How to Hold Your Project Managers Accountable (And Why It Matters) – Ep 005

The AEC Project Management Podcast - Un pódcast de Anthony Fasano, P.E., AEC PM, F. ASCE - Lunes

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In this episode, I talk about how you can hold your project managers accountable and why it matters by providing you with three specific steps you can start implementing right away. Engineering Quotes: Here Are Some Key Points Discussed in This Episode About How to Hold Your Project Managers Accountable: The reason that holding project managers (PMs) accountable is important is that your project managers are the cash flow engine of your firm. They dictate how profitable your projects are. If they are not performing at a high level, the ship may be sinking, so to speak, in terms of your company financially. And unfortunately, oftentimes what happens is if your PMs are not accountable, their projects aren't going to do well financially, although they may do well enough that you won't notice it fast enough to rectify this problem. Your PMs must be held accountable regularly. That being said, let's look at how you hold your PMs accountable. Here are three specific steps that you could take to do this: Step 1: Set Clear Expectations You need to make it extremely clear from the very beginning of their tenure as a project manager what you expect from that person as a project manager and what must be done from a companywide perspective. Firms that have good project management manuals, and good project management processes, typically have clear expectations. When we conduct project management training for firms, especially when we build custom programs, the first session of the training, especially if it's a fundamentals course, covers the expectations the company has of project managers. The other thing you must do in this first step is to not only define the company’s expectations of project managers in the scope, schedule, and budget, but also let them know how you are going to measure whether they're meeting these expectations or not. You could tell someone what you expect from them, but not have a way of measuring it. You must be clear about how you are going to measure it. Develop some metrics of measurement and communicate them to the PMs early on. In all fairness, you cannot measure someone on something unless they know they are being measured on it. It is a critical component of setting clear expectations. Step 2: Monitor Your Project Managers Consistently and Regularly Managing or overseeing leaders can be a tricky thing because there must be a good balance between managing people and not micromanaging people. You want to be able to tell people that you trust them and want them to lead the team effectively. You know they could be a great project manager, but at the same time, you can't let them go off on a tangent, especially if they are a new project manager managing million-dollar projects without oversight or mentoring. The next important piece of this step is to measure and monitor them against those metrics regularly. If you say you are going to be keeping a close eye on their project budgets monthly, ensure that you measure them monthly. The best way to do it is to have them involved in this process. Ask them to run a report once a month, share the report with you, and have a 15-minute call or meeting about the report in which you both review the projects. If you do this every month, you will see how they did every month, why some months were better or worse than others, and why some projects were better or worse than others. This way, you can have the conversations that you need to have. But if you tell them you're going to measure them against something and you don't, then you are not holding them accountable. Step 3: Meet Regularly With Your Project Managers and Discuss the Good and the Bad If you said that you were going to measure them on a monthly or quarterly basis, you must measure them and identify what are they doing wrong and try to correct it. Note, though,

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