III.6. How to ensure continuous improvement
Executive Summary
The transition from individual project experience to enduring organizational capability depends on the systematic institutionalization of insight. According to the source context, organizations fail when they allow project management intelligence to reside solely with individuals rather than the enterprise. This failure leads to the repetition of avoidable errors and unnecessary costs. The Continuous Improvement Framework addresses this through the rigorous application of Organizational Process Assets (OPAs), which include internal plans, processes, templates, and knowledge repositories.
Critical takeaways from the framework include:
- The Dual Nature of OPAs: A clear distinction must be maintained between procedural assets (governance boundaries owned by the PMO) and knowledge repositories (performance evidence maintained by project teams).
- Continuous vs. Retrospective Learning: Lessons learned must be captured in real time through a living Lessons Learned Register (LLR) to influence the current project, rather than being treated as a bureaucratic closure task.
- Evidence-Based Governance: Improvement is grounded in the Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycle, utilizing both leading indicators (early warning signals) and lagging indicators (realized outcomes) to evaluate process reliability.
- Dual Success Metrics: Professional competency in continuous improvement requires evaluating both the efficiency of the project management process and the ultimate strategic value of the project outcomes.
The Strategic Function of Organizational Process Assets (OPAs)
Organizational Process Assets serve as the internal governance instruments that convert project experience into organizational capability. When projects close without structured knowledge capture, the organization loses intellectual capital, and subsequent teams are forced to relearn lessons that should have been preserved.
Key Purposes of OPAs
- Institutionalising Insight: Ensuring that project intelligence belongs to the enterprise rather than just the individuals present during execution.
- Preserving Continuity: Maintaining intellectual capital as projects transition and teams disband.
- Creating a Learning Loop: Applying and testing internal assets against real-world conditions and refining them through direct experience.
Sustained improvement is not a passive byproduct of work. It requires explicit policy alignment, measurable baselines, and a disciplined adjustment of working methods as evidence accumulates. While the quality management plan provides audit structure and methodology (such as kaizen and six sigma), it must be supported by feedback mechanisms and performance measurement to remain effective.
The Taxonomy of Internal Project Assets
To ensure proper governance, organizations must distinguish between two primary categories of assets. Confusing these types leads to accountability issues and a misunderstanding of who is responsible for asset maintenance.
|
Asset Category |
Definition |
Ownership |
Examples |
|
Procedural Assets |
Stable governance boundaries defining how work should be performed. |
PMO or designated authority |
Tailoring guidelines, standardized templates, change control procedures, closure requirements. |
|
Knowledge Repositories |
Evolving performance evidence capturing what actually happened during delivery. |
Project Team |
Historical records, financial data (labor hours/budgets), lessons learned, metrics. |
Specialized Repositories
- Configuration Management Repositories: These protect artifact integrity by ensuring that versions and authorized changes remain traceable.
- Financial Repositories: Beyond accounting, these provide empirical data on cost behavior and labor trends, which serve as critical inputs for improved estimating and bidding accuracy.
Procedural Frameworks and the Enabling Role of the PMO
The Project Management Office (PMO) does more than enforce rules; it manages the life cycle of procedural assets. By observing how teams tailor standard processes and evaluating the results, the PMO integrates effective adaptations back into the organizational baseline.
The Four Steps of Tailoring
- Select: Choose the initial development approach.
- Tailor for Organization: Align the approach with enterprise standards.
- Tailor for Project: Adjust for specific project needs at initiation.
- Implement Ongoing Improvement: Refine the approach as execution generates new evidence.
Tailoring is not a one-time setup activity. It is a continuing process. If a project finds its review cadence is too infrequent or its change control procedures are causing excessive delays, the management approach itself must be updated to align with delivery reality.
Systematic Integration of Lessons Learned and Historical Data
Knowledge management is a live input to planning and control, not an archival activity of last resort. Projects that use historical data for risk identification and cost forecasting make better decisions earlier.
Explicit vs. Tacit Knowledge
- Explicit Knowledge: Information that can be codified, stored, and searched directly, such as reports, registers, and archived performance data.
