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Agile Project Management

Agile Project Management

Knowledge that stays siloed kills multipartner projects more often than missed deadlines do.
by Project Management Journal 2013 229 pages
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Summary in 30 Seconds
Knowledge stuck in one specialty is the bottleneck in multipartner projects. Shared technology, flexible structures, and interactive culture unlock it. Without common ground and trust, specialists cannot coordinate. Quality collaboration demands open communication, shared goals, mutual support, aligned effort, and cohesion. In temporary, one-off projects, these factors never arise by accident; they require deliberate forums and protocols.
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📚knowledge management 🔄agile methodology 🔗knowledge sharing 🧠organizational learning 🤝team coordination 👥cross-functional teams 🏢organizational behavior 📋project managers
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Key Takeaways

1. Collaboration in multipartner projects is crucial for success but poses unique challenges

Collaboration between different actors in project-based industries is viewed as the key success factor in projects (Gransberg, Dillon, Reynolds, & Boyd, 1999; Vaaland, 2004).

Complex environment demands collaboration. In many project-based industries, such as construction, high-technology, and semiconductor industries, the complexity of work and intense competition necessitate collaboration between multiple partners. This approach allows for risk-sharing and pooling of expertise, which is essential for reducing uncertainty in complex environments.

Challenges of multipartner collaboration:

  • Cross-disciplinary nature of work
  • Minimal common knowledge base
  • Belonging to different communities of practice
  • Temporary nature of alliances
  • Increasing workplace tensions due to diversity

Benefits of collaboration:

  • Reduced costs of controlling
  • Decreased probability of failure
  • Potential for innovations and learning
  • Ability to overcome competency gaps and resource scarcity

2. Knowledge integration capability is vital for effective project collaboration

Grant (1996) argues that the integration of knowledge, either explicitly or implicitly, of individuals from different competence areas is difficult, and advocates integrating specialist individual knowledge to achieve effective knowledge collaboration and application.

Knowledge integration defined. Knowledge integration refers to the ability of a project organization to turn knowledge into action. It involves synthesizing, refining, combining, coordinating, distributing, and restructuring knowledge from various sources to achieve project goals.

Key aspects of knowledge integration:

  • Facilitating knowledge flow across organizational boundaries
  • Eliminating barriers to communication
  • Encouraging interaction and collaboration between individuals
  • Enabling group problem-solving and decision-making
  • Creating shared contexts and common representations

Knowledge integration capabilities are essential for collaborating and integrating specialist knowledge from different competence areas. This is particularly important in multipartner projects where diverse expertise needs to be combined effectively to achieve project objectives.

3. Project-collaboration quality determines the fluency of interactions between partners

In this article, we define the quality of collaboration, not through its expected consequences, but on the basis of the fluency of interactional activities taking place between the collaborative actors.

Five elements of collaboration quality:

  1. Communication: Sufficient, open, and efficient information exchange
  2. Coordination: Shared understanding of goals, activities, and contributions
  3. Mutual support: Willingness to help and be flexible
  4. Aligned efforts: Matching contributions with expectations
  5. Cohesion: Existence of collaborative spirit

Importance of collaboration quality. High-quality collaboration ensures smooth interactions between partners, reduces the likelihood of conflicts, and increases the efficiency of project execution. It goes beyond merely assessing the outcomes of collaborative actions and focuses on the process of collaboration itself.

By evaluating these five elements, project managers can identify areas for improvement in the collaborative process, leading to better project performance and outcomes.

4. Collaboration antecedents and outcomes are mediated by knowledge integration and collaboration quality

The hypothesized role of project-collaboration quality and knowledge-integration capability is depicted in Figure 1.

Mediating factors. Knowledge-integration capability and project-collaboration quality act as moderating factors connecting collaboration antecedents and collaboration outcomes. This relationship suggests that the success of multipartner projects depends not only on the initial conditions and final results but also on how effectively knowledge is integrated and how well partners collaborate throughout the project.

Implications for project management:

  • Focus on enhancing knowledge integration capabilities
  • Improve collaboration quality through targeted interventions
  • Consider both antecedents and mediating factors when planning projects
  • Monitor and adjust collaboration processes throughout the project lifecycle

Understanding this relationship allows project managers to develop strategies that address both the initial conditions for collaboration and the ongoing processes that determine project success.

5. Information technology, organizational structure, and culture enable knowledge integration

Gold, Malhotra, and Segars (2001) identify information technology, organizational structure, and culture as infrastructure capabilities, and creation, integration, application, and protection as process capabilities required to achieve knowledge integration.

