The Secrets To Running Project Status Meetings That Work!
The Secrets To Running Project Status Meetings That Work!
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The secrets to running project status meetings that work!
Abstract
One of the project manager’s key responsibilities is to be aware of the status of the project at any given time. In order to do that,
status meetings become a critical tool throughout the lifecycle of the project. Too often, unfortunately, these critically important
meetings become unbearably inefficient, ineffective, and at times almost painful! The good news is that there are simple techniques
that project managers can employ to improve the overall efficacy of these sessions.
Status review meetings are regularly scheduled events to exchange information about the project. On most projects, status review
meetings will be held at various frequencies and on different levels. For example, the project management team can meet weekly by
itself and monthly with the customer. (PMI, 2004, p. 233)
Indeed, virtually all project managers are familiar with the status meeting. This is one tool that the project manager uses to “check in”
on the project. Typically, the project manager wants to assess the status of each of the following elements during a status meeting:
Task updates
Schedule status update (Are we behind or ahead of schedule?)
Budget status update (Are we under or over budget?)
Quality/scope status update (Are we maintaining desired scope/quality levels?)
Current or anticipated issues (e.g., changes, risks, resource issues, client satisfaction issues, vendor issues, etc.)
Next steps
Because the project manager should be able to report up-to-date information to project sponsors or clients at any time, it’s
imperative for the project manager to conduct status meetings regularly. The frequency of these status meetings will vary depending
on several factors, including (but not limited to) the following:
Project complexity
Number of team members
Level of information required by project sponsor, clients, and others
Project manager’s level of task involvement
Effective status meetings not only benefit the project manager, by providing timely task updates, but also benefit the entire team, by
providing a venue for recognizing milestone achievements, sharing information, and bringing problems/issues to the team.
Unfortunately, too often these important meetings are ineffective and fail to benefit the project in the manner intended.
Poorly developed agendas – Often, project managers simply assemble team members to meet without developing/circulating a clearly
defined agenda including topics, timings, and topic owners. When status meetings have no agenda or one that is incomplete or
unclear, the meeting lacks a framework or roadmap. Without this roadmap, the meeting easily runs off course and time is often
wasted. In addition, if team members don’t receive a clear agenda prior to the meeting, they often come to the session unprepared.
Because the entire purpose of a project status meeting is to obtain status on tasks, identify issues, and so forth, it is imperative that
team members gather specific data prior to the meeting and come prepared to answer certain key questions. The status meeting is
not a general team get-together to touch base and share. Without specific predefined goals, the session wanders aimlessly.
Poor time management – One of the biggest frustrations team members have with project meetings is that they often drone on too
long (without much getting accomplished). When time isn’t managed well, additional meetings are often required, which decreases
team member morale and often rushes decisions. All of these can negatively impact not just the project timeline but also the quality
of the project’s product or service. When time isn’t managed appropriately during status meetings, team members often become
tempted to skip the meeting because they suspect it will be a waste of time and their time will be better spent other ways. Once team
members start missing status meetings, their overall effectiveness begins to fundamentally break down.
Allowing discussions to veer off topic – This is an extremely common dysfunction during project status meetings. Quite frequently,
topics or issues arise during the sessions that are outside the intended scope of that meeting. When participants spend more and
more time on topics outside the scope of the meeting, less and less time is available for intended topics. This often means that the
intended agenda topics are rushed or not addressed at all, resulting in poor quality decisions, delays, communication breakdowns,
and the like.
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Not getting balanced input from team members – One of the most difficult tasks any project manager has is dealing with different
personalities
What are youon for? More aggressive personalities can tend to dominate project meetings while more passive types tend to
the team.
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contribute much less to discussions and tend to be much less vocal about their opinions on a given issue. We’ve all heard that the
squeaky wheel gets the oil, and that’s unfortunately often true during project meetings. Too often a project manager or team leader
will be overly influenced by a team member with an aggressive personality. When certain team members dominate while others sit
passively (without providing critical input on an issue), the quality of the team’s decisions suffer. Another major problem with this
particular dysfunction is that the project manager often develops a skewed view of important project issues because one or two
people may voice very strong opinions. Those opinions may not be representative of the group at all, but without balanced input from
the group, he/she may leave the project status meeting with an inaccurate perspective of the team’s views on a particular issue.
