As one might imagine, this is a difficult philosophical question. According to Hayenga (2008), there is a significant lexical difference between what is ‘complex’ and what is ‘complicated.’ He posits that complex systems are not merely those with many moving parts but rather complexity is inherent in systems and scenarios that are dynamic in nature or difficult to predict. This is a reasonable and pragmatic way of viewing the terminology and thus also tends to imply that systems which are highly dependent upon human interactions are necessarily more complex in nature. Humans, being the irrational creatures that we are, often interject a high level of subjectivity into the mix.
There is no better illustration of the dynamic interaction of many subjective individuals than a typical PMO. This of course becomes even more fascinating if their scope of interaction is elevated to the enterprise level. This becomes somewhat ironic when one considers that the PMOs have been created and chartered to correct perceived issues of system complexity which must be better managed. The reality is that much of what we consider to be “IT” problems are not technical in nature at all.
Recognizing a problem or a challenge is not enough. Many folks have hit the nail on the head in being able to identify the PMO or its associated management processes as the likely culprit of much of the related failures of IT projects / programs; however to date, no one has presented a comprehensive solution for this seemingly obvious problem area. There is recognition now though that such problems are solvable using new enterprise integration technology and techniques.
Complexity is implicit within each element of PLM (the other mini-PLMs or Ps). Over the years, the notion of “Portfolio Management” migrated over from the financial world to IT and has now become a new process discipline. As noted previously, Project Portfolio Management (PPM) popped up about ten years ago to address the obvious need to consolidate PMO processes. Product Lifecycle Management emerged over the last decade as an IT practice to address the very tactical aspects of design and innovation. Process management has been interpreted many ways – some schools of thought have advocated fairly sophisticated methodologies such as CMMi , others are adopting an “Agile” more flexible approach.
Copyright 2008, Semantech Inc.
Monday, March 24, 2008
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