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Top five reasons organizations fail at project management

Tags: Tools & Techniques, Strategy, Tom Mochal, project management, Project Management Newsletter

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Takeaway: Why are so many organizations still so bad at project management? I have pondered this on many consulting and training engagements and I have ranked my top five reasons below.

Generally speaking, all companies and organizations are trying to get better at project management. (In other words, there aren't any organizations that are purposely trying to get worse at project management.) Though they may not be able to articulate it, organizations recognize that there is value associated with being able to manage projects more effectively.

Why then, are so many organizations still so bad at project management? What is keeping most organizations from being able to effectively manage projects? I have pondered this on many consulting and training engagements and I have ranked my top five reasons below. See if you can pick out the reasons why your organization falls short in implementing good project management discipline.

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5. Senior managers think that project management is a software tool

When you discuss project management with some managers, they initially think you are trying to implement a tool that allows you to be a better project manager. Actually, if it were a tool, you might have more luck convincing them to do it. Even though some aspects of project management, like the creation and management of the workplan, may utilize a tool, that is not where the value of project management is. Instead, project management is about skills and discipline. It's about applying proactive processes and best practices. It's about using common and understood templates. Don’t get me wrong--tools have their place. However, software tools are not the answer.

4. Organizations don’t value the upfront investment of time

Many people consider themselves to be "doers." Organizations can be that way as well. If you're going to be good at project management, you have to understand that the upfront planning process has value. You need to know that if you plan the project well (in other words, if you know what you're doing before you start), you'll be able to manage the work more effectively. I have seen organizations that say they want to apply good project management, but then are unwilling to invest the time required. No one wants to take the time to plan. Instead, everyone wants to start executing immediately and then redo all the work later to get it right.

3. You may have been burned in the past

A common criticism of project management methodology is that it is cumbersome, paper intensive, and takes too much focus away from the work at hand. Sometimes this is a legitimate concern, caused by not scaling the methodology appropriately to the size of your project. However, project management was not the problem. The problem was a misguided attempt at implementation of project management. If you implement project management methodology right, the results will be outstanding.

2. Your organization is not committed

Many organizations say they want good project management, but do the actions back up the words? For instance, the first time you try to define the work, does everyone say "just get going"? If you try to enforce scope change management, does your manager say "just do the work"? Does your sponsor say you are wasting time identifying risks? This disconnect is very common. The words say one thing, but the actions say another.

1. Organizations don't know how to implement culture change

Most organizations don’t know how to manage culture change in general and project management in particular. You can’t just train people and turn them loose. You can’t just buy MS Project and turn people loose. You have to have a long-term, multi-faceted approach to managing culture change. It takes hard work and resources. Most organizations aren’t committed to focus on the culture change long-term, and they don’t want to spend any resources to do it. Is it any wonder then, that six months later, project management deployment ends up in the trash pile of culture change initiatives that have all failed in the past?

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Print/View all Posts Comments on this article

This is just the "tip of the iceberg" j.lupo@... | 06/29/06
Total Agreement BFilmFan | 07/04/06
even more agreement.. ProjectCoach | 07/05/06
culture is more than yogurt or a throat swab rupyoda@... | 07/05/06
That is why they are not change agents j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
I have a different View. The Admiral | 07/05/06
Lean Six Sigma, et al. Too Old For IT | 07/05/06
Lean and Six Sigma are not the same thing j.lupo@... | 07/06/06
Lean Six Sigma for Service Too Old For IT | 07/13/06
I thought I had heard about most of the j.lupo@... | 07/13/06
Nearly same result here Too Old For IT | 07/14/06
Thanks for the book rec j.lupo@... | 07/17/06
I would actually have a different 5. Jaqui | 06/29/06
I must agree with the accountant comment ReneP | 07/03/06
That is why Jaqui | 07/04/06
Because ... ValPM | 07/05/06
Companies should Too Old For IT | 07/05/06
in those cases null/void/ | 07/06/06
The annual raise is still ... Too Old For IT | 07/14/06
In my experience TiggerTwo | 06/29/06
I prefer Jaqui | 06/30/06
Please don't forget......... Khalid.Anwar@... | 07/03/06
I have to disagree with you about Project Management j.lupo@... | 07/03/06
J. Lupo is right, Jaqui | 07/04/06
Absolutely Jaqui j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
The other impact is... TiggerTwo | 07/05/06
Prenatal Project Care - Get Started BEFORE the Project Birth Dan Furlong | 07/05/06
Dan - Interesting you should post this j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
Dan- Does your corporate culture support this approach? TiggerTwo | 07/05/06
agree with concept, but not with Jaqui | 07/05/06
Did I misunderstand what Dan described? j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
nope you didn't Jaqui | 07/05/06
See I think it happens sooner than that j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
we are Jaqui | 07/05/06
back to culture... rupyoda@... | 07/05/06
There are many places like that j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
Planning, like design, pays off at the back end bwatkins | 07/03/06
Planning to succeed Matrix181 | 07/05/06
Scope Creep and the Ability to say not right now clangl@... | 07/03/06
Where's your change management? iam4it4256@... | 07/05/06
When it is needed, then yes j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
I tend to see Change Management as a requirement TiggerTwo | 07/05/06
Sorry TT - I am coming at it from a different concept j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
I agree, JL TiggerTwo | 07/05/06
But TT that is because you are the real deal PM j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
The big problem is TiggerTwo | 07/05/06
TT I won't crucify you j.lupo@... | 07/06/06
CFO could sign off on changes ... Too Old For IT | 07/05/06
Change = higher cost. Too Old For IT | 07/05/06
Show Me The Money! rheinlein@... | 07/05/06
Actually, at most publicly-held companies Too Old For IT | 07/05/06
Ignorance is bliss.... iam4it4256@... | 07/05/06
Absolutely j.lupo@... | 07/05/06
management people.... osocram@... | 07/05/06
Is any project successful? MGEyre | 07/06/06
Do projects succeed - Yes j.lupo@... | 07/06/06
Gotta agree with j.lupo Too Old For IT | 07/13/06
List of PM Responsibilities, Duties, Tasks, Authorities, Role Old Speckled Hen | 08/07/06
My top 5 - chiming in pcarter@... | 04/08/07

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