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.
- Set up ongoing committees focusing on management
process (such as TQM groups, etc.) and make project
team members participate in frequent meetings and write lots of reports… preferably when critical project
deadlines are coming due.
- Interrupt team members
relentlessly … preferably during their time off. Find
all sorts of trivial issues that “need to be addressed,” then keep their beepers and cell phones ringing and
bury them in emails to keep them off balance.
- Create a culture in which project managers are expected to “roll
over” and take it when substantive new deliverables are added halfway through the project. (After all, only a tradesperson like a plumber or
electrician would demand more money or more time for additional services; our people are “professionals” and
should be prepared to be “flexible.”)
- Half way through the
project, when most of the deliverables have begun to
take shape, add a whole bunch of previously unnamed
stakeholders and ask them for their opinions
about the project and its deliverables.
- Encourage the sponsor to approve deliverables informally (with nods, smiles,
and verbal praise); never force sponsors to stand behind their
approvals with a formal sign-off. (In other words, give ‘em
plenty of room to weasel out of agreements!)
- Make sure project managers have lots of responsibilities and
deadlines, but no authority whatsoever to acquire or
remove people from the project; to get enough money, materials, or facilities; or insist on timely
participation of SMEs and key reviewers.
- Describe project deliverables in the vaguest possible
terms so sponsors and reviewers have plenty of leeway
to reinvent the project outputs repeatedly as the project unfolds.
- Get projects up and running as quickly as possible
– don’t worry about documenting agreements in a formal
project charter, clearly describing team roles/responsibilities, or doing a thorough work breakdown analysis.
After all, we know what we’re doing and we trust each other. So let’s get to it without a pesky audit
trail!
(C) Copyright 2009 Michael Greer's PM
Resources. Michael Greer is a project management consultant
and author. See Greer's
bio on the Meet the Experts page. See his website
at http://www.michaelgreer.com.
Filed under Project
Management - General
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