Are your PMs drowning in paperwork?
From the Easy in theory, difficult in practice Blog
by Kiron Bondale
My musings on project management, project portfolio management and change management.
I'm a firm believer that a pragmatic approach to organizational change that addresses process & technology, but primarily, people will maximize chances for success.
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One of the unfortunate perceptions which many project managers face when trying to do their jobs is that some stakeholders perceive that they are just bureaucratic paper-pushers. While there are certainly some ineffective project managers who put a greater emphasis on administrative activities than the real job of leading, with most of the practitioners I've worked with, this is not how they see their role.
There are (at least) three factors which contribute to the administrative burden:
- The organization's policies and standards
- The complexity and size of the project
- The project manager's preferred ways of working
It is to be expected that as the complexity or size of the project increases, paper work will increase, albeit at an incremental rate. If the organization's policies and standards are flexible and fit for purpose, then the mandated documentation or practices will also scale in line with the size or complexity of the project.
When project management costs can be directly compensated such as when a project is done for a paying client or when the sponsoring division for an internal project is required to cover all labor costs, once the complexity or size of a project exceeds a threshold, a project manager may be provided administrative support via a project analyst or similar role. This is a common practice in companies which are operating at a higher level of delivery maturity. But when project management costs cannot be recouped, the project manager is left to fend for themselves.
I ran a one-week poll in PMI's Project, Program and Portfolio Management discussion group and the ProjectManagement.com community to understand how much effort was being spent on paperwork. I received 1068 responses to this poll so I must have touched a nerve! Here's the breakdown of the results:
- Under 25% of their overall effort: 23%
- 26-50% of their overall effort: 44%
- 51-75% of their overall effort: 25%
- Over 75%: 8%
So roughly one third of project managers are spending more than half of their time on administrative work.
It is fair to expect that a project manager would be spending some of their time doing administrative activities but how much is reasonable?
If we look at it from an opportunity cost and a cost/benefit perspective, if there are more valuable activities which a project manager could be doing which they are unable to because of mandated paper work or if the benefits of their doing this paperwork are outweighed by their labor costs, then it is too much. And while the project manager is pushing paper, it is possible that certain risks emerge or are realized which could have been avoided if they were able to focus on more strategic work.
This problem could be tackled in two steps. The first is to ensure that the administrative work is minimally sufficient. Once that leaning out has been done, the second is to monitor the project manager's administrative effort and provide them with support once it exceeds a reasonable threshold.
Posted on: July 03, 2022 07:00 AM |
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Comments (7)
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Shanos Kunhahamu
Product Manager, Mobile Wallet| First Abu Dhabi Bank
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
Luis Branco
CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª
Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
Dear Kiron
The topic that you brought to our reflection and debate was very interesting.
Thank you for sharing, for your opinions and for the results of the poll you carried out
I am convinced that the projects would do very well with some of the administrative practices imposed by the organizations
Thanks Shanos. Thanks Luis - "some" paperwork is needed but as the 2nd value of the Manifesto says: "Working software over comprehensive documentation".
Thank you for this concise summary, Kiron.
Could you please, share your perspective on leveraging Citizen Development (low-code/no-code platforms) and artificial intelligence to reduce the paperwork "burden" in the project management work.
Stéphane Parent
Self Employed / Semi-retired| Leader Maker
Prince Edward Island, Canada
As leaders, we often focus on providing a supportive and encouraging environment. Sometimes, we need to provide that environment for ourselves.
Thanks and great question, Maria! I have long been a proponent of computer-aided project management where (over time) software can handle much of the administrative work of a PM. I'm not sure how CD might fit into this so I'd love to hear your perspective.
Agreed Stephane - a case of "physician, health thyself"!
Thank you for your prompt answer, Kiron.
I see the role of artificial intelligence, machine learning, chatbots, citizen development, and other advanced technologies as enablers helping project managers with risk management - for example, AI algorithms can identify patterns of behavior related to past incidents, predictive analytics; build data consistency - for instance, leveraging apps to collect the information and having access to real-time data; task management, and others.
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