Handling the Creeps
May 21st, 2015 by Clint Padgett
There are two big creeps in project management that travel in pairs and always cause trouble: the expansion of the project called Scope Creep, and its traveling companion Schedule Creep, the extension of the project deadline.
Both creeps show up in projects with:
- Incomplete project scope development in the charter.
- Vague requirements from clients or management.
- Unauthorized scope and/or schedule changes and additions after the project’s start.
- Poor communication among the teams.
- Poor planning by team members.
- A lack of project control.
Handling both types of creeps calls for vigilance by the project manager. Diligent monitoring can nip some problems early, and requiring that approved scope changes are accompanied by revised estimates in time and budget can be helpful.
Entrenched issues – like an “impossible” new deadline or no budget for additional staff – need a comprehensive solution. PSI prevents both creeps from trashing projects with a ‘compression” technique; and ‘forward pass scheduling.” As important, PSI helps maintain the team’s commitment to the project – even through additions or changes.
These techniques, taught in our two day training and described with case histories in The Project Success Method book, manages scope, scheduling and more, so you can enjoy the creeps where they belong – while watching a scary movie.
Tags: accountability, deadlines, decisions, goals, Project Management, Project Success, Project Success Method
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