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A project sponsor’s impact on
practice-based learning within projects
Article highlight
Achieving a deeper understanding of project sponsor (PS) behaviour requires studies on the interaction of the PS with singular project phenomenon rather than pursue a multi-focused, broad brushed or shallow analysis. Through exploring the interface and the interactions between them, one can better understand the reciprocating impacts experienced and take action to achieve an accumulated benefit in a project.
What does the paper cover?
This paper seeks to advance a deeper understanding of a project sponsor’s impact on practice-based learning activity within a project, representing a first-case examination of the interface between a sponsor and practice-based learning phenomenon within projects.
The paper first explains the theoretical framework informing the study, before outlining the methodological approach engaged and detailing the case study examined. The findings argue for the project sponsor role to be acknowledged as dynamic and interactive, and a dramatic influence on project practice-based learning.
Methodology
The outcomes of this study come from a qualitative and longitudinal participative action research case study – a heavy industrial operation that processes coal into coke for use in the local blast furnace or for export. Over a period of 18 months, rich empirical data concerning the project participants and the sponsor and their behaviours in and around the project team was collected. This data was then triangulated to identify and confirm a set of emergent general themes.
Research findings
PS behaviour was a profound and multi-layered influence on the practice-based learning processes and activities of the project team and its members. This influence can be dissected and articulated as six impacts, which are:
- The number and quality of verbal exchanges and reflections
The project team participants were still behaving as ‘adaptors’ rather than ‘innovators’ for their learning activities – despite the PS wanting them to more readily move into that innovator role. - The active/passive/nil engagement of members
The PS behaviours and actions spurned mixed outputs in relation to participants’ levels of engagement to learn in the team. - A confusion about processes and roles
Decisions and actions by the PS created uncertainty and confusion for the team about what to do, how to do it and by when. - Restrained learning actions
Project team members often demonstrated that they felt powerless in their leadership of the case study project. - Provision of stimulus, structures and opportunities to learn
The PS demonstrated a high propensity to provide the stimulant conditions for the team to learn. - Quality and quantity of project boundary information flow
The PS was instrumental in being a source and filter of project context information and process guidance, as well as encouraging the team members into networking beyond the immediate team.
Conclusions
There are three clear conclusions to the study:
- The PS role can be clearly dynamic and influential throughout a project life cycle and a sponsor’s project interactions are not necessarily just based on rational and ‘distanced to the project detail’ considerations.
- The PS role can dramatically impact situated learning activity in a project team, so the PS needs to be constantly reflective about and actively adaptable with their behavioural actions to positively foster situated learning.
- Through attempting to effectively and systematically foster situated learning development, the PS implicitly acts as an agent for organisational learning development.
Significance of the research
Project management research and practice have become increasingly dynamic and diversely focused, which reflects the continuing development and maturation of the project management field. Accordingly, one aspect of project management research that’s gained significant impetus involves research associated with social and contextual phenomena affecting projects, project team members and project organisations.
One aspect of project management that had been more generally perceived as ‘peripheral’ to the main game was the functioning or role of the PS. Consequently, the PS function needs to be more deeply understood, and through attaining such knowledge PSs may become more informatively and more appropriately engaged with projects.