Project managers must focus on three
dimensions of project success.Simply put,
project success means completing all project deliverables ontime, withinbudget, and to a level ofqualitythat is acceptable to sponsors and stakeholders. The
project manager must keep the team’s attention focused on achieving these broad
goals.
Planning is everything — and
ongoing.On one thing all PM texts and
authorities agree: The single most important activity that project managers engage in is planning —
detailed, systematic, team-involved plans are the only foundation for project success. And when
real-world events conspire to change the plan, project managers must make a new one to reflect the
changes. So planning and replanning must be a way of life for project
managers.
Project managers must feel, and
transmit to their team members, a sense of urgency. Because projects are finite endeavors with limited time, money,
and other resources available, they must be kept moving toward completion. Since most team members have
lots of other priorities, it’s up to the project manager to keep their attention on project
deliverables and deadlines. Regular status checks, meetings, and reminders are
essential.
Ten
Guaranteed Ways to Screw Up Any Project By Michael
Greer
Don’t bother prioritizing your organization’s overall project
load. After all, if there’s a free-for-all approach to your overall program
management (i.e., “survival of the fittest”), then the projects that survive will be those that were
destined to survive. In the meantime, senior management need not trouble themselves aligning projects
with strategic goals or facing the logical imperative that people simply cannot have 12 number one
priorities!
Encourage sponsors and key stakeholders to take a passive role on the project
team. Let them assert their authority to reject deliverables at random, without
participating in defining project outcomes in a high-resolution fashion. And above all, don’t bother
project sponsors when their constituents (such as key SMEs and reviewers) drop the ball and miss their
deadlines.
Authors
Welcome If you are an experienced project manager and would like to write
articles for the newsletter, please email me at ray@projectsuccesstips.com. I am looking
for first-person project stories with real lessons learned.