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Delta Technology (DT), a wholly-owned IT subsidiary of Delta Air Lines based in Atlanta, is committed to leveraging technology to create a competitive advantage for the airline.

The Challenge

As DT began relying more and more upon the use of outsourcing for its mid-tier server engineering and limited application development, the company identified the need among its employees for a consistent methodology to more successfully gather and clearly document requirements.

In developing what DT called its Business Analyst Practise, the company was faced with several key decisions. These included determining:

  • If the Practise would be centralised or decentralised
  • If all 90 of its business analysts would be included in the Practise
  • Whether business analysts would sit within the Practise or within their specific project areas

The centralisation issue was particularly complicated because most of DT’s business analysts are also subject matter experts in their respective areas. As a result, they're often involved in tasks that stretch beyond business analysis. This, obviously, makes centralisation difficult. DT determined that in order to succeed, its business analysts must be able to fulfil their specific roles and then move on to their next projects. So, DT decided to keep its current decentralised group and also create a centralised group of business analysts within the Practise to be "matrixed" to various projects.

The Strategy

Upon creation of its Business Analyst Practise, DT implemented a number of successful initiatives, including the use of SharePoint™ to post and share information throughout the company, and the implementation of a coaching and mentoring program. They also more clearly defined their business analysts’ responsibilities based on a newly created Business Analysis Lifecycle, which aligned with the International Institute of Business Analysis (IIBA™) Business Analysis Body of Knowledge® (BABOK®).

"ESI helped us build the team of skilled business analysts we need to become a more effective, successful organisation."

Kathleen Morison
Manager Enterprise
Project Management Office
Delta Technologies.

Still, to create and maintain a consistent methodology organisation wide, which was its ultimate goal, DT knew that it needed to provide its employees with a comprehensive training program. For that, in January 2006, they turned to the leader in project management and business analysis training, ESI International.

Together, ESI and leaders from DT chose a training program that would create a baseline for success and ensure consistency in gathering and documenting requirements. The program consists of a suite of courses from ESI's curricula in business analysis and project management along witha four-hour workshop for managers that presents the expectations for the program and how it will ultimately benefit the organisation.

Results

The initial phase of the ESI-DT training program lasted nine months and—despite the usual corporate challenges, including resistance to change and adaptation of new processes—it was a rousing success. In April 2007, DT found itself with a core team of business analysts equipped with the skills to coach and mentor others and to promote a set of best practises and consistent methodologies.

The Next Step

With Phase One of training complete, ESI and DT are now preparing to begin Phase Two, which will not only enhance the newly established coaching and mentoring program, but will help DT's business analysts continue to effectively develop metrics, governance standards and assessment methodologies. The focus will be on identifying any existing knowledge and skill gaps as well as identifying any opportunities to further increase the overall effectiveness of DT's approach to business analysis.

"ESI understands that every company is unique. From the very beginning of our relationship, they were interested in helping us choose the training options that were best not only for our individual employees, but for our organisation as a whole."

Kathleen Morison
ManagerEnterprise
Project Management
Office Delta Technologies

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Contact one of our Business Development Managers by calling +44 (0)20 7017 5550 or by sending an email to enquiry@esi-europe.com


Improving Project Management capability in GlaxoSmithKline
GlaxoSmithKline Logo
 

Background

Leading pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) has a very clear mission: to improve the quality of human life by enabling people to do more, feel better and live longer. For GSK and its 100,000 employees around the world, turning this mission into a reality requires the management of many large-scale medicine discovery and development projects—projects that can typically run the course of a decade, include a broad range of business units and consume vast amounts of resources.

In 2006, GSK Research and Development (R&D) launched its iPlan initiative, a global programme sponsored at the highest levels of management. The initiative sought to improve people capabilities, processes, enabling technologies and support services to deliver integrated project and portfolio planning. Key aspects of the approach include—

  • Defining the planning process, responsibilities and key practices
  • Live piloting the new processes, practices, work breakdown structures and IT enablers within various medicine development teams to learn, refine and confirm the effectiveness of the changes
  • Extensive project management education and development
  • Selecting and validating an enterprise project management system
  • Integrating project and clinical development planning
  • A targeted communication strategy to engage and build momentum for the change programme

To make this ambitious initiative a success, and to roll it out effectively throughout such an expansive organisation, GSK leaders knew they would need help from experts in the delivery of large-scale performance improvement training in project management.

Strategy

One of the several performance improvement providers that GSK turned to for assistance with iPlan was ESI International. ESI, who has worked extensively with GSK since 2002, was chosen for this new initiative because of its impressive experience and its proven ability to meet tight deadlines and tailor its programmes and services to meet client needs.

