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Feedback from the PMI Maine (Nov 09)
"Great job! Let me know about cost/scope for ahalf or full day workshop next Fall.”
Steve MacIsaac, PMI Event Director
Feedback from the DAMA conference (Nov 09)
Churchill’s Adaptive Enterprise Keynote
"Brilliant, interesting and very imaginative. Would have been good later in the day to break up drier content.”
“As a “scrum” advocate – completely aligned to the agile ideas – superbly well researched and delivered material and compelling story. Thank you Mark.”
“Surprisingly relevant.”
Titanic Session
“Very nice analogy, great lecture.”
“Very interesting presentation with some real world takeaways.“
“Key lessons from history well drawn out.”
“Interesting parallels to today’s project management.”
“A great presentation on project problems.”
“Very valid points for today and tomorrow taken from history.”
Feedback from the IPMA Day UK (Nov 09)
“Mark was the opening key note speaker for the PMI UK IPM day in November 09, which I chaired. What a fascinating talk we had around the way the Titanic project was brought together the pitfalls and decisions that were made that led to that fateful iceberg. Bringing history to life and relating it to the issues of project management today, thoroughly enjoyed and recommended.” Patrick Bird , Director , InterActive Performance Management Ltd
Feedback from the BCS Institute PROMS-G (Teeside, UK) (Nov 09)
“I’m sure you’ve learnt, your [Titanic] talk was much appreciated. My personal thanks to you also.” Alan Shaw, Chairman, BCS Institute Teeside
Feedback from the BCS Institute PROMS-G (Manchester, UK) (Nov 09)
“After reading many of Mark's articles in Project Manager Today and Gantthead.com I invited Mark to speak at the BCS Chartered Institute for IT (Manchester, UK). He was and is a fantastic, energetic speaker who appears to seamlessly adapt to how to present his knowledge using the Titantic series. I have no doubts about the interest he portrays in his presentations and the engagement of his audience and would recommend anyone to listen and read Mark's works. Thanks you, keep up the good work and hopefully see you again in 2010.” December 4, 2009
Andy Jordan MBCS CITP, Senior IT Consultant, Strategic Systems Solutions
“Everyone I've spoken to about your talk enjoyed it and found the historical perspective very relevant and informative. Once again thank you for giving such an interesting talk to the Branch.” Andrew Mohan, Chairman, BCS Manchester Branch.
Feedback from the BCS Institute PROMS-G (London, UK) (Nov 09)
“Well presented and authoritative, and developed the analogy very well with lots of emphasis on IT projects and issues.”
“Very interesting presentation. Not enough time to fully explore all aspects though!”
“Enjoyed the approach taken to discuss about the issue.”
“A very interesting way of looking at project management, really enjoyable. I would have never thought of analysing the sinking of the Titanic in the way which Mark did.”
“Most of these comments up were very positive. Many thanks for your support. We look forward to seeing you next time you are over.”
David Reynolds, Director, Project Management Specialist Group (PROMS-G)
Feedback from the PMI World Wide Congress (Oct 09)
"This was the best session I have attended. Timeframe should be two sessions. Awesome!!! Great presentation.”
“Great job organizing the material and historical content. The level of detail and slide content was just right for the topic at hand. The presenter was clear and engaging. I am glad I attended.”
Satisfaction ratings with session (5/5 and 4/5): 64.71% and 35.29%
Compared to the average of all the sessions (5/5 and 4/5): 28.42% and 42.09%
Feedback from the McIntire School of Commerce, University of Virginia (Sep 09)
"Thank you again for speaking at CMIT. Your presentation [Churchill] was extremely well-received as usual.”
Jenny Leslie, Assistant Director for Corporate Information & Communications
Feedback from the PMI South Alberta Chapter (May 09)
"Thanks again, it was a great session. We are excited to have you at our PDC [for a workshop].”
Laurel Sim, PMI President
Feedback from the PMI La Crosse Chapter (May 09)
"Mark, thanks for sharing your insightful views on project management at our chapter meeting. Your discussion of the actual Titanic construction project provided an interesting slant on assumptions. It was a valuable reminder that project managers must evaluate all elements of a project without bias if they are to achieve success." Ann Yates, PMI Secretary
Feedback from the PMI Huron Valley Chapter Ann Arbor (May 09)
“Mark's presentation on Risk Management as it applies to the construction of the Titanic was engaging and intriguing. The presentation was able to transport listeners back in time while providing a unique case study for a project discipline that is not always given enough sincere effort. Thank you!”
