How successfully are organizations resource planning capacity today? When talking with project professionals we hear that resource capacity planning can oftentimes be the hardest part of managing projects. In a recent KeyedIn webinar, we polled the attendees to determine if other project leaders were facing the same challenges and here are the results.

poll

As you can see, none of the webinar attendees thought they had it down perfectly! Now let’s break down this data and determine the solution.

What many project leaders overlook about capacity is that it goes beyond a project and must be looked at from a strategic level in order to get it right and make it last! Capacity planning isn’t just about the number of people you have, but should be based on the skills of those resources, the budget allocated to projects, and what business initiatives are being driven from an executive level. Capacity planning is only one of the factors to deliver business decisions successfully.

Let’s take a look at 5 elements to consider for moden resource capacity planning:

  1. Capacity & Capability Let’s take a look at these two key elements and highlight the difference. Capacity is the number of resources you have and where they are assigned, while capability is the skill and will of those resources or what you can get out of them. This is where resource flexibility comes into play and can often be a game changer when considering capacity vs capability. With very specialized resources, you are limited to the projects or tasks that those resources can be assigned to which often leads to resource gaps or resource constraints on projects. An organization's ability to address those capability gaps is important to understanding the risk/reward of how you fill those gaps. Reviewing capacity and capability on an on-going basis is an important part of these elements because portfolio initiatives change and internal shifts will affect capacity plans leading to ongoing revisions. Make sure you look at both capacity and capability when planning for resource
  2. Gap Management This element of modern capacity planning is important to approach strategically. There is nothing wrong with having a gap because you likely won’t have the all the resources you need all the time. There will be positive and negative gaps - sometimes there will be too many people! Here are a few ways to handle gaps.
    - You may choose to ignore/accept a gap because you believe it will naturally solve itself overtime.
    - You may decide to replan projects or reschedule the work when you have the right resources available.
    - You may decide to rebalance a project vs. operations vs. support or assigning people from different departments to new roles for a short time, but you have to understand the cause and effect of that and what might be lacking when making those changes.
    - You may re-prioritize those business goals all together because resources are tight on one specific goal and maybe you pause that goal until some higher prioritized goals are accomplished.
    - You may fill the gap by: Building - develop skills internally, Buying - hiring the skill sets you need, Renting - hire contract workers, Outsourcing - use third party. However, you must fill gaps from an executive level. You can’t successfully achieve gap management by looking at individual department needs. Plan for long term needs not immediate problems including all business areas and all work types will make that easier. Determine the right mix of strategies - what is the easiest thing to do might not be the right solution long term.
  3. Business Integration The business integration element of modern capacity planning is the idea that all corporate functions or business ares have to work together to solve your capacity and capability management issues. Resource management at the strategic level requires everyone involved because they will be part of the solution. Everyone must be up-to-speed. Nothing is “for free” when solving resource problems - make sure the benefit outweighs the costs for going ahead with those changes. Creating synergy will lead to more efficient and effective solutions that will LAST!
  4. Beyond the Project This element identifies the need to think beyond the initial project including post project impacts and knowledge of the value of the completed projects. Impacts of the project go beyond the direct project work areas and customer groups. When a project is completed operationally, the impacts must be managed across the entire portfolio to minimize overall disruption or misalignment. If you don’t think about the post project processes, you may be setting up that completed project for failure. There will be direct and indirect impacts from the project and that impact duration may be important to define. There may be disruptions to operations and support areas which is often greater than the projects themselves, so managing that environment is important. Communicating “what’s in it for them” is key in increasing collaboration between business functions which will lead to minimal disruption and greater project success.


These elements are the building blocks of resource capacity planning and offer the most value when analyzed and executed strategically. There is a science behind getting modern resource capacity planning right, so addressing these key elements will be important to accomplishing business goals!

Back to Mastering Resource Capacity Planning.

Rachel Hentges
PMO Influencer
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Rachel Hentges

Rachel Hentges is challenging PMO leaders to think differently about their role. Rachel is the author of key industry related surveys, reports, blogs and more that challenge the status quo of today’s PMOs.