- Tacit Knowledge: Resides in experience, judgment, and technical intuition. This must be surfaced through structured interaction, including after-action reviews, mentoring, and storytelling.
The Lessons Learned Cycle
A critical distinction exists between the Lessons Learned Register (LLR) and the repository. The LLR is a living document updated in real time to support immediate adjustments. The repository is the OPA where the completed LLR is archived at closure. Deferring the capture of lessons until project closure results in reconstruction errors and lost context.
Technical Mechanics for Process Verification and Analysis
Continuous improvement requires a disciplined way to determine if processes are still producing reliable results under current conditions.
The PDCA Cycle and Performance Indicators
The Plan-Do-Check-Act (PDCA) cycle, also known as the Deming cycle, ensures that modification of processes is preceded by evaluation. This cycle relies on two types of indicators:
- Leading Indicators: Provide early warning that performance is drifting (for example, weak stakeholder participation or growing work in progress) before failure occurs.
- Lagging Indicators: Reveal realized outcomes (for example, cost variance or defect counts) after the fact.
Analysis Techniques
- Quality Audits: Assess compliance with established policies and procedures.
- Failure Analysis: Investigates root causes when deviations are severe or recurring, ensuring corrective actions address causes rather than symptoms.
- Process Analysis: Examines workflow efficiency before defects occur. Tools such as Value Stream Mapping (VSM) and SIPOC (Suppliers, Inputs, Process, Outputs, Customers) are used to identify “muda” (waste) and bottlenecks.
Adaptive Feedback and the Learning Culture
In adaptive and hybrid environments, reflection is integrated into the working rhythm through retrospectives. These are governance instruments used while there is still time to act. However, the need for reflection applies to predictive projects as well. Review points and phase gates serve as opportunities to reassess whether the current way of working remains appropriate.
Components of a Learning Culture
A professional learning culture integrates three essential mechanisms:
- Knowledge Sharing: Prevents expertise from being concentrated in isolated individuals.
- Mentorship: Develops capability across all experience levels.
- Reflective Practice: Supports disciplined self-correction and growth.
Professional Competency and Success Measurement
Continuous improvement is a core professional responsibility. Project managers must resist the narrow reading of success that focuses only on what can be easily counted.
True improvement must be evaluated through two distinct lenses:
- Process Performance: Assessing whether the project was conducted with appropriate efficiency, discipline, and control.
- Outcome Value: Assessing whether the work produced the intended strategic benefit and meaningful results for stakeholders.
A project may show exemplary procedural discipline but fail to deliver value, or vice versa. Comprehensive improvement requires that any change to the way of working strengthens both execution performance and the ultimate realized value.
Stop memorizing. Start reasoning.
Analyze scenarios. Navigate contexts. Recognize traps.
For:
- PMP® Candidates
- Project Leaders
- PMO Directors
- Managers of Project Managers
- Program Managers
- Executives and Sponsors
Available on Amazon as paperback and e-book –> Preview
Complete e-learning solution available from the author, including quizzes, mock exams, audiobook, engaging debates, videos, and full book text.
Demo: https://pmprep.de
Contact the author: Orlando@Casabonne.com
Related pages
Part I. Leading people
I.1. How to develop a common vision
I.3. How to lead the project team
I.4. How to engage stakeholders
I.5. How to align stakeholder expectations
I.6. How to manage stakeholder expectations
I.7. How to ensure knowledge transfer
I.8. How to plan and manage communication
Part II. Managing processes
II.1. How to develop an integrated project management plan and plan delivery
II.2. How to develop and manage project scope
II.3. How to ensure value-based delivery
II.4. How to plan and manage resources
II.5. How to plan and manage procurement
II.6. How to plan and manage finance
II.7. How to plan and optimize quality of products and deliverables
II.8. How to plan and manage schedule
II.9. How to evaluate project status
II.10. How to manage project closure
Part III. Navigating the business environment
III.1. How to define and establish project governance
III.2. How to plan and manage project compliance
III.3. How to manage and control changes
III.4. How to remove impediments and manage issues
III.5. How to plan and manage risk
III.6. How to ensure continuous improvement
III.7. How to support organizational change
III.8. How to evaluate external business environment changes