Pam Hughes, Director of Programs
“I attended the seminar you gave to our local PMI chapter (PMI-HVC) in Ann Arbor, Michigan, yesterday evening. I just wanted to say that I thought your presentation was outstanding. The lessons from the Titanic certainly remain relevant to us today. It was invaluable to hear your analysis – assessing and quantifying the risk, and evaluating the consequences – and to reflect on how we approach risk management on our current projects. I noticed on your last slide your offer to make your presentation available to us. Would it be possible to get a copy of your presentation? I would like to discuss it with my staff. Thank you.” Frederik Heineken. PMP
ProjectWorld Toronto 2009 Track Session Speaker Evaluation Results
For the Great Escape presentation. We asked 4 questions: rate the Topic, Speaker, Content, and Overall – all out of 5 (with 5 being excellent). First the big picture:
The total number of track sessions – 53
Topic – best - 5.00, average – 4.11, number over 4.0 – 32
Speaker –best – 5.00, average – 3.87, number over 3.87 – 25
Content – best - 4.83, the average –3.70, number over 3.70 - 28
Overall – best - 4.83, the average – 3.78, number over 3.78 – 31
and your scores: Topic: 4.5, Speaker: 4.05, Content: 4.35, Overall 4.25
Feedback from the PMI Thumb Chapter Michigan (May 09)
“Just a quick note to thank you on behalf of our PMI Chapter for the excellent “Great Escape” project analysis. It was very interesting and the initial feedback was very positive. On a side note I suppose if you used the same PMBOK analogy on “The Great Raid” this project was almost flawless. All prisoners were rescued from this prison camp with only one casualty. Perhaps I have just given you an idea for your next book.”
Edward Madden, PMP, Vice President Marketing
Feedback from the PMI New Hampshire Chapter (Mar 09) “Thank you and it was a pleasure having you present to the chapter. I would love to work out having you come back to present the Winston Churchill Lessons.” Courtney S. Henry, PMP, VP of Programs Feedback from the PMI Syracuse Chapter New York (Mar 09)
"Mark is a masterful educational craftsman who weaves lessons from history into a project management curriculum that is based on historical trials and errors; bringing to life theoretical principles of project management in a presentation that is more like a picture album or a documentary. His delivery aims at tying factual history to the principles of Project Management demonstrating the application of PMBOK processes in long used practices well before any effort to formalize them into current standards. And as he tells his stories through the eyes and ears of his data sources, real people who were part of that history, we are mesmerized. He leaves us with questions, challenges, and a yearning to learn more."
“Mark Kozak-Holland presented a fascinating seminar to our group. For thousands of years, the greatest teachers have used stories to effectively illustrate important concepts. Mark proves that history provides amazing stories with powerful lessons that provide value for today’s world. His speaking and writing styles are entertaining, educational and effective. He is always a crowd favorite.” Vince Socci, Professional Activities Chair, IEEE
“Mark: I just want you to know how much I appreciated your presentation to the PMI Central VA Chapter, and I'm well into the book as well – I already knew quite a bit about the history, but have thoroughly enjoyed the "PM" take on the subject -- great stuff! Thanks, and best wishes!
John K. Sheldon
History's perspective. A valuable checkEverything! Terrific presentation! Perhaps too much information but very informative pace a little too fast Lots of information, packed with content and explanations. Very good presentation. Engaging topic- slow start up but engaging as it progressed. Very fast paced and a lot of info. Chalk full of project management information, dripping with lessons. Great presentation. These leaders do motivate all leaders in the corporate world today. More of a lecture style This presentation was good but a hard act to follow from the Great Escape AWESOME! Feedback from PMI South Saskatchewan Conference (Apr 08) Our speaker (Mark Kozak-Holland) did a commendable job as he led us through the “Escape” story/project with an eye toward today’s PM methodologies, and how this story overlapped them. With images, and related facts he helped shed new light on what had only been a Hollywood treatment for most of us. We've doubled the attendance from last year's first meeting numbers. Jerry L. Behlau, VP of Programs
"Mark. It was a pleasure to meet you and hear you speak.” Harlan Kennedy, VP-Programs
Great Escape presentation (lunch keynote) written evaluation feedback:
+ Historical context analyzed into project management - excellent
+ Very interesting to blend history & PM - something we don't think to do too often
+ Very interesting presentation / very good topic - interesting case study
+ Organization of presentation / interesting example to which PM processes was applied /
+ FANTASTIC - WELL DONE
+ Informative - intense, put things into perspective
+ The topic was extremely interesting & was comparable to project mgt.
