{"id":12825,"date":"2023-07-25T07:00:00","date_gmt":"2023-07-25T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/post\/are-you-a-project-manager-or-a-project-leader\/"},"modified":"2023-12-06T14:52:59","modified_gmt":"2023-12-06T19:52:59","slug":"are-you-a-project-manager-or-a-project-leader","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/centricconsulting.com\/blog\/are-you-a-project-manager-or-a-project-leader\/","title":{"rendered":"Are You a Project Manager or a Project Leader?"},"content":{"rendered":"

Project management is a big job. In this blog, we share the differences between being a project manager and a project leader. It\u2019s about more than simply getting the job done \u2013 it\u2019s about getting the job done well.<\/h2>\n
\n

Every day, thousands of companies worldwide try to get things done by turning their goals into a project. And once they have a project, they need to manage it.<\/p>\n

The Project Management Institute<\/a> is only one of the many authorities advising would-be project managers on what to do and how to do it. You could fill a large library with all the guides, manuals and methodologies for project management.<\/p>\n

Virtually all of them will tell you that a project needs to have a project charter, a project schedule, an issue log, a risk log, a project governance structure and so on. Furthermore, there\u2019s metadata about the project. In essence, what methodology will you use? What tool will you use to document the project schedule? How will you track and report progress?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Driving all of these tasks \u2013 managing them, if you will \u2013 is the project manager’s job.<\/p>\n

Project Management: What It Is and What It Isn\u2019t<\/h2>\n

What may surprise you is that in many environments, the project manager is not responsible for delivering the project objectives.<\/p>\n

In many organizations, the project manager<\/a> is an administrator.<\/strong> Better ones will be proactive and vocal, asking for status on deliverables before the day they\u2019re due and discussing issues before they\u2019ve turned into burning oil platforms. But, as we often call them, they are professional nags. Everyone else is busy actually getting something done, and they\u2019re making sure their PowerPoint slides look good for the Steering Committee.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s no wonder that in some organizations, project managers get very little respect. And no wonder that in many organizations, they also get very little accomplished.<\/p>\n

We once worked with someone whose project management mantra was \u201cProjects get behind a minute at a time, a day at a time.\u201d His point was that a project manager must be on top of things every single moment because once you\u2019ve let something slip, the time\u2019s gone. You\u2019ll never get back the half a day you lost because someone\u2019s computer went down or a key business contact was out sick.<\/p>\n

We\u2019ll concede there\u2019s a basic point there. You rarely make up time on a project. If you\u2019re late getting to your first milestone, you can safely push them all back.<\/strong><\/p>\n

Nevertheless, we find this mantra tremendously annoying.<\/p>\n

First, it demanded an intensified experience as a project nag. Simply thinking in terms of human communication, there\u2019s a limit to how often and how rigorously you can ask people to provide updates on what they\u2019re doing. Ask enough times, and you can be sure you\u2019ll get evasions, estimates and outright lies \u2013 anything to get rid of you.<\/p>\n

Second, it oversimplifies why projects are late and suggests every problem is either avoidable with proper foresight or fixable within its original timeframe.<\/p>\n

Project management is about planning, predictions and mitigation<\/a>. We may sound critical of it, but there is no question that sound project management is key to project success.<\/p>\n

What is Project Leadership?<\/h2>\n

Project leadership, on the other hand, is about owning the outcome and working with everyone involved to deliver it. It’s the “Yes, and,” to project management. Rather than observing progress and nudging the team occasionally, a project leader is out in front. They set the pace, the example and the objectives, and then they work to establish a shared vision of the completed project.<\/p>\n

A project can be well-run, knock off all its project management artifacts, produce its deliverables, come in on time and under budget, and still fail. That\u2019s what happens \u2013 best-case scenario \u2013 when you don\u2019t have a project leader.<\/p>\n

A project leader differs from a project manager in that:<\/strong><\/p>\n