About Wikis
Project managers can benefit from a powerful web service called wiki. Wiki, which means quick in Hawaiian, is simply a website that allows people to edit its contents. One common wiki application is the free internet encyclopedia, Wikipedia.
Unlike traditional static web pages, that can only be read, a wiki can be readily accessed by everyone, everywhere and they can add, edit, delete, append and update content.
How to Use a Project Wiki
Project managers can utilize this tool to transform the project office into a live and ubiquitous environment.
A project wiki can facilitate the following tasks:
- Project meeting agendas and minutes
- Collaboration on project documentation
- Solicit and keep track of ideas
- Project dashboard (project vital signs)
- Calendars
- Project photo albums
- To-Do lists
- Establish a project office intranet
Project Transformation
To demonstrate the power of wikis, a project manager can post to the wiki a proposed meeting agenda, inviting direct input from team members, thus saving tedious e-mail messages and phone calls or preliminary meetings. Once the meeting is conducted, proposed minutes are posted for input and comments, almost eliminating the need for a PM meeting scribe. In one case, this resulted in reducing e-mail traffic volume by 75%, and slashed meeting time in half, thanks to group input and collaboration.
The table shows a comparison between traditional PM emphasis and the one offered by the wiki collaborative environment:
Traditional PM Emphasis
|
Project Wiki Emphasis
|
Centralization
|
Decentralization
|
Authoritarian
|
Collaborative
|
Hierarchy Organization
|
Flat Organization
|
Project Manager
|
Project Team
|
Permission Required
|
Empowerment
|
Central Files
|
Project Intranet File Cabinet
|
Hard Copy Documents
|
Documented Digital Media
|
Limited/Restricted Access
|
Organized/Unlimited Access
|
Local Access
|
Global/Live Access
|
Rigid PM Policies
|
Flexible/Adaptable Policies
|
Limited Communication
|
Unlimited Communication
|
We should stop viewing projects as merely an opportunity for management authority but rather model them and interact with them as empowered teams in a live and realistic view.
The proposed transformation is shown in the following figures[1]:
Authoratative Model - Traditional Team
|
Collaborative Model - Empowered Team
|
-> Find more Information here: Project Management Wiki! Everything, Everywhere and Everybody’s Project By Dr. Kifah Jayyousi
A Picture says more than 1000 words - Wiki collaboration[2]
-> Further Information:
- wikinomics.com by Anthony D. Williams
- Interesting Article regarding file-oriented and document-based vs. web 2.0 and wikis.
- ↑ Project Management Wiki! Everything, Everywhere and Everybody’s Project By Dr. Kifah Jayyousi
- ↑ wikinomics.com by Anthony D. Williams