PM@CH Journal 2017 December 2017 | Page 10

The Swiss Project Management Journal The People Project want to communicate with those affected using social media, we need to first under- stand how they communicate using social media, and then define the pilot around that, and their needs.” Tarun also men- tioned that nascent concerns, such as on- line data privacy, must be considered. Tarun’s team, which manages the pilot, will analyse their findings and contribute this to the definition of the project which later will follow. They will conduct a self- assessment with the project sponsor be- fore doing a type of handover to the pro- ject manager. Tarun further explained, “the definition, design, testing and scale- up of pilots is determined during the pilot. In a sense, my team explores options to find the right solution. We then bring these results to the project sponsor, who then ensures the ICRC validation is ob- tained, and the scaling up of the project is realized.” There is one clear example where the piloting approach saved a lot of time and prevented wasted effort: A new tablet- based system for gathering population in- formation was intended to be a 21st cen- tury way to collect census data but the pilot in Mali revealed a blocker which would have been horrible to discover after a full rollout. Traditionally, field offi- cers went from population to population Robert Whelan, PMP, is the Head of the Project Management Office at the ICRC in Geneva. Robert joined the ICRC in 2008 and has worked as a delegate in the Philippines, Afghanistan and in Israel/Occupied Territories as well as at headquarters in a variety of posts. He has extensive project and portfolio manage- ment experience in a variety of fields including re- search and development, technology and education in a range of organi- zations such as the European Commission, New York University as well as in the Pacific region. Robert holds a doctorate in psychology and an MSc. in ergonomics. He qualified as a project management professional (PMI) in 2012 and is an IAF certified professional facilitator. with database-entry forms (in paper format, attached to a clipboard), filling these out by hand, delivering them to the central offices to be entered digitally into the database, where the data would be analysed and results obtained. When considering that around fifty- thousand families were being surveyed, you can appreciate the sheer amount of data involved. But the new system was going to bring improvements! The data would be en- tered into the database while the officer was still in the field. This increases accu- racy, efficiency, and enables real-time analysis. The purpose of the pilot was to help evaluate just how great the im- provements were going to be! But the surprising outcome was this: field officers are personally in no position to take on the responsibility of receiving, maintai- ning, and protecting expensive and complicated equipment such as tablets. In the end, the pilot determined that the new system was not going to succeed; the people on the field just simply were not comfortable with the complexity and responsibility this would have required. The pilot approached helped to highlight that, to introduce technology, understand not only its potential benefits but as well its perception on the ground. The pilots vary hugely. In one case, Tarun had a pilot of just one person, and another case, he and his team are running three pilots in three different countries (Mali, Nigeria, Ukraine) each country with its own context (infrastructure, technolo- gical development). This is a pilot which involves over fifty dedicated people. Project Management Institute SWITZERLAND Chapter 10 2017 Edition