Ineffective handling of action items – One of the important parts of any project meeting is effective handling of action items. Often,
issues come up during the meeting that must be addressed after the meeting. Too often these action items are casually mentioned
verbally, which often results in meeting déjà vu (where no one follows up on the issue and the issue continues to resurface in future
meetings). Another result of poor handling of action items is poor follow-up on critical project issues. Action items are the vehicle
project managers use to assign follow up tasks after the meeting. When that process is ineffective, those follow-up tasks suffer. It
becomes much easier for team members to complain that they didn’t know about the action item, they didn’t understand it, or they
didn’t have time to complete it. When action items aren’t completed in a timely manner, project progress is stalled.
Clearly, these common project status meeting dysfunctions have significant negative impacts on the progress of the project. While
the impacts on schedule, cost, and quality may be obvious, a more subtle impact is the erosion of the project manager’s credibility
with his or her team. Team members view the project manager as the person responsible for running smooth, relevant, efficient
status meetings. When that doesn’t happen, often the project manager is deemed to be weak and ineffective. Indeed, the project
manager’s ability to run effective status meetings not only directly impacts the progress of the project but also influences how he or
she is perceived by others.
In short, the meeting leader is often focused on the “what,” while the facilitator is often focused on the “how”. Both are necessary for
an optimally effective meeting.
Because many project managers are leading status meetings, they tend to focus exclusively on their role as meeting leader and
ignore their role as meeting facilitator. The good news is that they are not solely responsible for the facilitator role. Many project
managers ensure that the meeting is appropriately facilitated by inviting an outside facilitator or asking team members to play the
role of facilitator. Team members should be actively engaged in all facets of project success and having them perform key facilitation
activities is one way to encourage more involvement. Because the facilitator should be constantly observing and prodding the group
from the sidelines, they’re somewhat “detached” from much of the meeting content. In this case project managers may not want to
To run efficient project status meetings, project managers can employ several specific techniques:
Assign time-intensive tasks as homework—don’t waste meeting time reading reports, reviewing materials, and so forth.
Only invite those team members truly necessary for the meeting—if you want to want to include other team members but they’re
not required, designate them as optional attendees.
Assign a timekeeper to let the team know when five minutes remains in each section of the agenda.
Prepare a standard “status update form” for all task leaders to complete prior to the meeting.
Consider shorter, more frequent status meetings.
Use facilitation techniques like simultaneous documentation to develop ideas very quickly (e.g., having attendees spend two to
three minutes individually writing down ideas at the same time before initiating a group discussion).
Use round robin (going around the room to get feedback from each attendee) and other facilitation techniques to balance
participation and minimize dominators.
Look Back – Look Forward
Look back – look forward refers to reviewing the previous immediate timeframe and the immediately upcoming timeframe as well
(e.g., +/- 2 weeks). During a status meeting, “looking back and looking forward” encourages the team to focus on a current snapshot
of the project and zero in on issues relevant to the current period. This approach provides a brief historical view that offers context
for the “current state” project discussion. The brief review also affords important opportunities to recognize team members for recent
accomplishments.
Produce a project schedule that focuses on the immediately preceding and upcoming time periods
Highlight key milestones/accomplishments on the project schedule
Summarize key events leading to the current state
Ask task leaders and team members to anticipate risks/issues likely during the immediately upcoming time period
Although the “look back-look forward” review technique focuses the status meeting on the current time period, the agenda should
always provide opportunities to address relevant issues outside this time period. If there is a pressing issue anticipated to occur at
the end of the project and the status review session is occurring early in the project, a team member should still feel comfortable to
raise the concern during the “Open Issues or Risks/Concerns” section of the agenda. This technique is not intended to exclude any
mention of tasks outside the immediate timeframe, but instead focus the group’s attention on that timeframe and minimize time
wasted by repeatedly reviewing tasks occurring significantly prior to or after the status review session.
