By
Bob Prieto
Senior Vice President
Fluor Corporation

Over the years I have read all too many project closeout reports, reports from turn-around managers on troubled projects, audit reports and project post-mortems. These reports have recurring findings that can be used to either guide effective management of a project or serve as a findings checklist for the auditor or other manager looking at a troubled project. Clearly an ounce of prevention is the desired course of action.

While the “findings” that follow are not all encompassing, they serve as a good framework for project managers, functional leads and corporate management to assess whether a particular project is suffering from or prone to one or more of the findings common to many troubled projects.

For turnaround manager’s and project auditor’s, it unfortunately will give them a head start in structuring their report!

Findings On A Troubled Project

  1. Failing to Adequately Plan:
    • Poorly defined objectives lead to weak planning
    • Weak planning leads to inefficiency and rework
    • Plan without the end clearly understood
    • Plan not utilized or kept up to date
  2. Weak Communications:
    • Stakeholders not fully defined
    • Communication plan for individual stakeholder groups not fully in place
    • Frequency and completeness of communication does not meet stakeholder’s needs
    • Communication plan and efforts not updated or fail to evolve through project lifecycle
    • Communication approach provides insufficiently for “active listening”
    • Project status not communicated frequently and in detail
  3. Failing to Get Adequate Team Buy-in:
    • Top down planning creates perception of “expediting”
    • Limited team buy-in delays “front line” decisions, acceptance of responsibility and constructive suggestions and feedback
    • Lack of required team skills may not be identified early on
  4. Team Skills Don’t Meet Project Needs:
    • Skill gaps not identified
    • “Hope” adapted as a strategy
    • Changed project needs not reflected in plan or team skills mix
  5. No One is Responsible:
    • Roles and responsibilities in project execution not articulated
    • Control of “white spaces” not addressed
    • Support mechanisms not identified or in place
    • Penalty for “taking personal risks” outweighs penalty for “failing to take personal risk” (retribution vs. reward culture)
  6. Performance Metrics not Effectively Used:
    • “True Condition” of project (or portion) is not known
    • Work performance metrics foster “debate on data” versus focus on performance improvement
    • Accountability not linked to performance
    • Communication and collaboration metrics not established for cross functional activities
    • Importance of safety and quality to overall efficiency not addressed by metrics
  7. Team Culture Not Defined, Communicated, Established or Supported:
    • Negative behaviors are tolerated
    • Difficulty of cultural change not appreciated
    • Team building never completed
    • Feedback mechanism to assess “team” performance not in place
  8. Plan Not Sufficiently Developed:
    • Notion that the “devil is in the details” is not heeded
    • Planning not to a level that allows gaps, conflicts or opportunities to become apparent
    • Planning assumptions not stress tested by detailed plan development
    • Productivity, cost, schedule details based on “historical means” versus current or forecast “realities”
  9. Failure to Fully Assess and Manage Risks:
    • Quantitative risks not comprehensively assessed
    • Over reliance on “factors” from prior projects without understanding differences between projects
    • Event risks not adequately addressed
    • “Known unknowns” not factored into risk analysis
    • Management actions to mitigate or manage risks not developed or articulated
    • Indirect consequences of risks not considered (Project disruption)
    • Contingency planning and provision not vigorously done
    • Plan to manage “unknown unknowns” (crisis planning) not done
  10. Critical Path Not Understood:
    • Project priorities and requirement for achievement not well developed
    • Resources not allocated to clearly support critical path
    • Intermediate milestones not clearly understood or communicated
    • Events impacting or potentially impacting critical path not understood or communicated in a timely manner
  11. Schedule Does Not Reflect Realities of Project:
    • “Political” dates bear no resemblance to project approach or resource loading
    • Morale impact of unrealistic dates and intermediate milestones not appreciated
    • Project sequencing and decision time frames not understood
    • External schedule drivers and constraints not adequately considered
    • Interdependences not adequately reflected in project schedule
  12. Quality Management Culture Not Built Into Project:
    • Quality Plan not developed at outset of project
    • Quality activities not flowed down into all project elements
    • Quality requirements not extended throughout supply chain
    • Timely identification of quality affecting issues does not occur
    • Corrective action plans not developed or effectively implemented
  13. Inadequate Project Management Skills:
    • Required skills not clearly understood at outset of project
    • Skill gaps not identified
    • Inadequate training to close skills gaps
    • Inadequate ongoing performance assessment of management skills
  14. Dysfunctional Project Organization:
    • No clear lines of authority
    • Lack of empowerment
    • Silos impede project performance
    • Lack of timely information sharing
    • Poor interpersonal relationships or lack of trust
  15. Project Management Framework Systems Not in Place or Appropriately Utilized
    • Necessary systems and tools not put in place at outset of project
    • Framework systems are not adequately integrated and do not provide timely and comprehensive “view” of the project.
    • Framework systems are not being utilized and local tools contain unintegrated information important to management of project and assessment of performance
  16. Project Execution Lacks Rigor:
    • Individual WBS elements or activities have not been rigorously planned
    • Early and late start scenarios not considered
    • Pre-conditions to undertaking an activity not well understood
    • Decisions not made in a timely fashion
    • “Paralysis by analysis” is accepted as substitute for informed risk taking
    • Changes and their inevitable disruption are not managed
    • Priorities “float” or no process for re-prioritization of project exists
    • Resource allocation does not match stated priorities
    • Resource hoarding tolerated
    • Organizational or process silos not broken down
  17. Project Execution Bottlenecks not Aggressively Addressed:
    • Telltale signs of people, process or physical bottlenecks not recognized or ignored
    • Unwillingness to deal with difficult people or change or failed processes
    • Team member concerns have no effective channel to management level where they can be addressed
    • Information is funneled or hoarded
  18. Project Reporting Does Not Support Project Delivery
    • Project reports focus on quantity of information versus quality of information
    • Project reports do not track open item status and commitments at an appropriate level of detail
    • Cross cutting project trends and issues not readily identified
  19. Audit Process Not Used to Support Project Execution:
    • Focused on playing “gotcha” instead of supporting project improvement
    • Project team not involved in defining areas of audit, frequency, and areas of focus at outset of project to support their needs
    • Not seen as valuable tool by project team
    • Frequency of audits inadequate to provide input for timely course correction
    • Expertise of audit team inadequate or not respected by project team
  20. Training Not Viewed as an Ongoing Activity:
    • Work Process implemented on ad hoc basis
    • No consistency of approach
    • No feedback loops to capture lessons learned or train best practices into team activities
    • Evolution of skills and associated training needs over project life cycle not recognized
  21. Inadequate Project Closeout:
    • Lack of closeout plan and checklist
    • Commissioning requirements not comprehensively addressed
    • Financial closeout process and requirements not agreed to
  22. Lessons Not Learned:
    • Prior project post mortems not reviewed
    • Lessons learned and best practices encountered during project execution not captured or communicated
    • Inadequate attention to conducting a project post mortem