Project Management

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Why Project Managers Are Not Respected ?

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Ali Zaidan Projects Leader| Prime Source Group Dammam, Eastern Province, Saudi Arabia
Here are eight opinions I found repeated in various forms on the Internet, over and over and over.

1. Project managers are generally perceived as being in their role primarily because they don’t have the required technical skills to do development and similar activities.

2. Project managers do not create software systems and are therefore often seen somewhat as sycophants who ride along on the ability of others.

3. Project managers tend to vastly overstate the importance of the project-peripheral artifacts they produce (schedules, endless e-mail communications, and so on).

4. Project managers are seen as having no unique skills; because most of project management consists of communication and organization activities, there’s a strong perception that project management is just common sense. So project managers are easily replaceable.

5. In a technical environment, project managers constantly ask, “give me more respect” rather than actively engaging in activities (such as learning more about programming languages and technologies) that would actually generate more respect from their colleagues.

6. Project managers aren’t entirely necessary. For example, in a startup company you can live without an extra project manager but you can’t live without developers. Put another way, in a pinch, developers can act as project managers but project managers can’t do development.

7. Technically skilled employees, especially developers, are constant, active learners. But project managers’ skillsets are essentially static. Therefore there’s little difference between a PM two years out of school and one with ten years of experience.

8. Because women are over-represented in project management, there’s a belief that most are hired to fill HR gender quota goals rather than on the basis of ability.

What do you think ???
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Luis Branco CEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, Ldª Carcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal

Ali Zaidan
This list is troubling — not because it's accurate, but because it reflects persistent misconceptions about the role of project managers in certain technical or poorly structured environments. Let me respond thoughtfully, point by point — not with resentment, but with clarity:

1 & 2 – “PMs lack technical skills” and “ride on others’ work”
These are classic symptoms of a narrow value lens — one that recognizes only direct technical contribution (e.g., coding) while ignoring the value of alignment, orchestration, foresight, and delivery under uncertainty.
Engineers may build the engine, but without steering, navigation, and coordination, the vehicle doesn’t move with purpose.

3 – “Overvaluing peripheral artifacts”
True — some PMs confuse documentation with delivery.
But the best PMs understand that plans, timelines, communications, and dashboards are enablers — not ends in themselves.
They’re tools to prevent cascade failures, align priorities, and create shared visibility. Criticizing PMs for this is like mocking a conductor for using a score.

4 & 5 – “No unique skillset” and “asking for respect”
Project management is not “just common sense.”
True PMs operate with advanced skills in adaptive leadership, conflict resolution, stakeholder psychology, strategic prioritization, and delivery under complexity.
And no — respect isn’t gained by learning to code just to appease technical peers.
It’s earned by creating clarity, coherence, and conditions for collective success.

6 – “PMs are dispensable”
Startups that make it beyond the MVP often learn the hard way that without project discipline, innovation becomes chaos.
PMs aren’t overhead — they’re execution catalysts.
Developers acting as part-time PMs often sacrifice depth on both ends.
These roles are not interchangeable without trade-offs.

7 – “Skillset doesn’t evolve”
This is simply false.
Modern project management now embraces agility, AI integration, behavioral economics, ESG alignment, user-centered design, business agility, and more.
Skilled PMs are continuous learners — and often the ones driving learning in their teams.

8 – “Women in PM = quota hires”
This is a toxic, discriminatory belief that must be confronted directly.
Gender diversity in project management isn’t about quotas — it reflects competence, leadership, and strategic capability.
Comments like this reveal more about the bias of the speaker than about those being spoken about.
Prejudice masked as analysis is a form of symbolic violence that should have no place in our professional communities.

Final thought
Rather than demeaning the PM role, a more constructive question would be:
- “How can we evolve project management to meet emerging challenges with greater impact, collaboration, and purpose?”

Project management is — and will continue to be — a core discipline where vision, people, and execution converge.
Let’s move beyond stereotypes and into meaningful dialogue.

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Wei Wu NanJing, JS, China, Mainland

I think it depends on your company and how your PM role is defined.
For example, in real estate, the PM is a powerful leader. They can decide many things and can be regarded as a top-level manager. But in the software field, especially in consumer electronics projects, if a PM doesn’t have C/C++ skills, they cannot communicate well with team members. As a result, they won’t be respected by other members.
Over time, they may even be ignored by coders or become irrelevant.

This issue can be resolved in two ways:
They should have a background in programming. This is particularly helpful for non-technical PMs and can be considered an easy solution.
The PM role can be filled by someone transferred from the technical team, such as a coder or software architect. This way, they can communicate fluently with the team.

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