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Qualities of a Good Project Manager

You wear so many hats in your organization, you鈥檙e starting to look like an Alice in Wonderland character. Now, a new one has been placed on your head: project manager. You may feel the urge to go mad and start hosting nonsensical tea parties. Stay calm. We鈥檒l help you take the reins on this important task and steer it to success. With a little practice, you can harness the top four qualities of a good project manager.

Communication, Leadership, and Organization, Oh My! 

According to the job search website Indeed, these are the : 

  • Communication
  • Leadership
  • Organization
  • Negotiation
  • Team management
  • Time management
  • Risk management
  • Problem-solving
  • Budget management
  • Motivation
  • Technical writing
  • Adaptability
  • Technologically savvy
  • Reporting skills
  • Active listening
  • Research skills
  • Interpersonal skills
  • Project management methodologies
  • Policy knowledge
  • Conflict management

Whew! With so many skills, how do you know which to cultivate first?

The Top 4 Qualities

To narrow this down, we talked to Anthony Buchanan, an instructor in USF鈥檚 project management program. Buchanan鈥檚 course is designed for people who are thrown into a new project management role, especially professionals who 鈥 like you 鈥 are already wearing multiple hats. That means his list of key qualities comprises practical skills that anyone can master.

Interpersonal Skills 

Understanding the psychology of people is 鈥渏ust as important as being able to manage the processes,鈥 Buchanan said. 

Take the time to get to know your colleagues: their interests, skills, and needs. As a good leader, you should 鈥渁djust how you work with people based on their personalities.鈥 That means going beyond the golden rule (treating people how you鈥檇 like to be treated). Instead, embrace the platinum rule, which means you 鈥渨ork with people how they want to be worked with, not how you would like to be worked with,鈥 Buchanan said.

Developing your interpersonal skills will help you get buy-in for your project. According to this (lightly edited) excerpt from an article in the , getting buy-in involves: 

  • Exercising communication skills
  • Influencing (ability to guide and influence stakeholders, creating change in the organization)
  • Getting support from upper management
  • Building and maintaining relationships
  • Delighting both customers and management consistently
  • Developing strong relationships with business and technical teams
  • Building public relations
  • Understanding top management

Communication

Your job is all about effective communication 鈥 from motivating team members to leading presentations. Learn how to: 

  • Match colleagues鈥 conversation styles. Do they like chatting? Start with small talk before jumping into the project details. Do they prefer just the facts, ma鈥檃m? Then keep your updates short and sweet. Understanding how your team members like to communicate is all part of the platinum rule, Buchanan said.
  • Keep an open mind, Buchanan said. When team members brainstorm ideas and solutions, actively listen and make them feel heard.
  • Clarify goals with management. If your supervisor gives you vague guidelines (i.e., that a project should 鈥渋ncrease revenue鈥), nail down specifics, Buchanan said. By exactly what percentage should revenue be increased? How can you measure success? Keep asking follow-up questions until you understand the intended outcomes.
  • Negotiate. When you鈥檙e given an unrealistic timeline or scope, you need to know how to reach a .
  • Always be clear and honest. 鈥淵ou may feel the need to hedge your language, especially to soften bad news,鈥 explains this article on project management tips. 鈥淒on鈥檛 fall into this trap. It鈥檚 better to be upfront about setbacks immediately, rather than set unrealistic goals that won鈥檛 come to fruition.鈥

Organization

To keep projects running smoothly, you need to stay organized:

  • Explore tools such as project management software, .
  • Keep careful records. 鈥淵ou may not think that brief email from a team member is important now, but trust me, there is nothing worse than being in a meeting and having to explain you deleted a resource that may be vital to the project,鈥 explained this .
  • Make a plan. Buchanan cites this quote attributed to Albert Einstein: 鈥淚f I had one hour to save the world, I would spend 55 minutes defining the problem and only five minutes finding the solution.鈥 
     

The acronym SMART can help you with planning, Buchanan said.

  • Scope: Communicate with the sponsor of the project (usually your boss) to determine the scope.
  • Measurement: Define what you are measuring. (If your boss wants you to boost company morale, you may need to do a survey of employee satisfaction before and after the project is complete.)
  • Affect: Ask yourself whom the project will affect. Include representatives from those groups in your team. (For example, you probably want to work with human resources if you鈥檙e trying to improve employee morale.)
  • Realistic: Check to make sure what you propose is doable.  
  • Time: Check to see whether you have the time, money, and resources to do the project.

Responsibility

Good leaders know how to admit when a project isn鈥檛 going the way they expected. 鈥淭ake responsibility for your actions. If there鈥檚 a mistake, don鈥檛 try to cover it up. Let everybody know that there鈥檚 a mistake,鈥 Buchanan said. 

Owning your own mistakes also helps employees feel more comfortable bringing problems to your attention. The cites the example of a company that changed its perception of failure: 鈥淧eople were so afraid about losing their job that they weren鈥檛 able to do their job properly. When senior leadership started normalizing failure, employees felt more comfortable flagging when things were going off track 鈥 and working out how to fix them.鈥

Keep Learning  

Congratulations! You鈥檝e learned some good project management skills today, but there鈥檚 much more to explore. Check out these articles to dive deeper into the field of project management:

  • 6 Tips for Delegating Effectively in Project Management
  • 5 Reasons to Become a Project Manager
  • How to Become a Freelance Project Manager
  • Project Management Jobs and Career Opportunities

Taking on a new role is always stressful, but we鈥檝e got your back. If you鈥檇 like to master more tools, you may be interested in our Designated Project Manager course. In just four days, you鈥檒l learn the skills to embrace your new project management responsibilities and become an asset to your company. You鈥檝e got this!

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国产短视频Corporate Training and Professional Education empowers people to craft their future without limits through engaging professional growth learning and certification programs. Its programs focus on an array of topics – human resources, project management, paralegal, process improvement, leadership skills, technology, and much more.