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Ethics Bistro

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We all tackle ethical dilemmas. Wrong decisions can break careers. Which are the key challenges faced? What are some likely solutions? Where can we find effective tools? Who can apply these and why? Dry, theoretical discussions don't help. Join us for lively, light conversations to learn, share and grow!

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Navigating AI in Project Management: A Comparison with Racing Co-Pilots and Driverless Cars

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Artificial Intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing industries, and project management is no exception. With advanced tools supporting decision-making, risk mitigation, and efficiency, the project management landscape is increasingly intertwined with AI technologies. However, this evolution raises questions about human responsibility, autonomy, and ethics—questions like those faced in the realms of racing co-pilots and driverless cars. 
This blog explores the pros and cons of using AI in project management and compares these dynamics with racing environments and autonomous vehicle scenarios, focusing on the balance between human involvement and ethical considerations. 
Shape 
The Role of AI in Project Management 
AI-driven tools, such as virtual assistants and machine learning algorithms, are increasingly used to streamline project management processes. From schedule optimization and predictive analytics to stakeholder communication and resource allocation, AI empowers project managers to make well-informed and efficient decisions. 
The Racing Co-Pilot Analogy: Shared Responsibility, Enhanced Performance 
In professional racing environments, a co-pilot performs critical tasks: navigating the course, analysing conditions, and advising the driver. This relationship mirrors the human-machine collaboration often seen in project management. Here, AI acts as a "co-pilot," assisting project managers while leaving primary control in human hands. Let us examine this analogy: 
Pros of AI as a Co-Pilot in Project Management: 
  1. Enhanced Decision-Making: AI algorithms analyse massive datasets to predict outcomes and recommend actions, akin to a co-pilot guiding navigational decisions during a race. 
  2. Efficiency Gains: AI automates repetitive tasks and improves processes, freeing project managers to focus on strategy—like how co-pilots manage tactical information during high-speed races. 
  3. Risk Reduction: By identifying potential issues in advance, AI serves as an advisor, much like a racing co-pilot warning about challenging road conditions, enabling initiative-taking corrections. 
Cons of AI as a Co-Pilot: 
  1. Over-Reliance on AI: Just as a driver must remain vigilant and not entirely dependent on the co-pilot, project managers risk deferring critical decisions to AI tools, potentially leading to a lack of accountability. 
  2. Ethical Blind Spots: Racing ethics demand fair play and adherence to rules; similarly, ethical AI use in project management calls for attention to bias, transparency, and fairness. Overlooking these aspects can harm stakeholders or perpetuate inequitable practices. 
In this analogy, collaborative relationships thrive when the human retains ultimate responsibility while leveraging AI as a supporting entity. 
Shape 
The Driverless Car Comparison: Autonomous AI in Project Management 
Shifting perspective, consider driverless cars: vehicles fully controlled by AI, requiring minimal human intervention. Some envision project management systems that resemble a driverless car—autonomous AI overseeing the project's execution from start to finish. While promising, this model has risks and challenges to consider. 
Pros of Autonomous AI in Project Management: 
  1. Unparalleled Precision: Autonomous AI can minimize human errors, akin to driverless cars maintaining perfect lane control or braking at precisely calculated intervals. 
  2. Scalability: AI can manage complex, multi-layered projects beyond human capacity, like its role in optimizing traffic flows with autonomous vehicle networks. 
Cons of Autonomous AI: 
  1. Loss of Human Judgment: Driverless cars highlight the drawback of removing human intuition, empathy, and situational awareness—a challenge mirrored in project management where human leadership and creativity are essential. 
  2. Accountability Gaps: In a driverless car accident, responsibility is ambiguous. Similarly, with autonomous AI, project managers may struggle to allocate accountability for errors, raising ethical dilemmas. 
  3. Ethical Concerns: Driverless cars must navigate moral conflicts (e.g., protecting passengers versus pedestrians). In project management, fully autonomous systems must grapple with potentially biased decisions affecting stakeholders, raising questions of fairness and inclusivity. 
Shape 
Ethical Considerations: Responsibility and Integrity 
Both racing co-pilots and driverless cars illustrate contrasting extremes in human-machine collaboration. A key differentiator in these scenarios is ethical responsibility: 
  • In shared responsibility (co-pilot), humans are ethically required to oversee and correct AI outputs, ensuring alignment with organizational values and stakeholder trust. Like racing, project managers retain control while benefiting from AI's support. 
  • In autonomous systems (driverless cars), ethical concerns magnify as AI takes over critical decisions. Issues of fairness, inclusivity, and transparency emerge, demanding rigorous bias checks, accountability frameworks, and adherence to PMI’s Code of Ethics principles. 
Driving AI responsibly in projects calls for a careful balance. Project managers must evaluate how AI’s involvement impacts stakeholder trust, transparency, and ethical integrity. 
Shape 
Conclusion: The Road Ahead for AI in Project Management 
The racing co-pilot and driverless car analogies shed light on the pivotal balance required in leveraging AI for project management. While AI offers immense benefits—such as efficiency, precision, and scalability—it also raises concerns about accountability, ethical responsibility, and judgment. As the PMI Code of Ethics underscores values like fairness, honesty, and responsibility, project managers must ensure AI tools serve as partners rather than replacements, fostering trust and inclusivity. 
By choosing the right path—whether enhanced collaboration or selective autonomy—project managers can steer their projects responsibly toward success while maintaining the ethical values essential to effective leadership. 