Information technology: Facilitates knowledge flow and eliminates communication barriers within an organization. IT tools such as e-mail, repositories, intranet portals, and teleconferencing play a key role in transferring knowledge.

Organizational structure: A flexible structure encourages knowledge sharing and collaboration across boundaries. It is shaped by policies, processes, and reward systems that determine knowledge flow and integration.

Organizational culture: Central to encouraging interaction and collaboration between individuals. It provides the ability to self-organize knowledge and participate in communities of practice.

Process capabilities:

  • Knowledge creation: Enabled by interaction, feedback, innovation, and benchmarking
  • Knowledge integration: Synthesizing, refining, and coordinating knowledge
  • Knowledge application: Applying integrated knowledge to project tasks
  • Knowledge protection: Safeguarding valuable intellectual property

6. Efficient knowledge integration depends on common knowledge and social capital

Newell and Huang (2005) argue that when common knowledge is created, different specialists need to practice continuously to facilitate seamless coordination of knowledge among team members.

Common knowledge: Refers to shared understanding within a context. It is essential for efficient knowledge integration, as it reduces the need for extensive communication and explanation between team members.

Factors influencing common knowledge creation:

  • Project organization
  • Social capital
  • Collaboration
  • Objective measures
  • Attitudes toward learning

Social capital: Requires a facilitating organizational structure and promotes the formation of ties between team members. It is crucial for connecting, disconnecting, and reconnecting different stakeholder groups in collaborative projects.

Balancing integration efficiency and scope: The level of integration efficiency depends on the extent of common knowledge. However, as the scope of integration widens, it becomes more challenging to maintain a sufficient level of common knowledge, potentially reducing integration efficiency.

7. High-quality collaboration requires effective communication, coordination, and mutual support

High-quality coordination refers to the shared mutual understanding of the goals, related activities, interdependencies between the activities, and the status of member contributions (Hoegl & Gemuenden, 2001).

Effective communication: Involves open sharing of ideas, sufficient frequency of information exchange, and efficient use of communication media. It ensures all parties are informed of changes and reduces communication costs.

Coordination: Ensures harmonized and synchronized coaction between partners. Well-coordinated tasks are less susceptible to conflicts and contribute to the fluency of interactions in collaborative settings.

Mutual support: Characterized by:

  • Willingness to help achieve common goals
  • Flexibility in case of unforeseen incidents
  • Adaptability and ability to compromise
  • Shared expectations on behavior
  • Alignment between expected and realized efforts

These elements work together to create a collaborative environment that fosters trust, reduces conflicts, and enhances project performance.

8. Project-based industries face specific challenges in establishing collaborative relationships

The discontinuity of demand is related to the temporally limited nature of projects that creates pressure for a supplying actor to enforce the continuation of the business.

Challenges in project-based industries:

  1. Discontinuity of demand: Temporal nature of projects complicates long-term collaborative relationships
  2. Uniqueness of project transactions: Inhibits learning from projects and efficiency in operations
  3. Complexity of actor networks: Divergent objectives and incentives among partners

Implications of discontinuity:

  • Difficulty in establishing trust and commitment
  • Willingness to collaborate depends on singular project success
  • Pressure to enforce business continuation

Uniqueness challenges:

  • Need for a knowledge-integrator role
  • Difficulties in applying lessons learned to future projects

Network complexity:

  • Shaped by long-term business networks
  • Competitive relationships between partners can pose risks

Understanding these challenges is crucial for developing strategies to overcome them and establish effective collaborative relationships in project-based industries.

9. Mechanisms for improving collaboration quality can enhance project performance

Mechanisms for facilitating the same are group problem solving and decision making.

Improving knowledge integration:

  • Implement information technologies that facilitate knowledge flow
  • Create flexible organizational structures that encourage cross-boundary collaboration
  • Foster a culture that promotes interaction and self-organization of knowledge
  • Establish forums such as communities of practice and centers of excellence

Enhancing collaboration quality:

  • Develop clear communication protocols and channels
  • Implement coordination mechanisms for shared understanding of goals and activities
  • Encourage mutual support through team-building activities and incentives
  • Align efforts by clearly defining expectations and contributions
  • Build cohesion through shared experiences and team-bonding exercises

Balancing formal and informal mechanisms:

  • Use formal processes for critical decision-making and problem-solving
  • Encourage informal interactions to build social capital and trust
  • Implement mentoring and training programs to facilitate knowledge transfer
  • Create opportunities for face-to-face interactions in virtual project environments

By implementing these mechanisms, project managers can improve both knowledge integration and collaboration quality, leading to better project outcomes and higher-performing multipartner collaborations.

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