Project Management is one of the oldest, most established disciplines in the world. The onslaught of productization and automation has brought about a huge change in the way organizations approach and implement project management. As organizations start to look beyond the initial ROI gains from automation towards sustained long-term benefits, it is crucial for them to strike a balance between the art and science of project management. In this blog, we will discuss how organizations can work towards achieving that fine balance.
The Science
The science side of project management addresses planning, forecasting, measurement, and resource management. The science essentially covers the measurable aspects, such as budget, time, and their downstream implications, such as timeliness, utilization, productivity, expenses, and adherence thereof. The purpose is to address the four key management focus areas: (1) Project Progress, (2) Budget adherence, (3) Timeline adherence, and (4) Resource Utilization. Here is how organizations can master the science side of project management.
Process excellence
Implementing well-laid-out processes brings in standardization and transparency to project execution. Everyone working on the project is thereby working towards a common goal using the best possible set of steps. What makes it even more effective is the ability to improve continuously. There are many established process excellence frameworks that organizations can choose from, based on the type of industry, nature of the project, size of teams, and other parameters.
Data-driven decision making
Across the lifecycle of a project, a wide range of data points are generated: Time, Budget, Risk, Resources, to name a few. These data points, when visualized, can provide valuable insights such as resource productivity & utilization, project health in terms of time & budget, and risk factors. Teams, stakeholders, and customers use a common language to keep the project on track and make informed decisions towards ensuring success.
Tools
Technology is the third and most important component in the science of project management. Project management tools can help organizations operationalize processes and institute a data-driven culture by capturing, aggregating, and visualizing data across the lifecycle. The business environment today demands that organizations invest in the right tools and drive adoption.
The Art
Processes, Data, and Tools alone would be enough for project success if it were an organization of robots. Organizations, however, are made of humans. The ability to create a hierarchy of people and get them all motivated to work towards a common goal is where the art part of project management comes in. Let’s look at the aspects that define the art side of things.
Leadership
History shows that strong leaders have consistently delivered success, sometimes in impossible circumstances. Data can be captured, tools can be deployed, but people need to be led. Leadership inspires and motivates people and helps build a healthy work culture. Where people are involved, there are a lot of variables. Leaders have the ability to manage those variables and keep the projects on track towards success.
Culture
We have discussed the importance of culture in project management at length in a previous blog. Culture is the glue that gets teams together and encourages them to contribute towards the greater good. It is what gets people to adopt tools and use them diligently. Culture is what drives them to follow processes down to the last detail. You can tell people what to do and how to do it, but it’s the culture that tells them why to do it.
Creativity & Communication
A project is a destination where the start and end can be decided. How the journey turns out cannot be completely controlled. Art again is a crucial part of making this journey more tangible and productive. Creativity, as subjective as it may be, is crucial to the ideation and problem-solving part of the project lifecycle. Projects demand a collaborative environment where teams, stakeholders, and customers come together to take the project to its agreed conclusion. Effective communication helps keep all concerned parties engaged at all points in time. The journey, therefore, becomes a lot more peaceful, so to speak!
CONCLUSION
Having elaborated on the science and art of project management, we can agree that both are absolutely critical. But it is also very evident that one without the other is just half as good. Organizations, therefore, need to invest time, effort, and money in mastering the art & science of marketing to stay ahead in the game.