Jacqui Alexander, Director of Project Management Learning & Change Management summarises the main reason for selecting ESI as follows: "Having forged a strong and collaborative relationship with ESI over a number of years, it was clear that ESI would be our ‘partner of choice’ in further extending our professional project management development programme."

After meeting with ESI representatives, it became clear that tailoring, cooperation and internal support would be keys to GSK’s strategy. In order to ensure relevance of content for its employees, GSK asked ESI to not only customise its courses to cover specific GSK topics, but to allow GSK experts to work along side the ESI instructors to co-teach the courses

Along with relevance, GSK leaders also understood that internal support was vital to the success of the iPlan programme. The company alreadyhad executive support; however, to ensure support among its employees throughout the organisation, GSK took to recruiting internal line champions from various business units. These champions were tasked with assuring that the course material was relevant and, equally as important, that it generated awareness and enthusiasm for the overall training initiative. To date, the company has 40 active line champion.

Tactics

GSK and ESI worked together to craft a number of courses for GSK employees, including an introductory course that defines the roles within a project team and how to be an effective team member, as well as a more advanced course that focuses on project planning for project team members. ESI also delivered courses on accountability and practical risk management, which helped participants understand the risks and opportunities that are inherent in drug development projects.

For the delivery of courses, GSK chose to take advantage primarily of ESI’s on-site training ability, which sent instructors directly to GSK locations to teach courses.

Results

With more than 1,000 GSK employees trained to date—and many more currently queuing up for courses—the company has managed to change individual behaviour, particularly regarding risk management. Project team members now use a common language in identifying the risks on their projects and approach risk management in a more consistent way, which is having an effect throughout the entire organisation. There is a clear mandate from senior management in place that all new projects must come with a detailed risk plan to be reviewed before that project is given the green light for large-scale development.

Speaking of the partnership with ESI, Karl Donn, Vice President of Global Project & Portfolio Management said, "This has been a great partnership between ESI and GSK. ESI brought both content knowledge and training skills to complement the knowledge in GSK R&D on how to apply the ESI capabilities to obtain maximum benefit. The joint efforts have allowed us to derive benefit immediately after the training programmes have been completed across the organisation."

This has been a great partnership between ESI and GSK. ESI brought both content knowledge and training skills to complement the knowledge in GSK R&D on how to apply the ESI capabilities to obtain maximum benefit. The joint efforts have allowed us to derive benefit immediately after the training programmes have been completed across the organisation.

Karl Donn
Vice President of Global Project & Portfolio Management
GlaxoSmithKline

Next Steps

GSK's commitment to performance improvement through training shows no signs of relenting anytime soon. The company has now begun working on the development of a center for project management resources for the entire R&D organisation. In addition, GSK leaders plan to continue reviewing employee feedback regarding individual training courses, measure progress against its many performance benchmarks and build a 2008 programme of training that will take project management to the next level of maturity within the R&D enterprise.

iPlan

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The Background

Henkels & McCoy, Inc. is one of the largest privately held engineering, network development and construction firms serving the communications, information technology and utility industries in the United States. Additional offerings have traditionally included installation, maintenance and training services. Several years ago, the company, which boasts 4,600 employees in 80 permanent offices and operations facilities across the U.S., identified the need to establish consistent project management throughout its organisation.

The Challenge

Upon winning significant utility infrastructure contracts ranging from the building of transmission lines to inside wiring for the Pentagon, which is one of the world’s largest office buildings, and Citizens Bank Park, home of the Philadelphia Phillies, Henkels & McCoy had firmly established itself as one of the country’s premier speciality contractors.

However, as the company executed these large-scope projects—and set their sites on many more—senior executives began recognising a need for standardised project management methodology throughout their organisation. The benefits to improved project management practises, they determined, would be numerous, including increased efficiency internally and seamless communication with their many large general contracting partners.

"Our industry has become increasingly more sophisticated over the years as people look for enhanced productivity and safety," said Kathy Mills, Director of Human Resources. "The complex projects we were winning required that our staff keep pace with industry knowledge."

Why ESI?

Henkels & McCoy sought a project management training provider with the global infrastructure required to easily and consistently deliver high-impact training to its employees. Additionally, the company was looking for a partner who not only understood Henkels & McCoy's complex industry, but who had an effective on-line training capability that could accommodate demanding staff workloads and differing styles. Henkels & McCoy chose ESI International.

"We interviewed a number of project management improvement providers from around the country and selected ESI for a number of reasons," Mills explained. "One of the primary reasons was that our people could take courses on their own schedule through ESI's comprehensive e-Training program. Our team is spread across a number of time zones, so we needed a provider that was as geographically diverse as we were. Most of our work is done in the field, meaning most of our staff members spend little time in the office. ESI understood this and worked within our schedule constraints to deploy an on-line training program that meets the needs of the entire company."