Related discussion topic: Can project management run on AI autopilot?


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Posted by Stelian ROMAN on: March 04, 2026 03:42 AM | Permalink | Comments (5)

What is new in PMBOK 8 – An ethics perspective

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Imagine a team of explorers crossing a desert. No matter how skilled its members are or how modern their vehicles are, they may not succeed in reaching their destination without a compass. In project management, ethics serve as that compass, guiding decision-making, fostering trust, and ensuring accountability.
 For PMI Members, the compass is the Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct. Developed even before the first edition of the Project Management Book of Knowledge, the Code was and remains the holder of the guardrails of the project management profession.
PMBOK 7 replaced knowledge areas with performance domains. The 8th is more aligned with the Agile delivery approach, whilst retaining the importance of good governance. Like the previous version, the PMBOK highlights alignment with both internal and external environments. It is important to note the focus on artificial intelligence and sustainability.
Principles of project management
PMBOK 8 simplified the 12 principles from the 7th edition to create a more focused and actionable foundation for modern project management. The principles of project management are aligned with the values of PMI’s Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct. They do not follow the same format, and they are not duplicative; rather, the principles and the Code of Ethics are complementary.
·Adopt a holistic view: Consider the project within its larger organizational and ecosystem context.
·Focus on value: Prioritize delivering tangible value and aligning project outcomes with strategic goals.
·Embed quality into processes and deliverables: Integrate quality throughout the project lifecycle, not just as a final check.
·Be an accountable leader: Take ownership and responsibility for the project's success and outcomes.
·Integrate sustainability within all project areas: Include environmental and social considerations in project work.
·Build an empowered culture: Foster a project environment that empowers team members. 
Enterprise environmental factors: Internal and external to the Organization
·The standard emphasises the impact of organizational culture, structure, and governance. Aspects like vision, mission, values, beliefs, cultural norms, leadership style, hierarchy and authority relationships, organizational style, ethics, and code of conduct remain critical success factors, as well as a framework for ethical decision making. Social and cultural influences and issues. External factors include political climate, regional customs and traditions, public holidays and events, codes of conduct, ethics, and perceptions.

Artificial Intelligence (AI)
AI ethical issues, especially the responsible use of AI tools and the negative impact on project team members, are an especially important aspect. Topics like data privacy and security can be addressed using technical controls. Issues like bias and fairness require special attention from project managers. Lack of clarity on who is responsible when AI-driven decisions go wrong can create confusion and an unending blame game. AI agents cannot be (yet) included in a Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, or Informed (RACI) matrix. Although their use is unavoidable, the responsibility and accountability remain with the human user.
The use of AI is dependent on context, and it should be assessed for each project through a decision-making process to determine when AI can assist with tasks or provide more time for other valuable activities. The evaluation should be focused on the use of AI to produce project artifacts. Initiative-taking measures should be considered to identify and assess the risk of incorporating AI and determine if it is acceptable or it should be controlled.
Below is a list of some ethical concerns related to the use of AI in projects
  • Accountability and responsibility: When AI systems are used for decision-making, it is challenging to assign accountability if something goes wrong. AI agents are not members of the project team; they are a tool that should augment human capabilities. Project managers need to establish clear lines of responsibility for the outcomes of AI-driven projects.
  • Bias and fairness: AI is still in its infancy, and finding large volumes of good-quality data that can be used to train AI models is difficult. AI models can inherit biases from the data they are trained on, leading to unfair or discriminatory outcomes in areas like task assignment or performance evaluation. These biases can reinforce existing societal prejudices related to factors like gender, race, or socioeconomic status, potentially leading to workplace discrimination and legal penalties.
  • Transparency and explainability: The "black box" nature of some AI algorithms makes it difficult to understand how they reach a decision. This lack of transparency can erode trust and make it hard for project managers to oversee, troubleshoot, or validate AI-driven recommendations.
  • Over-reliance on AI agents and lack of human oversight: At any point in the project, the control should remain with humans and avoid over-reliance on AI. Lack of knowledge and practice can lead to a decline in critical thinking and human judgment among team members.
Chapter X3.3 (Responsible Use and Ethical Concerns) provides guidance for project managers to mitigate the risks associated with AI, putting the emphasis on project managers to assess the challenges and benefits and make appropriate decisions regarding AI’s use in projects. For example, to avoid bias the standard recommends the following controls:
·Diversification of the data sets on which the AI system is trained;
·Periodic tests conducted on the AI system, with particular focus on bias; and
·Involvement of different teams in the development of the AI system.


