Seven Priorities for Project Managers in 2024

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Anyone who tells you with 100 percent certainty what 2024 will look like at the start of the year is bonkers. The best we can do is to recognize that the seed of each new year was planted in the previous year.

If you want to know what your priorities should be for 2024, look at the way your world was at the end of 2023 and the start of this year. The one trend that seems to be 100 percent reliable coming into 2024 is disruption. The world has been a turbulent place for the last couple of years and looks certain to remain so through 2024.

There are internal stresses and strains within countries and regions and major geopolitical threats too. These translate into the everyday concerns of our employers, clients and sponsoring organizations. So, we must be aware of them, as we establish our seven priorities for project managers in 2024.

1. Courageous Leadership

Given the prevalence of disruption, my priority has to be exemplary leadership. You won’t find many countries today where there’s a consensus that national leadership fits this description. The majority of leaders are prioritizing the needs of their stakeholders when managing projects, nor are they making the hard decisions that they need to.

But as project leaders, we must stand out. We are building the future for our sponsors. And this means that to get it right, we must put ourselves on the line and act with absolute integrity. We can do nothing else if we want our teams to behave well and deliver for us.

Related: Mastering the Decision-Making Process: A Practical Guide

2. Personal Resilience

A complex and demanding environment, coupled with a determination to do what is right, despite the cost, will make for high levels of stress. So, my second priority is to look after myself.

You cannot look after your team and your stakeholders unless you are in robust physical, mental and emotional health. To do this, you must make four things a priority in your life:

  1. Fuel: What you put into your body makes a huge difference to your well-being. Be sure to take a lunch break each day.
  2. Rest: Nobody can perform well when they are tired. A couple of poor nights’ sleep in a row can damage your judgment and emotional stability just as much as an excess of alcohol. Fix your sleep schedule to improve your productivity.
  3. Energy: Regular exercise does not just build up your physical stamina, but allows shifting mental gears and detaching from the stressful concerns of your workplace.
  4. Relationships: These indicate both our mental health and the source of protection for it. Invest time and effort in maintaining the relationships that matter to you. A work-life balance is essential given today’s “always-on” culture.

3. Make Time for Yourself

Linked to priority 2 is the need to carve out time that is just for yourself. It seems unfashionable to talk about having a hobby these days, but maybe the term “passion project” will be more appealing. And, what I encounter ever more often are project managers with a “side gig” — a project on the side. Do what it takes to create balance in your life.

4. Exceptional Stakeholder Engagement

This priority doesn’t change from year to year. I fully expect it to be a priority in 2024. As a project manager, make sure you are serving your client, your sponsor and your organization, but the people who will truly judge your work are your stakeholders.

So exceptional stakeholder engagement is the one lever to successful project management that will always dominate the others. One of my favorite sayings is, “Stakeholder engagement is how sophisticated adults manage projects.”

This is to say that, if you place your stakeholders at the heart of every scrap of planning and delivery, you will be most likely to get things right. Commit to engaging them actively. Ask questions, listen, respect their views and open a dialogue. Keep your stakeholders fully informed, and work hard to balance the needs of each against those of the others.

5. Agility and Certainty

There are plenty of project management commentators to remind you of the rise of agile. And certainly, if you are not aware of its strengths, shortcomings and methodologies, you’ll need to make learning about it a priority for 2024 (see priority 7).

Related: Kanban vs. Scrum: Which is Better?

There are also plenty of agile zealots who will tell you, variously, that traditional PM is dead… or that it ought to be! To them, I say your priority is to chill and get some perspective. If you look at the history of project management, with thousands of years of successfully planned projects, “traditional” projects suggest that these methods are the baby, not the bathwater.

The real priority here is to recognize that you always have three principle options when determining your broad approach to a project:

  1. A largely planned, predictive approach that borrows shamelessly from the agile toolset, when you need to
  2. A fundamentally agile approach that selects a suitable methodology, but also incorporates useful elements from traditional project management
  3. A truly blended approach that draws generously from the full breadth of traditional and agile thinking

6. Learn to Work Virtually

The rise of small, compact, agile teams, that use scrum or scrum-like methodologies has had an important mirror. This is the rise of large, global teams that rarely or never meet in the real world. Large organizations have always had to organize globally. But more of us are working with virtual teams, in different offices, in different organizations, and no office at all, but a converted bedroom in a private home.

These are virtual teams, made of people who work together, but may never meet. Tools like Slack, Sharepoint, and ProjectManager oil the bearings of virtual collaboration. But, regardless of location, the values that drive good teamwork don’t change. And, as a project manager, you need to understand them and put them into practice.

It astonishes me how thin the various resources are on this subject. There is much to learn, yet we are still learning, as a human culture, how to do something so alien from the way we evolved. Cross-cultural interactions in person are hard, but it’s nothing compared to managing them over an ADSL fiber.

7. Keep Learning

This last priority is also an evergreen priority, like priority 4. It’s built into most professional qualifications, like those of the PMI and APM. As a professional, your skills need to grow, or they will wither. There is no middle ground.

A failure to invest in your knowledge and skills will mean they don’t just stop growing: they will die. Continual professional development is not just a set of points to keep a qualification: it’s a duty…and a pleasure.

Related: Which Project Management Certification is Right for You?

Whatever route you choose for professionalism, the PMI’s guideline of 35 education hours per three years must be an absolute minimum. That is, after all, just an hour a month. And you cannot even read a decent professional magazine at that time. It’s just three articles like this, per week.

So, whether it’s learning more about virtual teams, doing an agile course, reading a book on stakeholder engagement, or attending a cookery workshop, do make 2024 another year when you keep learning.

Another priority for project managers in 2024 is making sure they’re equipped with the best tools to take advantage of new trends. ProjectManager is online project management software that gives users real-time dashboards and a collaborative online Gantt chart for better scheduling. Try it today, free with this 30-day trial.