The Project Leaders Do Not Have Prior Experience In International Projects
Oct 03,2007 00:00 by admin

The Project Leaders Do Not Have Prior Experience In International Projects

Project leaders may have been chosen because of their knowledge of the business and of prior project success in one country. These do little to prepare people for dealing with multiple languages and cultures—and different locations.

Impact

Project leaders when thrust into the world of international projects may perform well and rise to the challenge. Or they may fail. In either case, management cannot afford to take the chance. The project leaders may provide a false sense of security and progress about the project. They may hear what they want to hear and then pass it along to upper management. Project issues may worsen. Progress is much less than what is reported. The project loses its credibility.

Prevention

Prevention begins with selecting project leaders more carefully. You can select people with prior international project experience. You can look for individuals who have worked in different countries and speak other languages. In addition, attention must be given to the organization of the project. As was stated in earlier chapters, you should consider having a project leader in each location. Another step is to have the project leaders on the road most of the time in different locations.

Action

One way to address the problem is to substitute project leaders. However, this can slow the project down. Confidence in the project may decline. Instead, you should establish a steering committee for the project and use project leaders in multiple locations. The problem, after all, may not lie with the project leader, but with how the project is organized.