Project Management

Project Prioritization and Project Management Tools

From the Strategic Project Management Blog
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As an "accidental" project manager, it's very satisfying to contribute to the project management community online with anecdotes and stories I've picked up from my own experience. I hope you enjoy our daily conversation.

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I call them "drive-by" projects.

Basically, "drive-by" projects are all those ad-hoc tasks or initiatives that get dropped in your lap at random intervals every day. They suck up time, they suck up resources, they distract project teams, and have the potential to push active projects behind schedule. Often they are emergency projects that have no strategic initiative attached to them, which is critical for organizations that rely on project-based work to keep teams focused on the right projects.

Don't get me wrong. I'm not suggesting that they are of no value. In fact, it's not always about separating the good projects from the bad projects. It's usually a matter of choosing the best projects, the projects that will provide the most business value from a list of good potential projects. Unfortunately, when project teams are faced with dealing with a "drive-by" project, all the work to keep teams focused on those initiatives that drive the most business value gets thrown out the window.

I believe that's why the "get'er done" or "drive-by" project is such a problem. They may be worthy, but if they don't measure up to the "does this provide the most value" test, they ultimately limit an organization's capacity to work on the things that do. And that negatively impacts productivity—and ultimately profitability.

In theory, everyone agrees with this, however, practice is something different. In the heat of the moment, it's difficult for decision-makers to step back and ask the question, "Will this "drive-by" project provide enough value that someone should drop what he or she is doing to work on it?" Sometimes the answer is definitely yes, but there are times when the answer should be NO. If nobody asks the question, project teams can be chasing around working on projects of minimal value (at least projects that haven't be vetted to make sure they are the best projects for teams to be working on).

Project and portfolio management best practices revolve around the concept of identifying those projects that meet certain criteria, creating a plan, and then executing on the plan. Project management software does a pretty good job of helping do that. However, sometimes we need to ask ourselves, "How does my work management methodology address 'drive-by' tasks and projects that come up every day?"

It doesn't have to be a catastrophic failure that causes an organization to falter. Sometimes it's the accumulated weight of a thousand insignificant inefficiencies that cause the most damage. How does your work management methodology address the "drive-by" project? Even if your software doesn't, feel free to share what you do to keep your project teams focused on the right projects.


 


Posted on: November 01, 2010 11:53 AM | Permalink

Comments (2)

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Josh Nankivel Engineering Project Manager| Apple Sioux Falls, Sd, United States
Great points Ty.

This is why I love Kanban.

Especially for these little "drive by" tasks and small projects, Kanban wraps my teams and I in a protective layer of insulation from those "urgent, but not important" activities that always crop up.

Essentially, any of us (including me) can walk over to our Kanban board with the person who is asking something of us, and figure out where in our priority list it belongs. It forces us to stop and think about the relative priority of this "thing" versus everything else on our plates.

Plus, it does wonders to give outside observers an accurate picture of how much work is on our plates. My manager thought one of my teams was probably underworked when I took over from the last PM. Boy was he wrong, but he had no good way to gauge that. Now, he does. It's crystal clear.

I'll have to start writing some more posts on how I am using Kanban, cauz it rocks!

-Josh, pmStudent e-Learning

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Ty Kiisel Manager Social Outreach| AtTask Lehi, Ut, United States
Thanks for your contribution and insight Josh. Visibility into what the team is busy doing, keeping the team focused on what's really important, and trying to insulate them from the daily distractions that face all project teams is really important. I like how you use Kanban, and look forward to reading how you utilize it within your project teams.

—Ty

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