How many non-IT projects are late, over budget or fall short of objectives?
Add yours up and you’re likely to find between 25 and 75 percent suffer one or more
of these shortcomings. These faults might
not always cause damage to your project, profits or reputation.
But more often than not, project difficulties put you and your organization at risk.
For many service providers, no two projects seem to proceed the same way. These
variances—some foreseeable, some not—create difficulties you must overcome to reach
your goals.
ProjectChallenge
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Discussion
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Cost over-runs
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It’s one thing to go over budget because you discover new benefits or savings mid-project.
It’s another if the cause is poor project preparation or communications. The worst
scenario? When you are unable to track costs until after the money is spent.
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Missed deadlines
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Deadlines are missed for the same reason projects go over budget. There is an important
difference: you can exceed budget to meet a deadline. But when a project is delayed,
costs are almost certain to increase. And while people might not understand whether
a project achieves objectives, everyone understands deadlines and budgets.
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Constant changes in scope
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Most projects require frequent adjustments. Problems occur when lack of systems
and procedures make it difficult to routinely respond to and accommodate change.
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Little or no time and money near project end
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The precursor to missing deadline and exceeding budget. The same causes apply: inadequate
or missing project preparation, communication systems and methodology.
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Unrealistic schedules
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Chronic difficulty meeting deadlines is usually the result of poor pre-project planning
procedures and communication.
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Team unsure of roles, tasks and schedules
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When people are confused and messages missed, projects quickly derail. Communication
systems with receipt verification can expose misunderstanding and lapses.
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Poor internal communication
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Effective project communication requires systematic shared access to key information.
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Poor customer communication
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Projects and relationships suffer when clients feel out of the loop or staff is
unable to give timely updates on costs and project status.
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Limited access to project files and information
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When work descriptions, schedules and other documents are inconvenient to access
or horded, project management requirements go up and productivity goes down.
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Wasted efforts
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There can be many reasons results are not achieved or a team pursues unproductive
activities. Real-time project tracking and open communications help maintain progress.
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Too many project meetings
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Without effective communication systems, teams must resort to a large number of
productivity-sapping meetings.
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Employee turnover
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Miscommunication, uncertain responsibilities and low productivity lead to the defection
of valuable team members.
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High learning curve
for new employees
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When key project details are stored in the head of someone no longer on the team
or is otherwise difficult to access, new staff takes much longer to be effective.
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Lack of accountability
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When people are uncertain about their responsibilities or can hide from them, tasks
fall through the cracks and work goes undone.
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