1 / 30

Introduction

Engineering. Technology. Management. Tracking the Constant of Change. Risk. Systems Engineering. Economics. History. Management. Legal Aspects. Society. Supply Chain. Logistics. Technical Information. Multidiscipline Design. Product Development. Introduction.

boone
Download Presentation

Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development Introduction Management Perspectives on Workforce Development Dr. Jim Murray, Management TC

  2. Management Topics • What is managements role in workforce development? • The evolution of the PM Discipline • Rationale for succession management • Impacts of succession management • Use of Acceleration pools • Evolving management and Leadership Characteristics • PM Methodologies – flexible and Simultaneous • PM Supporting processes • PM Tools • A few PM Issues – to consider • Final thoughts about - Management traps

  3. The evolution of the PM Discipline • PM Discipline a few (of many) driving issues: • Expanding scope to address larger & more integrated solutions • Attempting to move from experiential to process orientation • Dealing with more subcontracting and teaming • Dealing with greater collaboration at all levels • Striving for more integration • Facing a customer base of reduced experience • More emphasis on lifecycle costs • More visibility on “hiccups” • More rapid technology integration requirements

  4. Rationale for Succession Management • Provide a source of in house replacements for leadership positions • Retain key talent • Prepare individuals for future challenges • Align personnel resources with new organizational directions • Avoid lost productivity while a person is learning a job • Monitor and attain diversity goals • Increase stock value: investment analysts are becoming concerned with orgs. Processes for filling positions • Increase the chance of survival: The alternative might be a decline or collapse Source: Grow Your Own Leaders, W. Byham, 2002

  5. Impacts of Succession Management

  6. Use of Acceleration Pools as a source of talent • Acceleration pools provide proven and solid foundation for talent assessment • Company size will indicate the number of pools needed • Companies call these: • Program management Development Programs • Leadership Development Programs • Etc…

  7. Made all major decisions. Solved problems for the team; acted as the expert Controlled the workflow; was responsible for work group results Gave the answers; played the expert Laid down the rules Shared responsibility with team members. Helps team solve problems. Promotes self management and responsibility as well as ownership of the task or process Asks the right questions; allows direct reports to be the experts Articulates and rallies the troops around a vision and set of values Evolving Management and Leadership Characteristics

  8. Valued Unanimity/conformity Sought to eliminate conflict Tended to be reactive; resist change Focused on tasks, products and technical Skills Uses linear and analytic thinking Values diverse perspectives Sees conflict as an opportunity for synergy and enriched decision making Is proactive; initiates change. Embraces change as necessary for survival Focuses on processes and people Uses nonlinear, holistic thinking ( systems). Evolving Management (continued)

  9. Sought to achieve functional specialized expertise Was concerned about own area of responsibility Was fiercely competitive Was concerned only with domestic operations Thought of people as interchangeable resources Put organization’s needs before people’s needs Seeks to achieve cross- functional and cross cultural expertise Is concerned about the total organization Is fiercely competitive but must partner with competitors, vendors Thinks on a larger scale Thinks of people as an organization's most valuable resource (hard to replace) Works a balance between organization’s needs and people’s needs Evolving Management (continued)

  10. PM Methodologies - Flexible and Simultaneous • Waterfall • Spiral • Incremental Spiral • Agile Source: The Economist Magazine December 13th, 2003 • Built around a core team • Rapid delivery ~ 2 wks • Deliver what effects the product • Customer integrated with the team • True Collaboration • Other - yet to defined or unique to an organization

  11. PM Supporting processes (Continued) • PM supporting processes • “What gets measured gets done” • Six Sigma metrics and measures • Design for Six Sigma (DFSS) • Total System of Systems Lifecycle perspectives • Design to Cost / CAIV • Lean PM applied to engineering & manufacturing

  12. PM Tools • PM Tools • “The internet generation +” • Integrated processes are • commonplace and expected • Integrated Management Framework • Digital Dashboards • Component model delivery • Model Based (everything!!) • UML – Unified Modeling Language • Price / CAIV Models • Collaborative models • Logistical Models Knowledge bases are used for optimization.