+ Mark was very knowledgeable about the subject matter & an excellent speaker
Average Rating out of 5 (with 5 being excellent): 3.9
Titanic Workshop written evaluation feedback:
+ Excellent idea/manner to teach PM concepts – risk
+ Fascinating material
+ I found the whole story fascinating
+ Great analogy
+ Perfect historical story to captivate interest!
+ Good relationship with real world concepts
+ Material and presentation were fascinating.
+ Great backdrop for a PM lesson.
+ Risk management is critical on projects, Analogy was interesting. History can teach us a lot.
+ Very educational.
+ This seminar exceeded my expectations.
+ Very interesting and informative.
Average Rating out of 5 (with 5 being excellent): 4.3
ProjectWorld Toronto 2008 Titanic Workshop Evaluation Results (Apr 08)
We asked 3 questions: rate the Overall, Instructor, Content – all out of 5 (with 5 being excellent). First the big picture:
Overall – best - 4.66 average - 4.18
Instructor – best - 5.00 average – 4.40
Content – best - 4.46 average – 4.05
and your scores: Overall: 4.53, Instructor: 4.53, Content: 4.60
ProjectWorld Toronto 2008 Track Session Speaker Evaluation Results
For the Great Escape presentation. We asked 4 questions: rate the Topic, Speaker, Content, and Overall – all out of 5 (with 5 being excellent). First the big picture:
Topic – best - 4.70 average – 4.03
Speaker – best - 4.74 average – 3.89
Content – best - 4.70 average – 3.72
Overall – best - 4.70 average - 3.80
and your scores: Topic: 4.25, Speaker: 4.28, Content: 4.28, Overall 4.22
Comments collected from track session: Very interesting application, thank you! Highly interesting and applicable. Fascinating analysis!
Feedback from City of Los Angeles Emergency Management Department (Apr 08)
"The City of Los Angeles and its Emergency Management Department have used the information presented by Mark to increase its emergency preparedness activities and our understanding of effective project management. We were pleased to be able to bring Mark to
Feedback from Nobilis (Apr 08)
"Thank you for your compelling presentation at our Project Management Institute Luncheon Meeting. The correlations you identified between the Great Escape and today's project management challenges were educational and entertaining. The positive response was overwhelming from one of the largest audiences we have had at any event. Thank you!"
Mary Beth Howe, PMP Noblis
Feedback from PMI Washington DC presentation (Apr 08)
"Once again, Mark delivered an outstanding presentation for our audience of project managers and leaders. His intriguing and unique examination of the events leading up to and including the "Great Escape" from Stalag Luft III during WWII was right on the mark for professionals interested in the application of our project management principles. His research was excellent as was his ability to remind us that detailed and flawless planning will always be trumped by execution."
Dave Maurer,
Feedback from School of Business Fleming College (Mar 08)
"I enjoyed your presentation very much. I think we can learn a lot from history and I incorporated your presentation into an assignment the students had to do. The issues / concepts of strong leadership, the ability to see the big picture, prioritization, communication and network design were very well demonstrated. The historical context was fascinating and showed how we really can learn from the past. Unfortunately, not many people do."
Maggie James, Co-ordinator, Global Supply Chain Management.
Feedback from PMI South Alberta Chapter presentation (Mar 08)
"It is outstanding how today's Project Managers can still not fully apply lessons learn from past tragedies. Mark's titanic presentation was not only a passionate presentation on history but he also aligned the really issues and roadblocks that Project Managers struggles with ever day. PMISAC will definitely be having him back!" Laurel Sim, Director of Programs, SAC
Feedback from ACP Los Angeles, Orange County presentation (Feb 08)
Thank you Mark! And we really enjoyed your presentation: the content, the delivery method, the great pictures, the "geeky" data! It all made sense and brought reality to our day-to-day lives of business!Mark Kozak-Holland is a fabulous speaker who was introduced to ACP LA, OC, and SD. He is awesome, down to earth, approachable, and very informative. His presentation is so appropriate for ACP meetings because he takes the historical experience, dissects it according to its business practices, and shows where the process worked or failed based on business principles and relates it to the practices of today! He also provides a very interesting insight to the importance of preparedness and contingency planning—at least with the Titanic topic. His presentation is such an innovative approach to history. We chose the business presentation on the Titanic and scheduled him for a two hour program. It took the full two hours and it was fabulous. I highly recommend including him on our speakers bureau list and promoting him to the other chapters, especially those that conduct the symposiums.
Monique Weiland, President - Dear Mark, thanks for your outstanding presentation. I truly enjoyed it both times.
