Project Management Framework
Closure - Conducting a Lessons Learned Exercise
Definition
A lessons learned exercise is the process of gathering, documenting and analyzing feedback on events that happened during a project that may be beneficial to others in the future.
Why is this important?
Lessons learned exercises give members a chance to reflect on events and activities during the project and helps bring closure to the project.
It provides an opportunity for team members, sponsors and stakeholders to talk about:
- Successes that happened during or because of the project.
- Unintended outcomes that happened during or because of the project.
- Other things that, in retrospect, might have been better handled if done differently.
- Recommendations to others who might be involved in future projects of a similar type.
The point of the exercise is to recognize and document lessons so that the future project efforts of others do more of the successful things and less of the unsuccessful things encountered by this project team.
How to do it well
- Include the project manager, the project team and the key stakeholders in the lessons learned exercise.
- Conduct the wrap-up lessons learned exercise soon after the project ends to get the most effective input from people.
- Recruit a lessons learned facilitator who is not closely connected to the project.
- Prepare for the exercise by meeting with the project manager.
- Review project material such as previously gathered lessons learned material and the final Quality Assurance report to get a sense of project issues and successes.
- Conduct the session in a comfortable setting.
- Set ground rules and timelines for discussion.
- Concentrate on obtaining information in four general areas:
- What went well?
- What didn't go well or had unintended consequences?
- If you had it all to do over again, what would you do differently?
- What recommendations would you make to others doing similar projects?
- Focus on behaviors or tactics that were successful or problematic, rather than people who were successful or problematic.
- Guard against a bias towards negative or positive comments.
- Ask prompting questions to get balanced input.
- Accept input after the session from individuals who prefer to remain anonymous.
- Provide the project manager with a complete, unedited listing of input from the lessons learned exercise.
- Analyze the raw material for future use.
- Document lessons learned in a positive way that promotes their use as best practices.
- Include lessons learned documentation in the Post Implementation Review for the project.
Checklists