Hmm, how do you accidently become a PM then?
Go to the wrong job interview?
People evolve into roles, they move into them. Its called progression.
Hmm, how do you accidently become a PM then?
Go to the wrong job interview?
Hmm, how do you accidently become a PM then?
Go to the wrong job interview?
I think there are certain character traits a good PM needs and people should explore these first more than paper qulaifications.
Hmm, how do you accidently become a PM then?
Go to the wrong job interview?
I think there are certain character traits a good PM needs and people should explore these first more than paper qulaifications.
I'd agree that there are many many useless PM out there who go into thinking its well paid and skip from contract job to contract job making a living.
I see people who want to be PMs as i see people who want to be politicians.
Anyone who wants to be one, shouldnt be.
My advice would be to stick with with the technical side of IT. Prove that you are competent enough to be given a team leading role and push for one. Once you are a team leader then prove that you are competent enough to a project managers type role. Talking to your existing project manager and asking if there's anything you can do to help him would help too - PMs usually have lots of tedious spreadsheets they need to fill in which they might let you do if they trust you enough.
By all means go on the training courses, but in my experience training is only useful if you can put the knowledge gained into context during your day-to-day activities.
I disagree unfortunately and especially in IT it is classed as a promotion. Whilst it's good to have an idea about the field you are managing it is more important to have good project management skills than IT skills. Sadly most IT departments (especially in civil service) don't see it that way and it's usually a complete nightmare to deal with them on a contract level.
My advice would be to stick with with the technical side of IT. Prove that you are competent enough to be given a team leading role and push for one. Once you are a team leader then prove that you are competent enough to a project managers type role. Talking to your existing project manager and asking if there's anything you can do to help him would help too - PMs usually have lots of tedious spreadsheets they need to fill in which they might let you do if they trust you enough.
I would say no to that Project Managment is a completely different skill to being a team leader which is man/line managment. I've seen many an excellenttechie totally ruined by a transition into project managment.
A good project manager does not need to have any significant technical knowledge and should be able to manage a project as a project not as a technical challenge.
He means that anyone who wants to be a project manager is inevitably incompetant and useless and makes the lives of the project team members worse. The best PMs are the ones who didn't intend to become one.
so true tbh...
a decent project manager would be someone who has been there/done that etc.. and has been asked to fill the position. He will have the courses because someone has sent him on them not because he had ambitions to do them in order to become a PM.
People who aspire to be one when they don't have experience or have done some course via a distance learning provider are likely to be crap IMO.
"I'd like to be more involved in the business side" basically means I don't understand the techy stuff because I'm too stupid but please can I do a course and then e-mail developers all day asking them to meet deadlines - not going to happen in a decent firm unless you've proved yourself first.
the fact is Prince2 etc.. just provide basic frameworks for management - a decent project manager also needs a fair bit of actual domain knowledge and for that you need experience.
some interesting views in here
Could I ask your involvement with PM's? Are you a consultant?
FYI, I'm MCSE, CCNA, HP ASE, IBM Storage and Tivoli Certfied but I dont think that automatically makes me a good PM.
I don't think he's saying that having technical experience automatically makes you a good PM... I think his point is that to be a good PM you need to have a good grounding in the work your team is trying to deliver, as well as the other skills needed to be a good PM (organisational, communication, limitless delegation (okay maybe not that one)). Without one of these, you are unlikely to make a good PM, without both you will not live long at all!!!
![]()
Well I've been doing it succesfully for 7 years so I'd say Im doing OK thanks![]()
Why so defensive? No-one was saying you're not good at your job.
Sorry, read his post wrong.
LOL, maybe I'm paranoid
some interesting views in here
Could I ask your involvement with PM's? Are you a consultant?
FYI, I'm MCSE, CCNA, HP ASE, IBM Storage and Tivoli Certfied but I dont think that automatically makes me a good PM.