The benefits of good project management

goodness ifeoluwa
4 min readJul 10, 2021

The importance of project management in organizations can’t be overstated.

When it’s done right, it helps every part of the business run more smoothly. It allows your team to focus on the work that matters, free from the distractions caused by tasks going off track or budgets spinning out of control. It empowers them to deliver results that actually impact the business’s bottom line. And it enables your employees to see how their work contributes to the company’s strategic goals.

Here are just a few of the benefits of good project management:

Save time and money

With the right planning, you can ensure that your work is delivered on time and within budget. Using project management methods, you can map your project’s journey from the outset and know in advance where the deadlines — and projected spend — are going to fall, so you can more efficiently allocate your resources, helping you to avoid delays and project overspend.

Improve internal communications

Working together can be hard. With more efficient project management processes, you can reduce the complexity of collaboration, increase transparency, and ensure accountability, even when you’re working across teams or departments.

How Teamwork streamlined Idea Planet’s workflows and communication

Working like dream Teamwork has allowed Idea Planet to streamline process and improve workflow through the use of project and task list templates, the ability to set repeating tasks and assign multiple team members to tasks based on their job role.

Learn more

Make better business decisions

With clearer records of how your project is progressing, you get a deeper understanding of where your resources are being spent, what you need to prioritize and when, and if you’re at risk of going off track. Good project management means that you can forecast issues before they become issues, prevent bottlenecks, and make smarter, data-driven decisions.

Iterate on your successes

Project management helps you to scale high performance and build on your team’s best practices. By using the data and learnings from previous projects, you’re able to pinpoint where your team is excelling and where there’s room for improvement. And by measuring your KPIs you can create and track personalized benchmarks to understand how your team is performing project over project.

Better project planning = better projects

Those are the benefits at an organizational level, and just some of the ways that project management can help to improve your entire business.

But what about your individual projects? Won’t it slow things down, add unnecessary bureaucracy, or keep you locked into a plan with no room for innovation?

Don’t worry — project management would never do that to you.

In fact, it’s the exact opposite. While it can be tempting to just dive into work and hope for the best, it’s a false economy.

Without proper project management and planning, you’re more likely to end up wasting time in the long run. In fact, one survey found that 80% of people spend at least half their time on rework. That’s a huge amount of valuable hours lost — and it could be avoided with a little extra forethought.

With a solid plan at the outset, you can:

  • Get stakeholder alignment from the beginning, helping you to get buy-in, minimize bureaucratic pushback, and set the project’s scope. In fact, spending a little extra time getting this alignment at the start of your project can save you tons of heartbreak down the line, because it removes ambiguity and gives everyone a clear outline of what’s expected.
  • Ensure everyone is on the same page and that they each know exactly what they have to do and when — so no more “but I thought someone else was handling it” mishaps.
  • Flag the risks in advance, so you know the warning signs to watch out for. These will vary from project to project, but could include things like: one major deadline that will have a knock-on effect on the others if it’s missed; a budget overspend that means you have to take money from somewhere else. Once you know what you need to be on the alert for, you’re better able to catch when you’re going off track and course-correct in the moment, instead of when it’s too late.
  • Make sure that each project has a strategic goal. Bye bye busywork. When you have a solid project management plan in place, you can ensure that each project contributes to your overall strategic goals.
  • Expect the unexpected. Planning doesn’t mean there’s no room for change. The best planning has a little wiggle-room built in from the very beginning, so you can adapt and stay. (More on that later.)

But these are just some examples of the importance of project planning. When it comes down to it, better project planning can revolutionize the work your team produces — and the results it gets. That means happier stakeholders, more fulfilled teams, and, if you’re working in a client-facing industry, more satisfied customers (and more glowing reviews).

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