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Insights
Thinking that goes beyond the project.
The highest-performing teams at Google weren't distinguished by seniority, process, or skill mix. After thirty years of delivering complex projects, we've reached the same conclusion about what actually determines outcomes. The team is the project. Everything else is context.
Sophisticated administration is not what produces outstanding outcomes. The projects that genuinely perform are almost never the result of better process. They are the result of something harder to manufacture - and considerably more valuable.
The building gets delivered. The transformation does not. It is the most consistent failure pattern in workplace projects - and the most consistently underestimated risk in the programmes we see.
Project management is usually described as a discipline of planning and control. This article argues it is something more fundamental - the design of an environment in which good decisions can be made under pressure, consistently, by people who are only human.