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Monkey Management for Project teams

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Title: Monkey Management for Project teams


1
Monkey Management for Project teams
  • Mike Graupner, PMP
  • mike.graupner_at_marlai.com

2
Agenda
  • What is a monkey?
  • How do you get monkeys?
  • What is the process?
  • Why do we manage Other People Monkeys? (OPMs)
  • How do we manage all our monkeys?
  • How do we prioritize?

3
Learning Objectives
  • Time management is working on the right thing at
    the right time.
  • To accomplish time management, you must
  • Give your items the top priority
  • (Feed your monkeys)
  • Let other people work their problems
  • (Let them feed their monkeys)
  • Prioritize the work based on value
  • (Magic Quadrant)

4
What is a Monkey?
  • Monkeys are issues/actions that people bring to
    you to solve.
  • We use the Monkey on your back metaphor to
    describe issues, and the ownership of issues.
  • Issues may be problems, tasks or other items in
    your life that you need to resolve.
  • It is not avoiding work, rather managing time!!!

5
Core Concepts
  • You are the master of your domain
  • When trouble is what you are looking for, you
    will be handsomely rewarded
  • Dont look for more monkeys!

6
Where did the Monkey concept come from?
  • First Identified In Harvard Business Review
    1970
  • Managing Management Time
  • William Oncken, Jr.
  • C 1984
  • ISBN 0-13-551986-4
  • The One Minute manager meets the Monkey
  • Kenneth Blanchard/ William Oncken, Jr., Hall
    Burrows
  • C 1989
  • ISBN 978-0-688-10380-4
  • The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
  • Stephen R. Covey
  • C 1989
  • ISBN 978-0-7432-6951-3

7
What is Monkey Management?
  • Imagine someone walking into your office with a
    Monkey on their back
  • They say, I have this problem, there is a monkey
    on my back, and I would like to put the monkey on
    your back
  • What would you say?
  • Great! Load it up, add it to the dozen I have
    already?

8
Where do Monkeys come from?
Bosses
Events
Vendors
Family
Co-workers
Your Back
9
Monkey Transference
  • The process of transferring problems from one
    owner to a another owner
  • Results
  • Generate Stress
  • Prevent you from working on your assigned higher
    priority tasks
  • Prevent you from being perceived as effective.

10
What to do?
  • Recognize the monkey
  • Help me to understand the issue
  • Determine the owner
  • Hmmm, who needs to solve this issue?
  • Define the Impact
  • How is this affecting us?
  • Get agreement of ownership
  • I am not sure this is on my plate, do you agree?
  • Help the owner find an action plan
  • If you did X, would this help?

11
Why do we do it?
  • We MUST help people with problems!
  • Boy/Girl Scouts
  • School
  • Church
  • We WANT to be the Hero!
  • They will appreciate you for managing their
    problems
  • We are programmed at an early age to fail!

12
The Hard Truths
  • Not every problem is your problem
  • Work your monkeys first
  • Not every problem you see needs to be fixed
  • Ask yourself, am I responsible to take this on?
  • Taking on Other Peoples Monkey (OPM) may not be
    appreciated
  • Them Thank god I got rid of that!
  • Manager Why is he/she working on that when I
    need this done!
  • Adopting OPMs generates unnecessary stress in
    your life!
  • Time management is key!

13
Example
  • Co worker comes and tells me that the PMO
    Projector is not being managed correctly.
  • I was the PM that procured the projector
  • The projector was turned over to the departmental
    admin to manage
  • The projector is not being returned with the
    cables and non-PMO staff are not respecting the
    reservations.

14
Response
  • Why is this an issue?
  • Waste PM time and makes the meeting start late
  • Self image ?
  • Who owns the problem
  • Projector users (not me at this point)
  • Potential solutions
  • PMs prepare an hour early
  • Speak with the admin about the process
  • Buy a second projector
  • Note since I am not a projector user
  • This is not my monkey!

15
Results
  • Allow the person with the issue to consider
    action
  • If no action is taken, it must not have been that
    big of issue

16
Qeustoin?
  • Whos Menkoy is tihs ?
  • If my agneda is cmmoncatoins, is splleinig my
    Mkoney?

17
Monkey Management Rules
  • In addition to the law of monkey management, the
    authors list six rules of managing monkeys that
    are instructive to managers. These include
  • 1. Monkeys should be fed or shot.
  • No one likes the consequences of a starving
    monkey. They tend to be very disagreeable and
    squeal and raise a ruckus. Monkeys must be fed
    periodically in this analogy, the problem must
    be dealt with between the manager and the
    employee with the problem on a regular basis. If
    the monkey can be shot (the problem solved
    quickly), then feeding times are not necessary.
  • 2. Every monkey should have an assigned next
    feeding time and a degree of initiative.
  • After a feeding session, the manager should
    select an appropriate time for the next feeding
    and should have a number of action steps for the
    employee to take. "Can we meet next Tuesday at
    1030 a.m. to see how things are going and what
    we should do next?"
  • 3. The monkey population should be kept below the
    maximum number that the manager has time to feed.
  • The authors suggest that it should take 15
    minutes to feed a monkey, and that managers
    should keep the list of problems that are in
    various stages of solution at a manageable
    number.

