Jean McKay PuttyCove, Inc. An introduction to High Cost of Doing Nothing 4/18/2012.

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Transcript of Jean McKay PuttyCove, Inc. An introduction to High Cost of Doing Nothing 4/18/2012.

Jean McKayPuttyCove, Inc.

An introduction to

High Cost of Doing Nothing4/18/2012

About Jean McKay, PMP, PMRMP, MSCIS

Jean is an experienced professional with a proven track record over 20 years.

She currently holds numerous professional certifications in both Project Management and IT, focuses on Disaster Recovery Planning, Business Continuity Planning, Risk Assessment, and Technical Training.

Jean is a certified Project Management Professional (PMP)®, and Risk Management Professional PMP-RMP, with a Master of Science in Computer Information Systems.

Jean currently resides in Phoenix, Arizona, and is an active member of the PMI Phoenix Chapter, BPW, and Infragard.

Background for this work

Fifteen years of development at Stanford University

Observations or interviews with 225 executives

25 longitudinal studies of executives

In 2007, 55 formal interviews in 9 industries

In-depth study of PQ+A in two global companies• Cypress Semiconductor, 1996 to 2004• Microsoft, 1995 to 2004

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Four deep trends

Information overload

Higher levels of complexity

Complexity is dynamic

Increased time crunch

Time

The pressure toimprove discussion

The efficiency of typicalbusiness meetings

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Two factors

Two factors make it difficult to manage complexity and overload in meetings

Answers that destroy focus

Questions that lack focus

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When answers lack focus

Not clear

Not crisp

Not concise

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What’s going wrong?

She asks a precise question• “What are the unit sales for the urban and suburban

segments?”

He hears a generic question• “Give me an update.”

He believes he’s helping the discussion by providing “valuable context”

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Precision Answering solves the problem

The basics of PA• Answer the question that was asked• Start with the core• Keep it short

The benefits of PA• Better focus• Greater efficiency

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When questions lack focus

Low efficiency

No depth

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What’s going wrong?

We shouldn’t be asking this:• What do the lines show us?

If the question in our mind is this:• At the end of the quarter, what was the rate at which

sales were decreasing?• Is the rate of decrease slowing down or speeding up?

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Precision Questioning solves the problem

The basics of PQ• Be precise• Get to the heart of the matter

The benefits of PQ• Greater efficiency• Better analysis

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Precision Questioning

Drill-down questions fall into seven categories

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The seven categories

Our customersare spending more

time on social networking sites.

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The seven categories

Our business needs to start doing better

security of our data.

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Let’s Practice

We will use your issue to practice thecategories one at a time

Real PQ ismore fluid

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Practice: Write down an issue like one or the other of these

Use a real issue fromyour work

Write legibly

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Instructions for two-minute drills

Find a partner to practice with. Decide roles

• One person presents issue & answers questions• Other person asks questions

Don’t change roles until instructed to

These are practice drills for the questioner; this will not be a fluid discussion. Real PQ ismore fluid than this.• Answers should be short, honest, and realistic

Please wait to begin

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Establish the big picture 2 minute limit

Presenter starts• Show partner the written statement• Give an overview of your issue (about 30 seconds)

Then questioner asks• Ask questions that help you understand the big picture

(about 60 seconds)• Big picture questions are mostly clarifications so you

understand the topic• Do not worry about the categories for now

• 2 minute limit

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Go/NoGo questions guide energy and focus

Setting up a good meeting• Who should participate?• Goal?• How much time?• Who should tee up the issue?

Shaping the direction once the meeting begins• Are we focused on the right thing?• Are we asking the right questions?• Should we take this off-line?

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Reminder: these are not Go/NoGo questions

How do you track resources?

What do you mean by “complex?”

What seems to be causing it?

For now – focus only one Go/No Go questions

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Examples of Go/NoGo questions

OK• Who should attend?

Better• Who knows more about this, Ellen or Bill?

