CITI consultancy solutions » Political Collaboration http://consulting.citi.co.uk Thu, 08 Oct 2015 10:51:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.3.3 Political collaboration http://consulting.citi.co.uk/political-collaboration/ http://consulting.citi.co.uk/political-collaboration/#comments Tue, 24 Feb 2015 12:00:18 +0000 http://consulting.citi.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Political-collaboration.png What is it? When the power structures of an organisation act so as to facilitate, promote, and endorse change the impact is unstoppable. When key stakeholders form an alliance with a common vision of the future projects succeed, technical issues dissolve and benefits materialise with surprising ease.

What it is not? It’s not salesmanship, nor is it jollying people along by sending out occasional emails, or convening project board meetings to discuss project progress. Political collaboration is not Machiavellian manoeuvring for position or being diplomatic, it is partnering for mutual gain.

What’s different afterwards? Commitment to the delivery of value from the project, commitment to providing resources, and the political will to make the changes a reality. Practices are embedded with key opinion-leaders supporting the shift in values and culture that underpin every sustained change.

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Political collaboration

What’s the value

Stakeholders are key individuals involved in the execution and assessment of successful change. They are the driving political force behind change initiatives, projects and programmes. Yet, they are often overlooked by project managers.

The success and failure of projects is determined by the stakeholders’ perception of the projects’ outcomes. Many project failures stem from lack of genuine involvement or a failure to identify them at all. It is therefore essential to ensure comprehensive identification with analysis of needs and then the execution of management actions to ensure they contribute to project success.

Political collaboration creates a positive environment in which communication channels are kept open and free from distortions created by deliberate misunderstanding, the focus is progressive and future-oriented not reactive and putting out local ‘fires’.

Why is it valid

A stakeholder engagement plan is distinct from any other managed interaction that takes place with individuals as a consequence of executing the general project plan. An understanding of the political environment; who is a zealot, an ally, a waverer, and who an opponent, allows more effective management of scarce communication resources and matches the interaction with the stakeholder, leading to achieving a greater level of planned outcomes.

What you will experience

Using a suite of analytical and planning mechanisms, CITI clearly sets out the political landscape within which the project operates. Stakeholders as named individuals are clearly identified, their WIIFM established and the sources of power and political relationships understood in order to carry out appropriate strategies for true engagement. RACI models are also used to confirm governance structures and communication plans but stakeholder identification, planning and engagement are treated as a discrete topic.

How you might start

The known stakeholder environment will be described and populated by named individuals. The information required for analysing the needs (WIIFM) is identified and individuals are assigned to collect the necessary data. Additionally, a series of structured discussions will take place with known individuals to confirm details necessary for planning their optimal engagement.

Example models, methods & tools used

CITI models & methods
Structured interviews
Facilitated workshops

Clients we have helped realise this value

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