When I was young, a good friend made a prediction to encourage me about finding a job: “you’ll find something that will fit you like a glove”.
That statement became true, once project management found me and I chose to become a project manager.
I want to be a project manager when I grow up
When looking at project management as a profession, little used to be known about what a project manager does and what the typical work day of a project manager looks like. Children never use to say: “I want to be a project manager when I grow up.” Refer to an earlier article about “Take Project Management out of the Box”.
Where it all started
Years ago I started as a project administrator. Then I moved into IT support and I was always chosen to manage all the projects in our division. This is something I enjoyed because it was a natural fit.
As a project manager I’m in the fortunate position to be doing something that suits my abilities and temperament and which complements my core talents and skills. I enjoy the variation provided by being involved in various different projects and teams. It brings excitement when starting something new, as well as satisfaction when bringing a project to successful completion and having formed lasting relationships with the team members.
Being a strong communicator and a person who cares about people, project management has become my destined career where I feel comfortable and I believe that I am making a difference.
I was blessed with the addition of 3 beautiful children that enriched my life to the point that I actually gave up my full-time, permanent position and started to work in contract project management which provided more flexibility to work part-time and still continue with a professional career.
A Mature Profession
Today project managers are making a difference in every aspect of society whether it’s in IT, financial sector, retail, engineering, mining, welfare organisations or public sector and plenty of other industries. A thriving industry in itself has developed around the project management profession with companies providing products, software, training, recruitment and consulting; all with the main objective of making projects more successful in terms of how well they are managed and to provide the outcome and benefits as intended. Project management as a profession has matured.
In recent years young people are actually considering project management as a career with plenty of University and online training being available and offering a relatively well mapped out career path that offers growth opportunities and good compensation.
Blogging as my contribution
As part of my mission to give something back to my community, I have been blogging on Virtual Project Consulting about project management best practices, processes and tools for the past 4,5 years. I reach out to existing and aspiring project managers while offering a hub of recommended resources.
Let’s continue to develop, grow and contribute as this is how we find meaning and where we can continue to make a difference where we are.
P.S. This post is published as part of a first ever project management-related global blogging initiative to publish a post on a common theme at exactly the same time. Over 70 bloggers from Australia, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, France, Italy, Mexico, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, UK and the USA have committed to make a blogging contribution and the fruit of their labour is now available all over the web. The complete list of all participating blogs is here so please go and check them out!
About Linky van der Merwe: Linky is the Founder of Virtual Project Consulting. Her mission is to provide project management best practices and to recommend resources to aspiring and existing project managers. A certified project management professional (PMP) with more than 14 years project management experience and a track record of more than 40 successful projects. She is currently working for Microsoft Consulting Services, South Africa.
Thank you for genuinely sharing what project management means, your path, and your continued contributions to the body of knowledge and sharing.
This #pmFlashBlog is a great way to learn from project managers across the world.
Regards,
Toby
Thanks for sharing your personal learning curve as a PM.
Hi Linky, thanks for taking part in the #PMFlashBlog initiative.
As I make my way through all contributing posts I attempt to identify and single out a key sentence, paragraph or phrase that catches my eye and use as a ‘take away’ from that post.
In your post, the statement I found most appealing is the one below:
“It brings excitement when starting something new, as well as satisfaction when bringing a project to successful completion and having formed lasting relationships with the team members.”
I share your view and excitement as I too have the same sort of feelings towards the project I run.
Thanks again, Shim.
Hi Shim, thanks for stopping by and thanks for initiating the #flashblog initiative. It was much fun to be part of this and I’m still enjoying the read on various PM blogs. One actually learns much from all the different perspectives on the same topic.
I didn’t grow up wanting to be a PM, but I’m glad I ended up where I did. These days it seems as if there are many more opportunities for people to find out about project management prior to entering the job market, through university and college courses, which is excellent, especially given PMI’s predicted talent gap.
Hi Elizabeth, thanks for stopping by. I agree with you and I wish more people who have the right mix of personality traits and natural abilities and skills would consider project management as a professional career.