Gunnar J. Kuepper, Chief of Operations Emergency & Disaster Management, Inc., President of IAEM Los Angeles
Feedback from APICS LA chapter (Feb 08)
"Mark is able to take a major historical event like the Titanic disaster and draw some extremely relevant conclusions for business leaders of today regarding the key design and planning activities involved. His compelling style and deep knowledge both of past events and current happenings in the business world make him an excellent choice to speak any function. Thanks Mark for a great presentation." Aaron Johnson, Director of events
Feedback from PMI Durham Highlands chapter (Dec 07)
Mark Kozak-Holland is a phenomenon in drawing unique parallels between History and Project Management discipline. His analogies 'n' lessons are spell-binding and widely appreciated by the audience. Best regards Pankaj Jain, Director of events
Feedback from PMI Central Indiana presentation (Sep 07)
The presentation was very dynamic. Mr. Kozak-Holland showed how project teams of today are candidates for the same mistakes that lead to the sinking of the Titanic. Mr. Kozak-Holland related the Titanic disaster well with project lessons of today. I would definitely recommend the presentation to others. Matt Bracher, PMP, Director of Programs
It was a pleasure meeting you last night at the PMI monthly meeting. I enjoyed your presentation last night regarding the parallels between IT projects and the Titanic’s journey towards that fateful night. John WilsonI attended your Titanic presentation last night at the PMI CIC monthly meeting in
Feedback from PMI Cincinnati presentation (Sep 07)
"Hi Mark, Attended the Cincinnati PMI chapter meeting on 19 Sept, 2007. Your presentation was not only riveting, but it kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time. The best PMI presentation I have ever seen. Great Job…….!!" Don Lykins,
Feedback from APICS presentation (Sep 07)
I was so delighted with your “Titanic” presentation at the Madison PMI dinner meeting in May that I was eager to invite you to speak for the Rock Valley Chapter of APICS this fall. Our event was a great success. We received wonderful feedback from our attendees. Thank you again, for your marvelous and very professional presentation. Ellen J. Granneman, CPIM, PMP Director of Planning & Inventory Mgt. World’s Finest Chocolate
Feedback from PMI Rochester presentation (Sep 07)
Thanks! Great Job. I really enjoyed it! Maria T. Vetri
Feedback from UTD PM Symposium (Aug 07)
Please put Dallas on your schedule for August 4-5, 2008, the 2nd UTD PM Symposium, as I would like you to be a speaker again. David Pells
Feedback from CMIT, (MBA program) University of Virginia (Jul 07)
In the words of one participant, the program was a "titanic success!" Another quote to consider: "Mark is a captivating story teller with an important story to tell. The Titanic project provides numerous lessons learned for project managers seeking to avoid their own disasters." We will definitely want to schedule an encore visit (the Great Escape) at some point in the next year or so. Ryan Nelson
Feedback from PMI Keystone Event presentation (Jun 07)
Your presentation was excellent and was very well received by our membership. I'd be glad to provide you a reference for other PMI Chapters and we'd certainly consider for future events for our chapter...my comments were based on conversations with those in attendance after your presentation. Eric Berry, Director of Programs
Feedback from PMI Western Lake Erie presentation (Jun 07)
Comments collected in evaluation "Principles cross boundaries of industry...Very informative... Liked knowledge shared by presenter...Excellent parallel projects...Liked the tie between history & today...fun to learn about the Titanic...Was something we can relate to...Good analogy with IT projects and projects in general Real Life - correlated with today's environment." and the scores: Met Expectations: 4.5, Useful for work: 4.5, Speaker: 4.7
I would be happy to be a reference for other chapters. Kris LaHote, PMP, Director of Programs
Feedback from PMI Great Lakes presentation (May 07)
Must say your Powerpoint Presentation was excellent. I have sent info on your book and your PPt to others authors that I have been working with over the last 5 years...You have truly taken "new" ideas and shown that they are not so new after all.Gary S. Elliott, M.S., PMP, NSA 4011
In the time available to him, the Speaker did a very cogent job of linking a significant historic event to the qualities that are critical to a Project that takes an organization in a new and critical direction. It would be fun to be able to expand on the skills having gained the historic facts setting the stage for a more indepth look. Anon.
Feedback from PMI Ocean State presentation (Apr 07)
We received fabulous feedback from your previous presentation from the membership and the board LOVED it. Allison Richardson, Director of Programs
Feedback from PMI Long Island presentation (Apr 07)
Your presentation on the Titanic was one of the memorable topics identified by our membership during an after the year survey. Jim Smith, Director of Programs
Feedback from PMI Manitoba Conference Workshops (Apr 07)
It seems that a significant number of people enjoyed your 2 sessions...I have read both books and really enjoyed them. Jon Cook, PMI Manitoba Conference
ProjectWorld Toronto 2007 Track Session Speaker Evaluation Results
We asked 4 questions: rate the Topic, Speaker, Content, and Overall – all out of 5 (with 5 being excellent). First the big picture:
Topic – best - 5 average – 4.16
Speaker – best - 4.90 average – 4.03
Content – best - 5 average – 3.83
Overall – best - 5 average - 3.96
and your scores: Topic: 4.62, Speaker: 4.76, Content: 4.67, Overall 4.67
Feedback from APICS presentation (Mar 07)
Your presentation was excellent.