OK• What would be the goal of the meeting?

Better• Is a half-hour enough time to both review the data and

figure out the underlying causes of the problem?

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Practice Go/NoGo questions 2 minute limit

Ask questions thatwould help them set upa real meeting to discuss this issue

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Clarification questions sharpen the meaning

By “clarification” we mean clarification of the meaning of words and sentences

Three main types of clarification• Clarifying slippery words• Asking graph questions• Asking pivot table questions

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Clarification of slippery words

A “slippery” word means one thing to one person

and something different to another person

OK• What do you mean

by “complex”?

Better• Complex in what ways?• Do you mean complex with respect to number of parts?• Complex with respect to number of dependencies?

The project has become more complex than we

expected.

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Reminder: these are not clarification questions

Do you have data on your use of resources?

What seems to be causing it?

If you don’t change anything, what would be the consequences?

For now – focus on Clarifying slippery word questions

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Practice clarifying slippery words 2 minute limit

Clarify words that mightmean something different to the presenterthan to you.

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Clarification through graph questions

“Draw the graph” with questions• When did the schedule first slip?• How far have you fallen behind the original projections?• Are you losing ground or gaining ground?

The project is taking more time

than expected.

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Clarification through pivot table questions

Pivot table questioning• Picture the parts• Question the parts

Examples• Show it to me by ___ (gender, age, location).• Where has morale been the most difficult to improve?• Where has morale been easiest to improve?

Improving morale is turning out to be more

difficult than weexpected.

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Practice graph/pivot table clarification 2 minute limit

Graph questions

Pivot table questions

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Assumption questions go deep

An assumption is something that must be true in order for the statement to be true

The difficulty: assumptions are in what is not said

Useful tip: phrase your questions this way• Are you assuming…?• Are you assuming…?

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Common categories of assumptions

“I’m looking for the solution to the problem of…”

Existence• Are you assuming a problem exists?

Uniqueness• Are you assuming there’s only one problem?

Measurement• Are you assuming you can measure improvement?

Value• Are you assuming it’s bad?

Time, Constancy• Are you assuming the problem isn’t changing over time?

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Practice assumption questions 2 minute limit

Are you assuming...?

Are you assuming...?

Are you assuming...?

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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BCQs ask for evidence

Two main types of BCQs• Questions about the validity of the data• Questions about the credibility of the sources of

information

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BCQ: questions about the validity of DATA

Not• How do you know that’s true?

OK• What’s the data?

Better• How complete is the data?• How accurate is the data? • Is the sample representative of the population?• Is the sample large enough?

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Practice DATA questions 2 minute limit

Ask questions about the validity of their data

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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BCQ: questions about the credibility of the SOURCES of information

OK• Where did you hear this?

Better• Did you hear it from somebody who was on the project

at the beginning?• Do you have 100% confidence in what they are telling

you?• Should you check with other people who were on the

project at the beginning?

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Practice SOURCE questions 2 minute limit

Ask questions about the credibility of theirsources of information

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Establish the big picture – switch roles 2 minute limit

New presenter• Show your written statement

(about 30 seconds)

New questioner• Ask questions that help you understand the big picture

(about 60 seconds)• Big picture questions are mostly clarifications• Don’t worry about categories, this is so you understand

the topic

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BCQs ask for evidence

Two main types of BCQs• Questions about the validity of the data• Questions about the credibility of the sources of

information

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Practice BCQs – DATA and/or SOURCE 2 minute limit

Ask about validityof data

Ask about credibility ofsources of information

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Cause Questions

Questions about causes help us control Here are five precise why’s

• What triggered this (an event)?• Is there a root cause (a condition of vulnerability)?• What is the mechanism (how does it work)?• What are the drivers (pushes)?• What are the inhibitors (pulls)?

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Cause questions

OK• Why were our initial expectations so unrealistic?

Better• Was the root cause that fact that this was a different

type of problem than we have seen in the past?

OK• Why is it becoming more complex?