The ESI Solution

From the beginning of its partnership with ESI in 2003, Henkels & McCoy's executives were committed to providing training to staff members across a variety of internal levels, ranging from project team members to senior executives. Executive involvement, which included participation from the CEO/President, COO and CFO, helped staff members understand that creating a project management culture was a significant initiative supported at the highest organisational levels.

"We strongly believed all along that, regardless of whether an employee is running projects or running operations, project management skills are important to have," said Mills. "So, we added everybody to the training program, not just project managers. Skills such as team management, motivation, resource management and planning were competencies we wanted all members of our staff to exhibit. ESI's training program brought a formalised approach to these skills."

In 2004, after one year of training with ESI, the executive team at Henkels & McCoy issued an internal "Project Management Challenge." The initiative challenged employees to establish and implement a methodology based on the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), which was customised to Henkels & McCoy’s industry and internal procedures.

Continuing its project management transformation, in 2005, Henkels & McCoy established a Project Management Office (PMO). The office was created to be responsible for defining and maintaining the organisation's standards of process and acting as the internal source of documentation, guidance and metrics for all project management activities.

Skills such as team management, motivation, resource management and planning were competencies we wanted all members of our staff to exhibit. ESI’s training program brought a formalised approach to these skills.

Kathy Mills
Director of Human Resources
Henkels & McCoy

The Impact

"Our bottom line has improved year over year since we implemented the training," Mills said. "We used to bid a high number of projects. Today, we've learned not to bid as much. We have a solid methodology and bid review process in place, enabling us to look at the associated scope and risk before we get too deep. There was a time when we might have placed educated guesses on whether opportunities represented a good project for Henkels & McCoy. Now, we use our processes to more closely pursue work that fits our corporate strategy and that will deliver the return we expect.

Like any major change management initiative, the move toward a project management culture at Henkels & McCoy was initially met with resistance. Many throughout the organisation were reluctant to change longstanding habits and procedures. However, through time, leadership and unwavering commitment, employees at Henkels & McCoy have come to understand that their customers and their highly competitive market required them to apply more sophisticated methodologies to their work in order to succeed.

"Slowly but surely, you reap rewards as people recognise that the skills they are learning are helping their projects, said Mills. “When people begin speaking the project management language and using the methodology, you realise you’ve been successful in developing a project management culture."

Since beginning training with ESI, 60 Henkels & McCoy employees have earned Associate's Certificates in Project Management, including the company's COO, and 10 employees have earned Master’s Certificates in Project Management.

"Our team has taken great satisfaction in the accomplishment of receiving associate's and master's certificates from ESI," Mills said. "Another source of value is that ESI's e-Training is backed by The George Washington University School of Business. That affiliation is a significant source of pride for our people."

Next Steps

Henkels & McCoy has no plans of slowing down its training initiative. As of spring 2007, 119 Henkels & McCoy employees have enrolled in a total of 311 ESI courses, and the company is working hard with ESI to develop and further refine its new project management culture.

Projects are currently grouped into one of four levels based on strategic importance and complexity. The current Henkels & McCoy project management methodology applies to Level 3 and 4. The company is now developing a leaner version of its methodology for Level 1 and 2 projects.

With expanded project management expertise and systems, Henkels & McCoy is also considering new partnerships and taking on a larger number of complex projects, both of which are expected to help the company continue to grow and cement its reputation as an industry leader.

"We're committed to continuous improvement," Mills said. "We have a solid understanding of what has worked historically, and we’re also keeping an eye on what will make us successful in the future. A commitment to further developing the Henkels & McCoy project management culture is an integral part of our future success, and our continued work with ESI remains key to achieving these initiatives."

Our bottom line has improved year over year since we implemented the training.

Kathy Mills
Director of Human Resources
Henkels & McCoy

 Need More Information?

Contact one of our Business Development Managers by calling +44 (0)20 7017 5550 or by sending an email to enquiry@esi-europe.com


  
 

Several years ago, HP Services realised that to stay competitive in a relentlessly competitive marketplace, changes were in order. The companys business was becoming more project-focused, and HP Services recognised the need to standardise its project management practices.

HP Services implemented a performance improvement plan for its project managers worldwide. The objectives were clear: reduce the number of troubled projects, increase operating margins and provide for a flexible project workforce.

After a thorough needs analysis, HP determined that an outside training provider was needed to deliver the kind of comprehensive project management training required.

