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Der Kapazitätsquadrant: Vier Schlüssel zur verbesserten Ressourcenplanung

Veröffentlicht Von Jerry Manas

Organizations often cite resource management as their most overwhelming challenge. Despite the best-laid plans, they just can’t get a handle on getting the right people available at the right time. Because of this, they sometimes resist taking on new projects and products for fear of the ability to deliver. Or worse, they take on unlimited demand, managing as if they have infinite capacity. Improved resource planning seems impossible.

These organizations need a clear picture of resource availability to confidently take on new projects and react to sudden market opportunities. Otherwise, valuable resources are wasted or misused.

While there’s no silver bullet for capacity planning and resource management, there are four distinct dynamics that can greatly improve success and help an organization become proactive instead of reactive. Together, these dynamics make up what we can call The Capacity Quadrant. The four components that make up this framework are:

  • Visibility: This includes improving visibility across three lenses, those of Demand, Capacity, and finally, the System lens (i.e., using a systems thinking approach to identify the many variables that can impact resource workload, efficiency, and productivity).
  • Prioritization: This requires understanding organizational goals and priorities, creating flexible scoring mechanisms that can encompass all discretionary work (not just large projects), and awareness of the linkages between projects and products on the roadmap.
  • Optimization: Here you can maximize your resources by focusing them on the most critical work; limiting the volume of primary demand objectives; tightening the resources on secondary objectives; and addressing efficiency issues identified during the whole system analysis.
  • Iteration: This involves planning capacity and demand at varying levels of detail at different points in the planning horizon. Early on, top-down high level plans are appropriate, with more detailed planning occurring as the work approaches. The two views should be reconciled during each planning iteration.

In essence, by understanding the four key dynamics that impact capacity planning, organizations can demystify resource management, make more informed decisions, and maximize their resources toward high value activities.

Stay tuned for an upcoming white paper on this topic, where I’ll be exploring the Capacity Quadrant in more detail.

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Geschrieben von Jerry Manas

Jerry Manas ist ein internationaler Bestsellerautor, Redner und Berater. Er wird häufig von führenden Stimmen in der Geschäftswelt zitiert, darunter der legendäre Management-Guru Tom Peters ("In Search of Excellence"), der sich häufig auf Manas' Bestseller Napoleon on Project Management bezieht, weil er darin Einsichten über Einfachheit und Charakter findet, und Pat Williams, Senior VP der Orlando Magic, der Manas' Buch Managing the Gray Areas "einen neuen Weg für Führungskräfte" nennt. Jerrys neuestes Buch ist The Resource Management and Capacity Planning Handbook (McGraw-Hill), das Judith E. Glaser, die bekannte Autorin von Conversational Intelligence, als "das erste Buch, das sich dem widmet, was im Wesentlichen der Antrieb von Organisationen ist - dem effektiven Einsatz ihrer Mitarbeiter für ihre wichtigsten Aktivitäten" anpreist. Mit seinem Beratungsunternehmen The Marengo Group hilft Jerry seinen Kunden, die Personalressourcen ihres Unternehmens zu maximieren, was zu einer größeren Innovationsfähigkeit, einer wertorientierten Belegschaft und einer besseren Anpassungsfähigkeit an Veränderungen führt. Er ist ein beliebter Redner bei Veranstaltungen auf der ganzen Welt und spricht über Lehren aus der Geschichte, Ressourcenplanung, organisatorischen Wandel und andere Themen. Jerrys Arbeit wurde in einer Vielzahl von Publikationen hervorgehoben, darunter der Houston Chronicle, Chicago Sun Times, National Post, Globe and Mail, Huffington Post und andere.