Better• What are the main drivers of complexity?

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Practice cause questions 2 minute limit

Root cause? Trigger? Drivers? Inhibitors? Mechanism?

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Questions about Effects help us predict

When thinking about the future, we tend to oversimplify

This 3x3 matrix helps us be more precise

Best case Worst case Most likely

Short term

Medium term

Long term

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Effects questions

OK• How long will it take?

Better• Worst case, how long will it take?

OK• What will be the result?

Better• What will the long-term consequences be?

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Practice effect questions 2 minute limit

Ask questions like this:• Suppose you don’t

change anything.In the ___ term, what’s the ___ case for ___?

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Questions about Action

There are many more options than “what should we do about it?”

• What is our strategy? • What tactics will we use to enact our strategy?• What is our plan for the coming week?• Is our goal a root cause fix? Or is it just containment?

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Practice action questions 2 minute limit

Ask questions like these:• Can you do a root-cause

fix on this?• Should you just try to

contain it?

___ is more complexthan expected.

___ is taking more ___ [time, resources, etc.]

than expected.

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Benefit of PQ

What is the benefit of making our questions more precise?• It helps us analyze our work in new ways• Our meetings become more efficient• The level of critical thinking goes up

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Tools, not rules

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Precision Answering

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PQ can’t get very far without PA

• In the first video, Jordy does not hear the Precise Question

• He hears, ‘Tell me a story’

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Precision Answering solves the problem

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The basics of Precision Answering

• Answer the question that was asked• Start with the core• Keep it short

Focus on Precision Answering

PA:Conveying only the important information in a crisp, clear, and concise way

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Three basic rules of PA

Answer only the question that was asked

Start with the core

Keep it short

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Three basic rules of PA – Rule #1

Answer only the question that was asked

• Don’t answer the question you wantedthem to ask

• Don’t answer the question you think they shouldhave asked

• Make sure you heard the question

• If the question isn’t clear to you, clarify

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Three basic rules of PA – Rule #2

Start with the core• Core answers go right to the point

Common core answers

• Yes• No• Number• Date• Single point• Bullet points• I don’t know + next step

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Three basic rules of PA – Rule #3

Keep it short

• Many times the core answer will suffice

• At most, add one or two additional points

• When adding necessary information, use bullet points when possible There are three top concerns . . .

We have two options . . .

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Additional options

Clarify the question

Redirect the questioner

Add qualifiers

Do a torpedo alert

Anticipate the next question, only when obvious

Keep the discussion moving forward

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Find the precise answer

Q: What’s the status of the project?

A: Well I made the phone calls to our customers

that you asked me to. I think people were ingeneral pretty positive, though ABC Retailerhad some concerns about the timing, but Ithink we can work around their schedule bydoing a phased implementation of the plan.The rest of our customers are fine withthe schedule, so I think we should be onschedule to deploy next month, with againthe exception of ABC Retailer which willdeploy the system in the next two months.

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Core answer plus information

Find the precise answer

Q: Why did the schedule slip?

A: I want to say that we have been working veryhard to make the schedule, but as you know theschedule is very aggressive and we are workingon a new system, so we are doing our best.We have been having some problems

integratingthe new system with the manufacturing

process.We are not sure, but we think it has something

todo with an incompatibility between the newsystem design that used an XYZ process and

ourmanufacturing design that used the old ZYXprocess, but at this point it is just a guess. - 93 -

Single point answer plus I don’t know

Practice Precision Questions & Answers

Visit www.vervago.com Skill Sharpeners that build skills The PQ+A 1 day Workshop

• Teaches four things: PQ PA plus two additional techniques

• Workshop creates high impact three ways: Focuses on real issues How to make practical application Post-workshop emails to deepen the learning

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Thank You !

Questions? Contact me! Email: jean@puttycove.com Call: 623.210.7312 Website: www.puttycove.com LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/jeanmckay

www.vervago.com Ask better questions and give better answers

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