I heard Mark speak at an internal Project Management training session when he gave an absolutely captivating presentation on the project management and business lessons learned from the mistakes and bad decisions of the principal people involved in the building and sailing of the Titanic. The lessons learned are as applicable today as they were 90 years ago. Mark would be a great speaker for one of our Vermont PMI chapter meetings.
Michael Knauer, PMP
“I found the presentation extremely interesting and very entertaining. Using the Titanic as the subject matter and drawing analogies between today's challenges and the past was very effective. It re-enforced that no matter how much technologies advance over time, business in the past face the same issues and opportunities as the present. The presentation also supported the importance of team communication, openness and integrity. When you come down to it, managing relationships and individual styles is paramount to project success. If you create an atmosphere where one person dominates, you run the risk of shutting others down. This strengthens the position that project managers must also demonstrate leadership (people) and management (project tasks) skills. We definitely want to avoid the Ice Bucket test results and behaviour. Thank you for a great presentation!” KW
“I attended the presentation that Mark did and found it both interesting and informative. In particular, it was very interesting to see that projects are the same whether they were done decades ago, as in the case of the Titanic, or whether they are IT projects that are underway in our world today. The same aspects of planning and risk management are so critical to the completion of any successful project.” Gary
“I found Mark's presentation quite interesting in how he compared the an engineering project with and IT project and identified common issues and ways projects cut corners to meet targets and satisfy clients. Him tying it back to a major disaster just emphasized the consequences of taking short-cuts in a large scale project. The only issue I had with the presentation was a desire for him to take it a step further and discuss where IT projects differ and how we can avoid similar issues / mistakes in IT related project.” Greg
Feedback from Worldwide IBM GS Business Transformation presentation
Comments from April 2004:
"The article assumes the scenario of early 80's where organisations were working in a functional model approach where there was no collaboration & co-operation amongst the members working on a project but in the current scenario where we have a separate project management area of communications management & risk management plus tighter integration with other departments of a project I don't think its applicable to the entire IT industry. "
rahul76 - January 22, 2004
"This is totally on the mark! This hasn't changed in 100 years. I don't agree with the comment made that says we don't run into these problems with curent methodologies. In my 28 years in IT, testing comes at the end of the project and therefore carefully laid test plans are scaled back due to project overruns in other areas. Six weeks of testing is turned into four. Why test for three months? One month should do it. Nowadays, people don't even know what hash totals are -- what do you need those for when you're doing a conversion? I agree with the author that it is important not to let business needs unduly push you into implementation before being ready."
clnewman - January 30, 2004
"Found your Titanic article on Gantthead very interesting. I'm sure you are going to elaborate in following articles, but particularly when viewing the James Cameron movie (and assuming this is true to the facts), it is striking that the "crew" were very poorly briefed about the capabilities of their vessel i.e. the Project Handover was very poor. I am thinking of the fact that they stopped engines and turned the rudder - had they kept the engines going, the ship would have turned faster and they didn't know that a glancing encounter would likely do more damage than a head-on collision. I am sure you will say that the poor testing time had a lot to do with this - as a PM, it is important to ensure good handover (even if you have to ask for more money) or get blamed for the lousy deliverable! Can tell you a story about an IT project I took over that suffered this disease!! Thanks." Owen Price
"A friend forwarded me your article from Gantthead. It was very insightful and well written. I'll have to check out your book." Elizabeth Schmitt
"Just a quick fan letter to say I have enjoyed your Titanic article series on Gantthead, and have just ordered a copy of your book. Look forward to reading it. Interested to know if you are doing other research or writing on the topic of project management." Robert McKeeman
"Dear Mark, I just read your article titled “IT Project Lessons from Titanic”. I found it very interesting and you have developed very true and interesting analogies between the two processes. Just wanted to compliment you on that….
Rgds, Bilal Asghar | Applications Engineer
"Read your article on Titanic it was excellent how you related Titanic to the IT projects."
Fatima Murad, Senior Auditor, Internal Audit & Corporate Security
Feedback from ITTSIG Webinar
Comments from October 2003: