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Planning Phase

Become a better planner

Managing the expectations of beneficiaries, donors and maintaining stakeholder relationships is important to the long-term success of any project. Planning can be the difference between success and failure. Whether you are managing a small project or a multi-year program, planning is a critical factor for project success. Here are four tips on how you can become a better planner.

  • Strengths and weaknesses. Figure out where your strengths are and where your weakness may lie. As a project manager, you don’t need to develop all the project plans, work on those that you know you have expertise and delegate or ask others with more experience to do the plans where your skills are not too strong. For example, you may be good at decomposing the project using a Work Breakdown Structure (WBS), but you may now know much about using scheduling software to find out the project’s critical path.  
  • Plan with SMART goals in mind. Set some reachable short-term goals. How many milestones do you want to make this month? How many beneficiaries do you want to reach? How many events will you present this month? Set a goal and reach it. Work the project details on short-term goals; don’t spend too much time defining the tasks for objectives that are still months or even years away in your project plan. Projects are built on assumptions, and assumptions tend to change.
  • Engage the team. Make sure you engage your team and keep them in the loop. Brainstorm everything, from the issues you might face in planning and execution, to the possible techniques and tools you might use for their solving. Mind maps and free-writing are just some of the techniques for effective brainstorming. Besides using the team as raw processing power of the brain, you also need to constantly inform them on all the project-related developments.
  • See the big picture. Make sure your plan is aligned to the end goals of the project, that you will connect your plan with the expected results and not just the achievement of activities. Monitor progress of your plan and make changes as needed.

Once you start, be aware that your plan will depend on different factors, such as the context, the project environment, resources dedicated to the process itself, as well as the complexity of the project.

Want to learn more? Register for the next session of our online course, Effective Project Management for Development Organizations and NGOs. Register now and obtain a 20% discount with the promo code 20EPM. Click on the link to find out more about this course. https://www.pm4dev.com/elearn/ecourses/eepm.html  

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