Projects required time, space and attention to be really successful. A project doesn’t just involve the team actively working on it, but needs contribution by stakeholders for sign off and peripheral buy-in staff-wide, some of whom may need to adhere to a change brought about by the project.
There’s a few tell-tale signs of a business trying to do too much at once. In this article we’ll talk about a few of these and why prioritising your projects is critical for the success of each of them.
How many projects is ‘too many’?
Smaller businesses can’t cope with the resource, time and money drain of too many projects. In fact, SMEs might be best to run only 1-2 reasonably sized projects at once, or do what we often suggest to all sizes of business and break each project into smaller pieces. And for large organisations with thousands of employees, there’s obviously more bandwidth to accomodate more projects, provided the parts of the business impacted don’t deal with more than a few projects at once. So in essence, large organisations should consider their business units as small businesses with regards to their readiness for the impacts of active projects running.
Without doing this, the same department of your business can suffer from project ‘fatigue’, where the projects that have an impact on their work start to become confusing and muddled. BAU staff inevitably have interaction with a project, even if it’s as the recipient of comms and eventually a tangible business change. Some may be pulled into a project for meetings or even for some work. Imagine then, the same people being pulled in 5 different directions on top of their regular work. It’s a quick way to disengage a key audience – your staff.
Too many projects can also put strain on the finances of the business. Keeping many plates spinning at once can cost, especially if there are unforeseen circumstances that demand more budget for one or more projects within the portfolio. When businesses try to juggle too many projects, there’s little wriggle room for reactive budget allocation.
There’s also the matter of how many initiatives a senior leadership team can adequately stay across on top of their other operating functions. No one executive level role should be worrying about more than a few key programmes at one time, nor should programme directors have to deal with more than a few projects.
Approaching the conversation of project prioritisation
The conversation of prioritisation needs to be had with the anchoring points of the annual, 2 year, 5 year strategies to hand. When prioritisation references the business’ objectives and not the agendas or goals of the individual, decisions can be made easier, faster.
Prioritising a project doesn’t simply come from the business strategy however. Discussion and consultation with the business, and guidance from external parties in some cases (like us), helps to equip a leadership team with more data points on which to reshuffle the project portfolio. Sometimes a project may not seem as high up in the list of strategic imperatives, but actually has a clear, quick path to completion based on the business’ current status. Some technology based projects like system updates or establishing a new tool might not be the biggest move forward, but the roll out could be fairly straightforward.
Sometimes business’ prioritisation of projects may be done as a precursor to splitting up projects into smaller ones. This brings more confidence to the business of certain deliverables’ ability to be completed. By breaking up projects into smaller pieces, the most pressing strategic objectives can progress, without derailing all others.
In our work with our clients, we make sure not to rush the process of developing a good project portfolio. It’s not one meeting where this is determined, but a series of discussions, information gathering and data-led decision making.
Signs you have too many projects on the go
So, what are the tell-tale signs we speak of? The short answer is that there’s dozens of possible red flags. But for this article we’ll cover some of the more common of these:
Budget is continually being reallocated and stretched across multiple initiatives
The more projects that are active at one time, the further capital expenditure needs to go. If there are too many projects on the go, each may struggle to get sufficient budget to deliver, particularly if there are unforeseen events that require additional resource, scope changes or rework. When the wriggle room is only enabled through robbing Peter to pay Paul, all projects will suffer as a result.
None of the milestones seem to be getting hit on time
Quality of delivery is dropping
The same stakeholders are getting pulled in multiple directions
Leadership teams don’t have time to focus on every initiative
The same team members are getting dragged into multiple projects at once
Project teams are usually assembled to own the bulk of delivery, but these teams require input from the rest of the business who need to implement the project’s outputs. It’s also common for organisations to tap into existing staff for help on a project as this reduces the additional cost of new outside resources. It’s possible that some key staff (particularly key subject matter experts) are in demand on more than one project. This is okay once in a while, but if it becomes the norm and day to day operations suffer, there’s an issue.
Staff simply stop trying to keep up with all the projects and lose interest
What are the business’ strategic priorities? Start here first
Get help prioritising projects and get things back on track
Having independent assurance and advice around a reprioritisation of your projects can be tremendously beneficial to organisations, especially those where there are many opposing views on which projects should remain priority.
IQANZ brings completely independent, objective advice to businesses. We use the available information about your business goals and the status of each project to determine which projects are the most important to keep in your active portfolio.
Our team has a lot of experience and draws upon proven quality assurance methodologies to help clients refine and plan their projects within a portfolio that makes good outcomes more likely.
Chat to our team to discover IQANZ’ portfolio assurance service.