Procurement is another ethics area of focus that PMBOK 8 provides guidance on. In chapter X4.9.2, Sensitivity of Legal Actions and Upholding Ethics Codes, the standard provides considerations to avoid impact on project outcomes and stakeholder relationships:
·Nuanced communication.
·Escalation protocols.
·Confidentiality.
·Impartiality.
PMBOK 7 explicitly references the PMI Code of Ethics as a complementary and essential guide for project professionals. This code provides the specific rules for ethical conduct, based on core values of honesty, responsibility, respect, and fairness.
  • Contextual application: The principles and the code are designed to be applied within the context of project work. Ethical dilemmas are often encountered when balancing conflicting needs, and the framework provides guidance for decision-making.
  • Performance domains: Ethical dilemmas can arise in any of the performance domains (e.g., Stakeholders, Delivery, Performance). The principles and the code provide the tools for navigating these situations and making responsible choices.
  • Focus on value: Ethical considerations are a crucial part of focusing on long-term value, rather than just short-term outputs, ensuring that projects are conducted in a responsible and sustainable way. 
Connection to PMI's Code of Ethics
  • The principles in the PMBOK 8th Edition align with and reinforce the values in the PMI Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct, which are honesty, responsibility, respect, and fairness.
  • Project managers are expected to apply these principles in their daily work to make ethical choices that lead to positive results and maintain trust. 
  • The PMI Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct remains the primary source for detailed ethical guidelines.
  • ProjectManagement.com offers webinars that discuss the connection between PMBOK 7 principles and the Code of Ethics. 
Posted by Stelian ROMAN on: December 11, 2025 06:47 PM | Permalink | Comments (4)

Conflict Resolution: Leading with Ethics to Prevent Fractures from Becoming Irreparable and Transform Them into Growth

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This past week, I caught up with several former colleagues and friends from different organisations. A recurring theme emerged in our conversations: many of them are grappling with significant challenges, with much of their time and energy consumed in trying to resolve conflicts within their teams. In several cases, these conflicts are escalating and beginning to get out of hand.

By the end of the week, these discussions prompted me to pause and reflect, analysing not only what I had heard, but also how it connects with lessons I’ve learned through teaching, leadership, and practice. 

Why Do We End Up in Conflict?

Across these reflections, one root cause stood out: misaligned expectations. When expectations are not met, trust begins to erode. But why are expectations so often out of alignment?

Each person brings their own interpretation of what success will look like working in this team driven mostly by their own sense of purpose. Over time, when those expectations are not met for a variety of reasons. Without the right guardrails in place, signs of disengagement or frustration go unnoticed until conflict surfaces.

How individuals react is strongly influenced by their values and coping mechanisms. For organisations, this can result in good employees quietly leaving disruptive arguments within teams, or prolonged disputes that drain productivity and morale.

Drawing from My Teaching Experience

When teaching the PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP®) course under Domain IV: Team Performance, one of the models I referenced often was Speed B. Leas’ Model of Conflict. It outlines five escalating levels of conflict from manageable problem solving to entrenched, intractable disputes.

The lesson is simple but powerful: leaders must recognise and address conflict early. In agile environments, where transparency and collaboration are vital, even small misunderstandings can snowball into major disputes if left unchecked.

Another useful framework is the Thomas-Kilmann Conflict Mode Instrument (TKI), which identifies five approaches: competing, collaborating, compromising, avoiding, and accommodating. Effective leaders learn to adapt their approach to context, while prioritising collaboration for long term trust and cohesion. Together, these frameworks reinforce a core truth: effective conflict resolution requires awareness, adaptability, and timing.

Preventing Conflict Before It Escalates

The best approach to conflict is prevention. From my reflections, several practices stand out as essential:

  • Shared vision and purpose: A clear “why” which keeps the team aligned.
  • Team ground rules: Agreements on how the team will work and communicate serve as guardrails.
  • Empathy in action: Recognising that we are all human subject to personal highs and lows helps teams support one another through challenges.
  • Regular touchpoints: Leaders must check in frequently to ensure expectations remain clear and trust is intact.
  • Open and safe dialogue: Providing space for candid conversations allows issues to surface early, before they escalate.

When these practices are embedded in the way we work, conflict shifts from being destructive to becoming a constructive part of problem solving.

