In Managing Without Authority, a course in the Stanford Advanced Project Management
program, you learn skills that top-rated problem solvers employ to achieve project, program and portfolio success.
How do you succeed when you have a tough project, tougher customers, a nearly impossible deadline...plus valuable team members who are being given other priorities, others who aren’t delivering as agreed, functional managers who aren’t meeting key resource commitments... everything but the authority to get people to do what needs to be done?
This highly interactive course demonstrates effective techniques - including how to influence decisions, gain commitments, hold people accountable, and address performance problems - and provides plenty of practice in using them.
Concepts and skills are reinforced through filmed enactments demonstrating both how and how not to handle difficult situations. Group discussions, role rehearsals, and simulations also give participants hands-on experience in applying new approaches to problems faced every day on the job. The course teaches skills that top-rated problem solvers employ to achieve personal and project or program success. It does not focus on technical project management, financial management, or product management techniques. This course is an elective in the Stanford APM curriculum.
Managing Without Authority can be taken on campus at Stanford University, onsite at your organization, through synchronous live virtual advanced project management courses, or via streaming video in our online Stanford Advanced Project Management program.
As a result of Managing Without Authority, the organization benefits from:
After completing Managing Without Authority, you will be able to:
Managing Without Authority will benefit project, program, and portfolio managers, as well as functional managers, senior-level managers, human resource professionals, organizational development professionals, and company executives - everyone who must influence others to perform for success.
Prerequisites. This course has no prerequisites.
Course Introduction
Reading the Political Terrain
Influence Strategies
Influence Tactics Overview
Bringing up problems: What can go wrong
Solving Motivation Problems
Solving Ability Problems
Solving Emergent Problems
Putting Strategies and Tactics to Work
Read more about how to get started with the Stanford Advanced Project Management program for an individual, or bring Managing Without Authority, as well as any of our corporate learning solutions, to your organization. Please contact us today to learn more.