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Why is My Project Failing? Part 2

Why is My Project Failing? Part 2

By Brad Egeland
Agile Project Management
Agile Project Management (Photo credit: VFS Digital Design)

In Part 1 of this two part series on examining a failing project in midstream, we looked at the situation of an out of control budget and things that can be done to stop that from happening or take corrective action while the project is in progress to hopefully correct the budget issues.  In this Part 2, we’ll examine the ever-growing issues list and the problems of disengaged team resources or a disengaged project client and how to hopefully remedy those situations proactively.

The issues list is getting longer, not shorter.

This may be one of the single most frustrating situations to be in.  It’s happened to me on two projects – both of which I inherited with an already loooong list of outstanding issues that the project team was trying to resolve.  You can fight a fire with a garden hose, but you’re not likely to get too far…and when it starts spreading, watch out.  On both projects, I found that I had to basically halt all current project work and block out time – two weeks on one project and a full month on the second one – to dive into and resolve the issues.  Trying to move forward AND resolve old issues was getting us nowhere.  Yes, halting work and focusing key resources on issue resolution ate through the project budget quickly.  But had we not done that – and it was indeed a successful action for both projects – the project customer most assuredly would have pulled the plug on their respective engagements and that would have been a far greater disaster than an overrun budget with no more income coming in to offset any of it.

Resources or the customer are disengaged.

Whether it’s your project resources or the customer, having critical project resource either unavailable or not full engaged in what’s happening on the project can be frustrating. But it can also lead to added risks on the project, overlooked issues, incomplete deliverables, decreased customer satisfaction, and increased costs and extra time spent making decisions and completing tasks using less experienced or non-key personnel. Online collaboration software will help all members of your team recognize the problems plaguing your project.

The best way I’ve found to keep resources and customers engaged on the project is to keep them busy and keep them accountable.  For your project team, be sure to hold weekly internal meetings prior to the weekly customer meetings and make your team members accountable for their assigned tasks.  Have them participate in the project status calls with the customer. Use cloud-based project management to ensure that everyone has access to the same communication resources. Likewise, with the customer, find tasks for them to do.  Big or small, it doesn’t matter…the key is to give them tasks that they must be accountable for so they aren’t skipping meetings and forgoing project work for their ‘regular’ jobs.  You need them available for key decisions and to review work – hold ups and delays cost money.

Summary

These are just three areas that I’ve experienced a few times in my project management career.  They stick out in my mind because they were extremely frustrating and significant – for the project, for my customer, and for my executive management.  Resolution had to happen or the projects were going to collapse.

How about our readers?  Feel free to share your thoughts on these items or share your own experiences and how you resolved them.

Check out Workzone web-based project management software and collaboration tools.