The Role of PMI Ethics

Conflict also brings us back to values and ethics. How we respond under pressure whether we lash out, withdraw, resign quietly, or seek constructive dialogue is guided by both personal values and professional standards.

The PMI Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct provide a compass for leaders and teams alike:

  • Responsibility – owning our decisions and their consequences.
  • Respect – valuing diverse perspectives and treating others with dignity.
  • Fairness – acting impartially, without bias or favouritism.
  • Honesty – communicating truthfully and transparently.

Applied consistently, these principles not only help to prevent conflict but also shape how teams respond when disagreements inevitably arise.

When Conflict Becomes Beyond Repair

Despite best efforts, some conflicts move beyond repair. This typically happens when:

  • Trust has been repeatedly broken.
  • Core values are fundamentally misaligned.
  • Hostility escalates into personal
    attacks.
  • Resolution is delayed too long, allowing resentment to harden.

At this stage, leadership often shifts from resolution to containment, restructuring, or separation, to protect the wider team and organisation.

These conversations reinforced my belief that conflict is not a sign of failure it is an inevitable part of human interaction. When addressed constructively, it can become a powerful driver of learning, innovation, and stronger collaboration. The true test of leadership lies in how early we recognise conflict, how openly we create space for resolution, and how firmly we anchor our actions in ethical principles. By leading with responsibility, respect, fairness, and honesty, we can transform conflict into an opportunity for trust and growth ultimately strengthening the very foundations of collaboration and leadership.

Posted by Yannick Arekion on: October 10, 2025 05:50 PM | Permalink | Comments (4)

PMI Code of Ethics on the Menu: What’s Your Strongest Flavor?

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Imagine walking into a cozy little café called The Ethics Bistro. The air smells of freshly brewed coffee, and the tables are filled with people quietly reflecting on their day. At one corner table sits a project manager named David, looking worried.

The owner of the bistro, a wise old mentor, notices David’s frown and walks over.

“Why so serious, David?” the mentor asks.

David sighs. “I am leading a project team, but I am struggling to make the right calls. Deadlines, clients, budgets it feels like I am being pulled in every direction. How do I know if I am being fair?”

The mentor smiles and says, “Ah, then you need to taste the four-course meal we serve here every day. It is called the PMI Code of Ethics.”

First Course: Responsibility

“Responsibility is like the soup,” the mentor explains. “It warms the soul. As project managers, we are responsible for our decisions, both good and bad. If something goes wrong, we take responsibility instead of placing blame. Taking responsibility keeps the project honest and the team confident.”

Second Course: Respect

Next comes the main dish. “Respect is the heart of the meal. Just as food is seasoned with care, respect seasons every conversation. Whether it is a client, team member, or vendor, every person deserves to be valued. Respect builds trust, and trust keeps the project alive.”

Third Course: Fairness

Then arrives a plate of perfectly balanced flavors. “Fairness means treating everyone equally. No hidden favoritism, no secret deals. Like sharing bread at the table, fairness ensures everyone gets their piece. When the team feels fairness, they give their best.”

Final Course: Honesty

Finally, dessert is served sweet but powerful. “Honesty,” says the mentor, “is the sugar of relationships. Speak the truth, even when it is uncomfortable. A project can survive a missed deadline, but it cannot survive broken trust.”

David listens carefully, sipping coffee. “So, the PMI Code of Ethics is like this meal responsibility, respect, fairness, and honesty. If I serve these values to my team, they will follow me with trust.”

The mentor nods. “Exactly. Projects come and go, but the taste of integrity stays forever.”

As David leaves the Ethics Bistro that night, the burden feels lighter. He knows that no matter how tough the project becomes, the recipe for ethical leadership will guide him.

If you were serving your project team at the Ethics Bistro, which course responsibility, respect, fairness, or honesty would they say is your strongest flavor?

Share your answer in the comments.

Reference:

PMI Code of Ethics & Professional Conduct

Posted by Shenila Shahabuddin on: October 04, 2025 01:39 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)

How should we protect the value and the reputation of PMI and PMP Certification? 

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Hello Everyone!

I wanted to share a LinkedIn post with you today. It is not my post, but I proudly reposted it for my LinkedIn connections. It affects every project management professional who holds or aspires to earn the PMP® certification.

What happened to Samer can happen to any of us, and like him, we should follow PMI's Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct..

"A few days ago, I received a message via WhatsApp from an unauthorized provider in Saudi Arabia claiming they could give me a PMP® certificate without taking the official exam, for just $450 USD!"

 

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7343683099454509056/

 

Well done. Samer Musallam Dahdal. PMP-PMI

 

Posted by Stelian ROMAN on: June 27, 2025 04:48 AM | Permalink | Comments (1)
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