18
Monkey Management Rules
  • 4. Monkeys should fed by appointment only.
  • Allowing employees to bring problems to you on
    their timetable increases the chances that the
    monkey will move from the employee to the
    manager. By setting specific times for addressing
    the problem, managers empower employees to make
    interim decisions about the problem, and still
    report back.
  • 5. Monkey feeding appointments may be rescheduled
    but never indefinitely postponed.
  • Either party, the manager or the subordinate, may
    reschedule a feeding appointment for any reason,
    but it must be scheduled to a specific time to
    avoid losing track of the monkey.
  • 6. Monkeys shall be fed face to face or by
    telephone, but not in writing.
  • Holding feeding sessions via e-mail or memo
    transfers the monkey to the manager. An employee
    can pass the monkey to the manager by simply
    requesting a response. Feedings that take place
    in person or on the phone require the monkey to
    remain with the employee unless the supervisor
    takes an affirmative step to take it.
  • Proper delegation skills, properly applied as
    suggested in this creative approach, can help
    managers better solve problems and develop their
    employees' problem solving skills. Visualizing
    each problem as a monkey that is impatient and
    noisy can help managers see problems as they
    really are and address them in the best possible
    way. Beware of the monkeys that may come into
    your life today!

19
Managing Monkeys
  • Goal of Time Management Get control over the
    timing and content of what you do.
  • Enlarge discretionary time by eliminating
    subordinate-imposed time.
  • Use a portion of this newfound discretionary time
    to see to it that each subordinate possesses the
    initiative without which he or she cannot
    exercise initiative, and then see to it that this
    initiative is in fact taken.
  • Use another portion of the increased
    discretionary time to get and keep control of the
    timing and content of both boss-imposed and
    system-imposed time.

20
Once you can identify your monkeys
  • Use the magic quadrant

Not Urgent/Important
Urgent/Important
Urgent/Not Important
Not Urgent/Not Important
21
Priorities
  • Urgent/Important
  • Do first
  • Typically from Management
  • Important/Not Urgent
  • Do Second
  • Typically from your work assignment
  • Keeps the Urgent/Important items to a minimum
  • STOP You are done

22
Why Stop?
  • Not Urgent/Not Important or Not Important tasks
    are not worth doing
  • No Value!
  • If worked, you will most likely not get to other
    tasks of value

23
Understanding Value
  • Inputs
  • Boss Imposed (1)
  • System Imposed (2)
  • Self Imposed (3)
  • Leverage
  • Employee time (1)
  • Supervisory time (2)
  • Executive time (3)
  • Output
  • Stabilizing time (1)
  • Corrective time (2)
  • Progressive time (3)

24
Understanding Inputs
  • Inputs
  • Boss Imposed (1)
  • Assignments from the boss
  • System Imposed (2)
  • Assignments from the system (budgeting, time
    approval etc)
  • Self Imposed (3)
  • E.G. Working on next years problems.
  • Boss giving input has the least value, because
    you are not anticipating their needs.
  • Self Imposed time is when you can work on magical
    things.

25
Understanding Leverage
  • Leverage
  • Employee time (1)
  • Managing Monkeys yourself
  • Supervisory time (2)
  • Managing monkeys by delegation
  • Executive time (3)
  • Managing monkeys by assignment
  • Doing is the least value, assigning has the most
    value (process driven)

26
Understanding Outputs
  • Output
  • Stabilizing time (Value 1)
  • Admin functions/ todays problems
  • Corrective time (Value 2)
  • Solutions/Responses to this years
    Problems/Opportunities
  • Progressive time (Value 3)
  • Solutions/Responses to next years
    Problems/Opportunities

27
Least Valuable Time
  • Inputs
  • Boss Imposed (1)
  • Boss tells you to
  • Leverage
  • Employee time (1)
  • Manage the monkey yourself
  • Output
  • Stabilizing time (1)
  • To fix today's problem

28
Most Valuable Time
  • Inputs
  • Self Imposed (3)
  • You tell you to
  • Leverage
  • Executive time (3)
  • Identify and Assign Monkeys
  • Output
  • Progressive time (3)
  • For Solutions/Responses to Next Years
    Problems/Opportunities

29
Dont ignore 1,1,1!
  • Least valuable time is important, but try to keep
    it down to a minimum
  • Try to grow the percentage your are spending on
    most valuable time (3,3,3)
  • Balance is the key!

30
Exercise 1
  • Break into 5 people teams
  • Identify a Monkey of each team member that jumped
    on your back in the last week
  • Define a strategy for moving the monkey back to
    the proper owner
  • Be prepared to report to the group on each issue
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