Exploring trends and developments
in project management today.
The Project Liberation Checklist: Finishing Unfinished Projects
2009
We all have one hiding over there in the groan zone. It's the unfinished project that lives in a strange sort of limbo. As Nassim Nicholas Taleb reminds us in The Black Swan, the longer a project goes unfinished, there is an exponential increase in the time to finish the project. Sound familiar?
So, you see them lurking there getting dusty and forlorn, what should you do about them? How can you move these projects from limbo to liberation (aka completion)?
Here's my Project Liberation Checklist:
- Look at all your unfinished projects. Which ones are still relevant? What's important, and what no longer matters?
- What can be recycled? Those projects that have expired or no longer matter can still be useful. Look at them, and see if any of the project assets can be reused somewhere else. For example, were there any lessons learned that you can reapply? Why did these projects stall, and what put them on the back burner, and could you have prevented it? Also, go through your documentation, and pull out any golden nuggets such as charts or research or any data you can build on.
- Choose the projects you're going to finish. Once you've chosen the projects you are going to finish, then you're going to reboot them - just like your overworked computer. However, this reboot is different from all the others, because you are going to finish this project in three months. Three is a magic number here. Why? Because in three months so much changes.
- During your Project Reboot, here are things you need to look at and probably change:
- Your goals.
- Your project plan.
- The project schedule and cost baseline.
- The project team.
- Key questions to ask:
- Has any of the technology that's important to this project changed? Are you sure? Talk to your best friends in IT, and consult with them to make sure.
- Has the strategic direction of the organisation changed? Is there new management, a merger or acquisition, or any new threats or opportunities? While this project was in limbo, did any key things in the environment change? This is important because if you lob the project back out there without considering the changes, it will flounder again.
- Rally the troops around this liberation. It's important to get your team excited and let them know you're clearing the decks of the old projects so your team can focus on the projects that are most important.
Why do we care about those projects in limbo? Because a bunch of unfinished projects suck the lifeblood out of organisations and keep us from moving forward. For the Project Manager, unfinished projects are our nemesis. We need to tackle them, evaluate them, recycle their assets or finish them.
And just like life, when you look back, what is the difference between success and failure? It's often crossing the finish line. See you there. I'll be the one cheering loudly.
The Know How Network is a monthly column written by Michelle LaBrosse, the founder and Chief Cheetah of Cheetah Learning. Distributed to hundreds of newsletters and media outlets around the world, the Know How Network brings the promise, purpose and passion of Project Management to people everywhere. Visit www.cheetahlearning.com
to learn more about Cheetah PM, the fastest way to learn about Project Management and get your PMP. You can also get your career in gear with CheetahWare
free Project Management tools.
Related Articles
Keys to Rescuing Ailing Projects
When we examine what makes projects succeed or fail, we're actually looking at a variety of vital success measures that can keep our projects healthy, or offer a powerful remedy if they start to break down. As a form of prevention, using these measures from the very beginning will make our projects considerably more successful. They'll avert many potential snags stemming from mixed communication signals, ignored problems, and unrealistic expectations that can lead to project downfall.
Project Recovery Efforts: The Struggling Project
Project recovery is the effort and activities related to addressing troubled projects. In other words, the activities that lead you to recognise that the project is troubled, then bring you to a decision point on whether or not to save that project, then those activities you might undertake to drive that project to completion.
How to Get Out of Project Overwhelm
This article offers a simple, sanity-saving approach to handling projects that have not followed expectations, or have otherwise gone awry. It explains how to extricate one's team from "project overwhelm" by regrouping and swiftly charting a new course. It explores the pros and cons of attempting a last-minute, heroic manoeuvre versus proactively re-planning the tail end of the project.
SWOT Analysis
SWOT is a strategic planning tool used to evaluate the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to a project. It involves specifying the objective of the project and identifying the internal and external factors that are favourable and unfavourable to achieving that objective.
21 Ways to Excel at Project Management
The popular project management eBook now fully updated and available as a website for the first time.