Insist on Accountability
Project managers rely on subject matter expert team members to complete tasks in a timely manner. Throughout the course of the
project, additional items will arise requiring follow-up by various team members. Team members must be accountable for tasks that
they take on if the project is to reach its objectives within the parameters set. When team members are not held accountable, it
creates a myriad of problems for the project:
Sounds good? Well, the obvious question becomes how does the project manager encourage this culture of accountability in the
project team during status meetings? Consider these techniques to encourage that dedication to accountability in the team:
Write all action items with a task owner and due date on a flip chart in real time during the meeting
Repeat the action items to the owner and confirm his/her understanding of it
Ask action item owners to suggest due dates (do not mandate due dates)—negotiate dates if needed.
Maintain a database of action items that task owners are responsible for updating
Begin all status meetings with a review of previous action items
Consider using electronic tools to provide automatic reminders of action items
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Discuss importance/consequences for missing action items during project kickoff
Address repeat offenders offline to explore potential causes
What
Team are you looking
members for?
are certainly influenced by the behavior of and reactions from other team members. Project managers should
capitalize on this to foster a team that is highly accountable.
Simplify the Agenda
The agenda is your roadmap for the meeting. It should include not just topics but also timings, topic owners, and possibly even
facilitation techniques for each section. A well developed agenda helps the project manager keep the team on track, makes
preparation easier for team members, reduces meeting time, and provides a sense of focus for the meeting.
For project status meetings, agendas should be simple and consistent. The project manager should clearly indicate what topics
should be covered at each regularly scheduled status meeting—no surprises! Project managers should get consensus on the status
meeting agenda early in the project cycle, then circulate that agenda as a reminder prior to each meeting. A sample status meeting
agenda might include the following topics:
As much as possible, project managers should strive for agendas that are simple and to the point. During a status meeting, the
discussion should be very direct and focused on providing specific status updates. Agendas that are overly aggressive tend to result
in lengthy meetings with less focus.
Stay Focused
One of the biggest dilemmas project managers face during project status meetings is keeping focused on the topic at hand.
Everyone seems to have their favorite soap box issue that they’d love to discuss extensively, whether it’s on the agenda or not!
These tangents not only take the group off topic but also tend to take up critical time during the meeting and cause meetings to run
late. Another problem with tangents is that they tend to cause the meeting to bounce from topic to topic without facilitating true
resolution of the intended topic at hand. In short, getting sidetracked impacts both the efficiency and effectiveness of the status
meeting.
Project managers should consider a few simple techniques to help maintain focus during their status meetings:
Ask someone on the team to “raise a flag” or otherwise point out when the discussion is veering off topic
Question whether the issue raised can be taken offline
Use an egg timer or similar device to “time box” discussions about issues not on the agenda (but the team agrees should be
discussed)
Redirect the issue to the parking lot
Develop ground rule about keeping the group on topic (e.g., ELMO—“Everyone, Let’s Move On)
Maintaining focus during status meetings is critical to keep meetings within the allotted time. The key for implementing any of these
techniques successfully is surfacing the issue with the team early in the project cycle and identifying techniques that the team will
support to address this common problem.
Conclusion
Project status meetings are a critical tool in the project manager’s tool box. Unfortunately, too few project managers have adopted
methods and techniques to ensure that these sessions are succinct, productive, and valuable. It’s not uncommon for project
managers to conduct at least one 90-minute status meeting per week. For a team of six, that’s an investment of nearly 40 hours in
just one month! Too many project managers assume that a status meeting means sending out a meeting invitation and just showing
References
Project Management Institute. (2004). A guide to the project management body of knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) (2004 ed.).
Newtown Square, PA: Project Management Institute.
This material has been reproduced with the permission of the copyright owner. Unauthorized reproduction of this material is strictly
prohibited. For permission to reproduce this material, please contact PMI or any listed author.
© 2008, Dana Brownlee
Originally published as a part of the 2008 PMI Global Congress Proceedings – Denver, Colorado USA
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