Use the EZ Form First
April 15th, 2015 by Clint Padgett
“Paralysis by Analysis,” “Information Overload,” “TMI.”
If the key to a successful project is controlling time, one timewaster to eliminate is over-reporting. Some managers spend too much time tracking too many activities at too low a level of detail.
Luckily, reporting doesn’t have to be like doing your taxes, if you have some guidelines on how much detail is enough:
Each activity should produce a deliverable or change in product status with just enough information to indicate a change in status.
- Subdivide long-term activities into tasks of about a month, so you can track and monitor progress reliably.
- As a rule of thumb, a good level of detail is between three and fifteen working days.
Of course, some large, complex projects – just like large, complex tax returns – need some outside help. Our hands-on course in Control Methods & Practices with Microsoft Project streamlines controlling the performance of projects characterized by complexity and dynamic change.
A concise reporting strategy lets everyone spend their time on the project and not on reporting. Whoever said “the Devil is in the details” was likely a project manager.
Tags: atlanta, deadlines, decisions, focus, Project Success Method, tax day, teamwork
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