Standardising Projects Worldwide

Ron Kempf, Director, HP Services Project Management Competency Development and Certification, explains: As we reviewed projects, it became clear that we needed to train our project managers in fundamental project management practices, but we also needed to provide them with a pragmatic approach for executing projects. We wanted an approach supported by proven tools and techniques, so our project managers would have a common frame of reference, allowing them to form new teams or join existing teams anywhere in the world and immediately go to work.

HP Services selected ESI as its training vendor in 1996 because the company exceeded all the criteria HP Services requiredtraining based on the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK), public classes in addition to on-site delivery, highly qualified instructors and an international reputation.

We needed a training partner with established international experience, Kempf says. ESI told us of their experiences in international training, especially with respect to cultural considerations, and that was important to us. It was clear that ESI had the experience we needed. No one even came in a close second.

Designing a Comprehensive Programme

With HP Services, ESI developed an integrated programme that would meet the needs of the original 1,200 project managers through training in fundamental project management practices. (The number has since grown to more than 2,500 project managers in 160 countries and even more project support staff.)

Through the ESI programme, HP Services is able to offer its project managers a series of courses based on a standardised and universally accepted set of project management practices, the PMBOK. The programme leads to a Masters Certificate in Project Management from The George Washington University, ESIs academic partner for more than 20 years.

This well-rounded course of study prepares HP Services project managers for certification as Project Management Professionals (PMP) by the Project Management Institute (PMI).

Being able to develop PMPs is critical to us, Kempf says. Increasingly, offering PMPs has become a key evaluation factor in the bid process, and now its essential to winning new business. HP Services had 12 PMPs in 1997; today, it has more than 1,000.

Case Study Overview

The Issues

- Lack of standardised PM practices on a local and global level

- Need to reduce number of troubled projects to ensure competitiveness

- Need to increase the operating margins on projects.

The ESI Solution

- Establish a large-scale integrated global programme of on-site and public courses

- Develop PMBOK aligned training to facilitate consistent practices in HP services

- Create solid career development paths leading to PMP® certification

The Result

- 70% projects now running at or better than budget

- PMPs have become a key differentiating factor to winning new business

- Project Managers are more business savvy to realising their profit and loss responsibilities

- Higher staff retention rate due to HP Services commitment to career development

ESI continues to expand its curriculum, so HP Services is now able to offer relevant advanced courses to accommodate the growing number of programme graduates, who require a higher level of training. We offer 250 course sessions annually around the world, and ESI's delivery capability and curriculum are major contributing factors to the success of the programme. ESI has brought significant expertise and guidance in helping us design, develop and deliver our project management training programme, Kempf says. Since ESI offers its training in public classroom sessions, onsite sessions and online, HP Services project managers all receive consistent content, tools and techniques.

Understanding the Business of Projects

Before we had ESI training in place, we conducted project reviews in business units around the world, and we found that in some cases, our project managers did not fully appreciate or implement risk management practices, change control or financial management. They understood they needed to bring a project in on time and they knew they had to satisfy the customer, but they didnt realise they had profit and loss responsibility for their projects. Yet they were on the front lines of managing our business, Kempf explains.

HP Services complements its project management training in areas such as risk and contract management with training in selected business competencies, such as conducting effective negotiations, delivering presentations and managing financial aspects of a project. Not only are we developing more effective project managers, we are strengthening their business competencies as well, Kempf says.

As a result of this two-pronged approach to training its project managers, HP Services has seen a marked increase in project management knowledge, skills and abilities being applied in its business units worldwide. ESIs training programme has helped HP Services reduce the number of troubled projects and heightened its project managers awareness of managing towards increased margins. Kempf says that this performance improvement initiative has resulted in 70% of their projects running at or better than budget (well above the industry average of 50%) and has increased margins by as much as 50% in some cases.

ESIs training earns high praise on post-course evaluations, Kempf says. A clear majority of course attendees indicate that the training is directly relevant to their work and assert that the knowledge and skills acquired were a contributing factor in their efficiency and productivity.

Another result of the training has been a new confidence in the managers abilities to perform complex project activities, Kempf says. Project managers are more open to taking over troubled or leaderless projects. Because our project managers are now using a consistent approach to project management, assuming control midstream of a troubled project is less of a problem than it might have been in the past, he says.

Other, less-tangible benefits have come about as part of the HP/ESI partnership. Our employees recognise and appreciate that they have significant career-development opportunities here and, as a result, they are highly motivated. HP Services commitment to career development has given us a long-term advantage because we save hundreds of thousands of dollars each year on training, recruitment and orientation.

Having well-trained project professionals on the job every day gives us a competitive edge in the marketplace, and ESI's project management training programme has helped us to achieve that.

 Need More Information?

Contact one of our Business Development Managers by calling +44 (0)20 7017 5550 or by sending an email to enquiry@esi-europe.com

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