How to Be a Productive Project Manager: 7 Tips

    Productivity

  •  Minute Read

Many project managers feel overwhelmed with emails, phone calls, and meetings. They often work overtime, but few feel as though they are making progress. Although we are all given the same amount of time each day, some project managers are able to produce greater value for their organizations. Some are more engaged.

Imagine yourself as a more productive project manager, one with greater capacity and energy to complete each day’s tasks. Let’s look at common problems that impede our progress and what to do about each:

productive

adjective

1: having the quality or power of producing especially in abundance

2: effective in bringing about

Problem #1: I am spending more time managing issues than managing upcoming project activities.

Susan, the project manager, had a gnawing feeling that the network team might fall behind schedule on a high profile project. The network manager failed to order the network cable and routers on time, and now the team is scrambling to make ends meet.

How can project managers prevent issues? Identify project threats and take action early.

Develop a risk management plan – define how you and your teams can identify, evaluate, respond to, and control risks. Teams should take preventative measures to minimize issues and develop contingency plans for risks that may become issues.

Problem #2: I have more work than I can handle.

 I keep a to-do list in Asana. Here’s what I’ve noticed through the years. Many of these tasks were never completed. Guess what? The world kept turning.

The best project managers do valuable work, not busy work. One of the most important things you can do each day is to prioritize your work. Some things that we think are important are not.

When should you prioritize your work? Some individuals invest the last five to ten minutes of their work day prioritizing the next day’s activities. Others prioritize the first few minutes of the work day.

Problem #3: I’m so busy at work that I have a problem keeping my personal commitments to family and friends.

I’ve had a habit for years – I plan my week on Sunday afternoons. I schedule my personal and work activities. The weekly planning helps me maintain my priorities.

Healthy relationships can give you greater capacity to perform at your highest levels. Some project managers fail to invest time with family and friends. Consequently, negative events occur outside of work that affect their ability to focus at work.

Problem #4: I feel stressed and I’m making more mistakes than normal.

We expect a certain amount of stress at work, but bad stress for long periods affects our ability to do quality work. If you’re finding yourself making lots of mistakes and having to rework items often, it’s time for more breaks and rest.

Do you make time outside of work to do things that you enjoy – play golf, read, learn a musical instrument? Do you take vacations? These breaks reduce stress and provide mental clarity.

Problem #5: I don’t have much energy in the day, particularly in the afternoon and evenings.

Tom has worked overtime for the past three weeks attempting to catch up on his projects. When asked about his exercise, Tom says, “I don’t have time.”

Busy, productive individuals make time to exercise. Consider some of these exercises and find something you enjoy: walking, swimming, biking, jogging, or doing upper body workouts. It’s great to take breaks during the day to walk and stretch.

Sleep is essential for productive project managers. The National Sleep Foundation recommends 7-9 hours of sleep. For you geeks, check out the Sleep Cycle app– pretty cool!

I find exercise and sleep save me time by giving me greater energy. I also have energy to give to my family and friends in the evenings.

Problem #6: I am overextended in several areas of my life. I have no margin or free time.

Individuals don’t get into this state over night, and you will not correct the problem quickly. However, here are some tips. First, evaluate all of your activities at work and outside of work and eliminate what you can. Second, start saying “no” to requests when you can. Third, don’t let people guilt you into things for which you don’t have time.

Problem #7: I have meeting problems. Individuals come unprepared, people get off track, and others constantly check email.

First, make sure you need a meeting. If so, distribute an agenda prior to the meeting specifying the purpose of the meeting, what individuals should bring, and how they may prepare.

Work with your team to define meeting ground rules. What behaviors does the team desire?

Start the meeting by stating the purpose of the meeting, ground rules, and reviewing the agenda. Begin with the first agenda item. When someone gets off topic, gently bring them back to the agenda topic. For large meetings, you may wish to assign a gatekeeper who has the responsibility to keep everyone on track.

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