The Summer Syndrome
June 1st, 2015 by Clint Padgett
Happy summer. Your project is about to get disrupted.
Summer brings vacations, kids free from school, office summer hours, and weddings. It disrupts the flow of business (up to 20 percent decrease in productivity and a 13 percent increase in project turnaround times). Global projects are particularly vulnerable to The Summer Syndrome, since many workers abroad often vacation at the same time, in August.
In the U.S. not everyone will vacation at the same time…but that’s a mixed blessing. A string of vacations taken throughout summertime creates a ripple effect as the project progresses. Decision makers, team members, vendors, consultants, shippers, payment processors – every function and business segment is affected.
That’s a compelling argument for the Project Success Method’s duration based project planning. Our seven-step duration estimating process helps team members devise real-world timeframes (in which people go on vacations, for instance), while our add-in for Microsoft Project give managers more control of the schedule.
Of course project managers must still monitor for schedule slippage to prevent the Summer Syndrome. However, the right tools and realistic scheduling can help make projects and teams have it “made in the shade” clear through to project completion.
Tags: accountability, challenge, deadlines, focus, goals, Project Management, Project Success, Project Success Method, Summer, teamwork
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