Understanding the needs and expectations of stakeholders in your client’s project can only make your job easier. Here’s a look at two tools and a series of questions you can ask to help you gather crucial stakeholder information.
Understanding the needs, expectations, and potential issues of project stakeholders is crucial to the success of any project. The work you do before a project begins to familiarize yourself with these stakeholders or anticipate any problems that their issues might create for your project can make or break your efforts.
Two tools that you can use to help analyze stakeholders and ensure their full participation in your project are a Stakeholder Assessment Map (SAM) and a Stakeholder Reporting Matrix (SRM). These tools can help you reach your stakeholders through a process of three Ps:
In this article, we’ll talk about the second step, preparation, and understanding the questions you should be asking your shareholders and the information you’ll need to collect from them.
This is the second of three articles that examines ways to work best with project stakeholders. The first article discussed the stakeholder analysis process and the role of the Stakeholder Assessment Map and the Stakeholder Reporting Matrix. The final article will suggest the best ways to use the information you’ve gleaned from the stakeholder analysis.
Data collection for the Stakeholder Assessment Map
The information contained in the SAM, shown in
Figure A, provides you with a detailed understanding of your stakeholders so that you can anticipate their impact on your project.
To properly build your map, you will first need to identify who can give you information on key stakeholders. Potential sources of this information may include:
| Figure A |
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| A Stakeholder Assessment Map |
Learn about stakeholders by asking these questions
One of the most efficient ways to learn about your stakeholders is by asking them pointed questions that involve different aspects of the project. To truly get a well-rounded view of your stakeholders needs and expectations, you should make sure your questions cover the “four Is”: Figure out who they are (Identification), how the project affects them (Interest), why their roles are important to the project (Influence), and how the stakeholder will affect the project (Impact). Below are some specific questions you can ask to begin your stakeholder analysis.
You want to gain as much information as you can about the stakeholders during the feasibility and planning phases. Gathering this information in the beginning of a project will help you to develop a realistic plan that key stakeholders will buy into early on.
You will need to update this information as you implement the project, but the majority of this data collection is done in the very early stages.
Data collection for the Stakeholder Reporting Matrix
I’ve found that the best time to draft the SRM, as shown in Figure B, is after you finish the SAM.However, you want to have your SRM ready by the time the project start-up meeting occurs so that you and the client can review and agree upon the reporting methods.
| Figure B |
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| Stakeholder Reporting Matrix |
To begin building my SRM, I first make some general assumptions about how I can best communicate with my stakeholders based on my understanding of the different types of stakeholders and their roles in the project. Figure C shows the general framework I use to define the reporting needs of each type of stakeholder:
| Figure C |
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| Stakeholder framework |
Keep in mind that the culture of the organization might influence the reporting mechanisms you should use. Here are some questions you can ask yourself that may help you decide which mechanism is the best fit:
Do you have methods for reaching your stakeholders that you think would benefit other TechRepublic members? Share them with us, and we’ll feature them in upcoming articles, or post your comments in a discussion.