sorted out and you will be a long way down the path to project success.
Got any experiences or tips you’d like to share? I am keen to hear from you, so please add a comment….
April 11, 2008 at 4:08 pm
[...] complex issues – people, process and technology at play [...]
April 25, 2010 at 2:21 am
[...] not sure who came up with this little gem, or in what context, but I’ve been hearing it a lot lately. No particular reason, I think, just that it seems to be gaining a bit of status as a [...]
July 16, 2010 at 2:35 pm
This P-P-T thingy still makes me dizzy. I still do not have a clue what its about.
September 14, 2010 at 5:44 pm
[...] with all three types of organizations (financial, healthcare, federal government) to make sure PPT (people, process, and technology) is in place for privacy and security. SOX requires financial [...]
December 22, 2010 at 2:40 pm
See this article
Virtual Teams: A Literature Review
Available on http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1501443
Australian Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences, Vol. 3, No. 3, pp. 2653-2669, 2009
In the competitive market, virtual teams represent a growing response to the need for fasting time-to-market, low-cost and rapid solutions to complex organizational problems. Virtual teams enable organizations to pool the talents and expertise of employees and non-employees by eliminating time and space barriers. Nowadays, companies are heavily investing in virtual team to enhance their performance and competitiveness. Despite virtual teams growing prevalence, relatively little is known about this new form of team. Hence the study offers an extensive literature review with definitions of virtual teams and a structured analysis of the present body of knowledge of virtual teams. First, we distinguish virtual teams from conventional teams, different types of virtual teams to identify where current knowledge applies. Second, we distinguish what is needed for effective virtual team considering the people, process and technology point of view and underlying characteristics of virtual teams and challenges they entail. Finally, we have identified and extended 12 key factors that need to be considered, and describes a methodology focused on supporting virtual team working, with a new approach that has not been specifically addressed in the existing literature and some guide line for future research extracted.
January 19, 2011 at 12:17 pm
I found the following article reviewed an interesting topic which is related to the post.
SMEs; Virtual research and development (R&D) teams and new product development: A literature review
Available on http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1674011
International Journal of the Physical Sciences Vol. 5(7), pp. 916–930, July 2010
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) are indeed the engines of global economic growth. Their continued growth is a major subject for the economy and employment of any country. Towards that end, virtual research and development (R&D) could be a viable option to sustain and ease the operations of SMEs. However, literature shows there has not been a great deal of research into the diverse characteristic of virtual R&D teams in SMEs. This article provides a comprehensive literature review on different aspects of virtual R&D teams collected from the reputed publications. The purpose of the literature review is to provide an outline on the structure and dynamics of R&D collaboration in SMEs. Specifying the rationale and relevance of virtual teams, the relationship between virtual R&D team for SMEs and new product development (NPD) has been examined. It concludes with identifying the gaps and feebleness in the existing literature and calls for future research in this area. It is argued to form of virtual R&D team deserves consideration at top level management for venturing into the new product development within SMEs.
August 20, 2011 at 1:35 am
Product Development…
People, process, technology – still the 3 keys to successful application development projects « The Smell of Good Business…
September 28, 2011 at 7:13 am
toys…
[...]People, process, technology – still the 3 keys to successful application development projects « The Smell of Good Business[...]…
November 3, 2011 at 1:34 pm
tricks…
[...]People, process, technology – still the 3 keys to successful application development projects « The Smell of Good Business[...]…
December 24, 2011 at 4:21 am
This is genuinely awesome concept dude.iam genuinely proud of you .
Do u have twitter?? i want to abide by you .thx
April 21, 2012 at 5:21 am
The Civil Engineer…
[...]People, process, technology – still the 3 keys to successful application development projects « The Smell of Good Business[...]…