1 / 10

A $20 Million Point Of View

The lesson seems to be that engineers who aspire to higher level management have to recognise that there is a serious lack in their education.

engeduaust
Download Presentation

A $20 Million Point Of View

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A $20 Million Point of View“Those Who Aspire Need To Go Beyond Engineering”

  2. By almost any measure, John Grill is one of the most successful engineers in Australia. But he is by no means an unquestioning supporter of the profession. “I'm a bit of a contrarian” he says. He does not, for instance, think engineers have any special claim to leadership roles in engineering companies. In fact, he says engineers do not have an especially good record in managing projects and have overseen some egregious examples of cost and time overruns. www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  3. A$20MillionPointOfView www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  4. His own track record gives him the right to make such claims. In 1971, Grill joined Smith, de Kantzow and Wholohan. In 1976, he reformed this entity as Wholohan Grill and Partners and established it as a small but growing consultancy. In 1987, the company acquired the Australian interests of Worley Engineering. The merged company was floated on the ASX in 2002. By this time it was employing 3000 people in 30 offices globally. In 2004, Worley acquired Canadian company, Parsons E&C, and since then has traded as WorleyParsons. Grill left the company in 2012, having it up to deliver more than $7 billion in business in 2013. www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  5. Grill’s observation is that the big issues that de-rail large engineering projects are often not especially technical in nature. He argues that they often have to do with managing the divergent interests of a multitude of stakeholders. “The development of coal seam methane resources in NSW is a classic example of the types of projects I'm talking about. The technical issues are complex, but well understood. They can be solved. But managing the various stakeholders – the politicians, the farmers, the various environmental groups – all of which have a different viewpoint, is extremely complex, and there is nothing in an engineer's training that makes him especially good at managing it.” www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  6. ProjectManagement CostControl & Scheduling www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  7. The lesson seems to be that engineers who aspire to higher level management have to recognise that there is a serious lack in their education, and do something about it, he says. In particular, engineers need to educate themselves in project or business management. “Project management used to be about cost control and scheduling, but you need much more than that to be successful today,” Grill says. www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  8. He was sufficiently concerned about the dearth of project management skills in engineering to establish the John Grill Centre for Project Leadership at Sydney University with a personal donation of $20 million in October 2012. “Mega-projects worth tens of billions of dollars are the new face of the global economy, but there is a worldwide lack of the leadership skills required to manage these projects,” Professor Tyrone Carlin, co-dean of the university's Business School, says. www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  9. Grill also says Australia's engineers are consistently of very high quality. He believes that while WorleyParsons does 85% of its business outside Australia, hiring engineers locally is worthwhile. Good they may be, but, he cautions that Australian engineers are also expensive. “It's relatively easy to send detailed engineering work overseas. It's impossible to do project management remotely,” Grill says. “The result is that people who want to make a career out of technical engineering find themselves in competition with people overseas, who charge half as much.” www.eeaust.com.au | +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

  10. www.eeaust.com.au| +61 3 9274 9600 | info@eeaust.com.au

More Related