Overview:
This webinar is about effective communication inside and outside of the project team.
The webinar will use case studies and examples to reinforce key teaching points. Instruction will begin with a discussion of the communication model and the barriers that can erect obstacles to understanding the information and intent of the communications sent and received
Techniques for determining the unique communication styles that must be formulated for categories of project participants - some require different approaches from others. We will end this webinar by discussing the critical success factors that will guarantee that the communications you send and receive will be understood as intended.
Why you should Attend:
No matter the scenario that results in poor or at worst, totally ineffective communications, the results are always the same: Lack of effective communication significantly increases project risk and the likelihood that the project will either fail or experience some uncomfortable obstacles along the way to completion.
Several reports of late have tried to quantify the impact on poor communications on project. One from several years ago, the Pulse Report, indicated that as much as much as $135 million is at risk for every $1 billion spent on projects. More than half that - $75 million is at risk because of poor communication.
So as a project manager, you need to get it right - you need to communicate effectively, and you need to be able to clarify those fuzzy ambiguous communications you receive from others into actionable information
Areas Covered in the Session:
- The communication model - what it means and why it is important
- Eliminating barriers to communication
- Using your PM tools to communicate effectively
- "Effectiveize" your communication style for both team members and stakeholders
- Determining your communication strategies for each project participant
- Your project management communication process
- Your project management success factors
Who Will Benefit:
- Any member of a cross functional project team that has the potential opportunity to lead that project
- Engineers
- Marketing Associates
- Product Managers
- Program Managers
- Contract Managers
- Project Managers
- Research & Development Associates
- Managers
- Directors
- Design Engineers
- Manufacturing Managers