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IT implementation has been, and remains, one of the great enablers of the globalizing economy. IT systems such as Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) or Supply Chain Management (SCM) pose increasing challenges commensurate with the complexity of global business; they are tools necessary or participating in a more complex business world, but also disruptive when not implemented well. One of the major issues we see in IT implementation failure is that the rapid growth of a globalized knowledge economy has outpaced the training and instructional design necessary to have a workforce adequately prepared to tackle new, complex challenges. Particularly for Project Managers (PMs) in IT, rapidly changing objectives, competitive environments and budgetary needs require a kind of adaptive flexibility that is difficult to guarantee with traditional training and professional development approaches. Project leads can easily lose sight of the uncertainty inherent in IT implementation, often underestimating the necessary time, money, and resources or even the real indicators of success that need to monitor, such as better outcomes for the business implementing the technology.
The experiences of effective project managers show that developing the needed adaptive flexibility among PMs of IT implementations – at both the individual and organization level – involves trial and error and learning through failure in complex situations. Yet, traditional classroom or workshop style instructional methods are not designed this way. Traditional methods often fail to sufficiently account for how people develop real expertise and tend to focus on specific steps, procedures, and skills instead of allowing learners to experience decision-making in an exploratory, outcomes-driven environment that helps develop higher-level skills such as agility and naturalistic decision making. Furthermore, traditional methods fail to sufficiently take advantage of emerging technologies that can enable a more immersive, exploratory learning experience to accelerate skills development among workers dealing with complex challenges.
In this paper we describe a 2-day exercise, called the Project Management Rehearsal Studio (PMRS), designed to provide an immersive learning experience for Project Managers at IBM using a Virtual Worlds technology. The exercise was designed to replicate a client engagement, and targeted complexities PMs face in a rapidly changing global knowledge economy. Specifically, it enabled users to practice the high level skills involved in IT implementation through iteratively rehearsing the implementation of enterprise business IT systems – in this case ERP. Furthermore, the experience targeted specific deficits in traditional instructional design methods among learners in complex, volatile environments. Lastly, virtual world technologies have allowed for a new generation of instructional design. Through this pilot project, we were able to reveal both the challenges and opportunities afforded by emerging virtual worlds’ technologies.
Our goal for this paper is to illuminate key points of immersive simulation and rehearsal design that may be able to narrow the gulf between the kinds of skills required in the global knowledge economy and the instructional methods available to professionals in the field.