Project Management

Project Management Knowledge Versus Technical Knowledge

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Categories: Leadership


As project managers, we have to manage various tasks in multiple lines of work. At times, we operate from our technical background and impart that knowledge and expertise more than our project management knowledge.

There needs to be the distinction of when we use our "project manager hat" versus our "technical specialist hat."

Many project managers work in two common extremes: process focus or technical detail focus. This is common for junior project managers and for project managers who are new to an organization. That often happens, in my opinion, because those project managers haven't developed their management style yet or haven't adjusted to the organizational culture.

When the project manager thinks something is going wrong on a project, either with how someone is performing a task or the results of a deliverable, we often try to fix it. We do that with our strongest toolkit -- usually, that's our technical background. We often take over and hijack the task just to do it "our way," based on our experience.

Remind yourself that as a project manager, you have a different role as a leader. You also can't be a technical skills expert for your team.

Realign yourself to the deliverables. Gain a clarity of the project goal, the project management approach you are using and your role in managing the given project resources.

Project managers can be quite connected and attached to the project outcome. But when you see an opportunity to improve something based on your technical expertise or what you would do differently, stay focused on your role, which is to deliver the project according to the business requirements, aligning with the business sponsor and the organization. Let your team handle their tasks according to their experience and expertise.

Do you ever rely too heavily on your technical expertise?

Read more from Dmitri.


Posted by Dmitri Ivanenko PMP ITIL on: June 12, 2012 09:24 AM | Permalink

Comments (2)

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Essien Andah Aviation Safety Inspector| Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority Lagos, Nigeria
Sometimes it can be really hard to refrain from jumping into your functional manager boots especially when you have technical expertise on the matter. However, in my opinion, the danger for the project manager is when do you take those boots off and how often are you willing and should you re-wear them. I feel sometimes you just have to get involved in the functional aspects of your projects but the trick is not to totally immerse yourself and begin to handle varying roles.
The project manager is expected to see the whole picture and get others to see it just as well as he/she sees it. That should be the approach when a PM decides to get functional, let it be about bringing the functional element into alignment with the bigger picture 'The Project'.

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Jelili Odunayo Kazeem Co-Founder | Currently developing a RAG-based app for scope screep detection| Convosync Solutions Limited Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom
Great insights. A good PM with technical flexibility will deliver better in my own opinion. Project Management is evolving, it does not end only with PM knowledge alone as described by PMI Talent Triangle, it is even much more, the more you know, the better flexible PM. Thanks for sharing

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