What’s the worst that can happen?
May 14th, 2015 by Clint Padgett
Everyone knows the feeling when a traffic jam or a babysitter not showing up plays havoc with a carefully planned day…
…and the back up plan needs a back up plan.
Like everything else in life, projects will have problems, too. Sometimes it’s a wonder how anything gets done. Weather, wildcat strikes, international unrest, or delays due to shipping or subcontractors can hinder progress. Internal issues like a new CEO, or a change in project sponsors can drastically affect a project’s schedule or its resources – and even the most robust planning process can’t foresee every sudden and unexpected event until it is imminent.
That’s why enterprises using our methodology have the edge. We offer more effective ways to prevent, detect and solve problems by using The Worry Curve to stay on track. Our strategy of thinking long-term but planning short-term makes worry productive – preventing molehills from becoming mountains.
As important, we train project managers and enterprises to form real teams with members committed to the project and to each other for mutual support and problem solving at every step of the way…
…short of baby-sitting, that is.
Tags: Project Management, Project Success, Project Success Method, Shifting the Worry Curve
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