Friday 18 May 2018

Graphic Recording blog involves a few book reviews

Review of The Zen Approach to Project Management: Working from your Centre to Balance Expectations and
Performance by George Pitagorsky, PMP

Pitagorsky is a real practitioner who has derived Zen insights from several traditions. He has studied Tibetan Buddhism as well as Indian ideas, and has maintained “a longtime practice of Yoga and the non-dual teachings of Advaita.” Can business merge with spiritual ideas? Pitagorsky remarks, “while perfecting the outer work, important inner work is done, and awakening takes place. This is a book then, for people interested in both managing projects and finding a way to reach their highest potential.” Well, as we know, the Church combined money and spirituality for thousands of years, much to the detriment of millions. Could Zen Buddhism move corporate culture towards environmentalism, justice and philanthropy and represent a nudge away from exploitation? Pitagorsky explains that Zen is about 'blowing the mind' out of its normal view. “It uses techniques like koans, Zen arts, dialectical argument, self enquiry, and meditation to help the practitioner go beyond his intellect to experience things in an unfiltered way." Some of us are cynical, but Pitagorsky does write in an interesting way. And it does merge with the intent of Graphic Recording.
The book is to describe techniques for linking the “essential principles and techniques of managing projects to a 'wisdom' approach for working with complex, people-based activities.” Well, choosing a Graphic Recorder is a wise choice, so I'm still reading. To Pitagorsky, a Zen-based project management approach is a tool for “continuously improving yourself, your projects, the way you work.”
Pitagorsky wants to improve your not only your serenity, but your project management performance. "The Zen approach is about being able to step back without disengaging from the current situation- being simultaneously dispassionately objective and passionate.” Addressing “the Zen of estimating,” he describes how to cope with feeling “reactive in the face of negative emotions” and avoid “burn out, interpersonal strife, client relationship, and credibility problems.” These are examples of Project Management "suffering." This is interesting because Graphic Recording can be a solution that allows whole groups to step back and let go of conflict. So to me the two can compliment each other and merge. Remarks the author, “clinging to what cannot be achieved is a cause of suffering.” My favourite part, “Thinking about the negative is not negative thinking,” as “detailed risk analysis is part of detailed estimation.” Zen Buddhist techniques applied to project management assist directors in acquiring “courage, realism, and balance.”
Composed while he was completing a doctorate, the book is “based on over 20,000 project management hours, and is “written for executives and board members in the private and public sectors, project managers and program leaders, consultants, educators, association leaders.” He includes diagrams and recommends a “strategy map” to “avoid sub-optimal results,” something I like because it is a visual key. Pitagorsky counsels revision, evaluation and communication with senior management. To do this, he offers The Three C’s: Courage, (being candid, honest, saying what needs to be said) Confidence, and Change. For executives, he promotes the three A’s; “Ask, three levels of listening, Acknowledge, Activate.” The book, which contains lively case studies and interviews as well as relevant research, closes with an annotated bibliography, almost a small book review in itself of other resources the author finds worth your while. I found this a helpful and interesting read, written by a project manager with a proven success record and an intriguing twist on the usual corporate culture doctrine. Bridging a spiritual practice with pragmatic professionalism is, according to Pitagorsky, an approach worth meditating about.