Five ways to keep your project team motivated
March can be the hardest month in which to motivate yourself as you plug away through the short days with a snivelling cold to boot.
March can be the hardest month in which to motivate yourself as you plug away through the short days with a snivelling cold to boot.
Forgive me for starting with some sweeping generalisations about three key personality traits of project professionals, but I hope you’ll be able to relate.
Why bother going to a conference? They can be huge, impersonal events, full of people desperate to flog you their wares, not to mention endless presentations in darkened rooms, with much of the content unrelated to the work that you do.
You may be thinking ‘oh no not another article about organisational change’, however, despite all the philosophies and taught approaches, we have missed identifying the key component; that point in time when everything is aligned for change to successfully happen.
As 2024 unfolds, the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into project delivery is transitioning from futuristic vision to tangible reality.
Following The link between personal autonomy and project performance) by Sam Jefferies, I’ve been using my own experiences in the civil service to consider how we might apply that same thinking.
From an outside perspective, the transition from project to programme management makes logical sense.
The first session of Life Hacks on Project Governance – a virtual meet up of the APM Governance SIG which took place on 13th December 2023 – was a valuable and insightful event.
I wanted to share few tips from my experiences to help you successfully manage time management and achieve your career goals in 2024.
This was my assumption before deciding to start a project management apprenticeship in 2020 at the grand age of 32.