  13. A few PM Issues – to consider • The generational characteristics need to be considered X, Y and Z • The Z generation has been characterized as: “ a Generation of followers” • The ability to work in a group will • A broader set of skills in PM and technical disciplines will be required • Program architecture(s) and nurture its/their evolution • Proactive risk management • System complexity demands it! • Development of Tactical execution and strategic thinking skills are essential

  14. Final thoughts about - Management Traps • Thinking that having a good succession management system will lead to success • Assuming short-term issues are more important than succession management • Thinking that management knows who all the high potential people are. • Considering only individuals that have been personally observed • Choosing people who could handle last years problem.

  15. Final thoughts about - Management Traps • Choosing a pool of individuals that mirror the CEO • Not getting to know the people in the acceleration pool • Stopping all recruiting and development of high potentials during a business downturn • Not letting people learn from their mistakes • Being patient

  16. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development What will U.S. society look like in 2025 ? Mr. Timothy Howard, Society & Aerospace TC

  17. Society Potential topics - A few issues to consider • What will our society be like in 2025 • What are our emerging societal needs • How will it evolve • What will motivate a potential workforce • What new societal incentives exist • New incentives that may need to be provided • Will the current segregation between Aero and Space still exist? • What comes after the X, Y, Z generations? • New national and world wide priorities?

  18. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development The U.S. Economic model for 2025 & the role of aerospace Mr. Michael Leon, Economics TC

  19. Economic Potential topics - A few issues to consider • Will economics introduce a new “reality” for the 2025 generation? • Systems of Systems Concepts • Airframes lasting longer • Net centric operations • DoD and NATO procurement reform • Reductions in Research and Development • Regional Blocks, Countries - US, EU, Russia, China? • Company • Reduction in new airframe development • More integration and component upgrades • New methods of evolving & cost justifying systems

  20. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development Systems Engineering in the U.S. Aerospace business in 2025 Dr. John C. HSU, Systems Engineering TC

  21. Systems Engineering Potential topics - A few issues to consider • Systems Engineering requires a new set of processes and techniques for employment, production and workforce management • New Systems Perspectives for Systems of Systems • More distributed and diverse teams • More sophisticated modeling and performance • Greater emphasis on Design to Value (DTV) • Other

  22. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development Retaining and Recruiting the workforce for 2025 Ms. Nicole Smith, Young Professionals, AIAA

  23. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development Educating the workforce of 2025 Lisa Bacon, AIAA Staff Liaison

  24. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development Will we still be talking about  Knowledge Management in 2025? Mr. Gerald Steeman, Technical Information TC

  25. Knowledge Management Potential topics - A few issues to consider • How will knowledge management impact the workforce in 2025? • What are realistic expectation to have for knowledge management? • Is it a repository of corporate knowledge? • How will it be employed and evolve? • What are some of the near term opportunities? • How may concepts be employed to get maximum value? • What may be the expectations of the next generation? • Will governments take a different approach from industry? A partnership? • Is the Aerospace industry in a better or worse position than other industries for addressing the need of the future? • Are there other industries that will be precursors?

  26. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development What will AIAA look like in 2025 and beyond ? Ms. Julie Albertson, AIAA VP Member Services

  27. AIAA Member Services - A few issues to consider • Member Services Strategic plan aspects • Counseling • Education • Coordination • Technology awareness • Government initiatives • …

  28. Engineering Technology Management Tracking the Constant of Change Risk Systems Engineering Economics History Management Legal Aspects Society Supply Chain Logistics Technical Information Multidiscipline Design Product Development Summary of issues for 2025 Dr. Robert Winn, VP TAC AIAA

  29. Perspectives • Issues for the AIAA Strategic perspective • Workforce development across the industry • A partnership: Governments, Companies, Associations, Individuals

  30. Engineering & Technology Management Group Questions on this Session?

More Related