Site icon Search Engine People Blog

How To Plan a Project

project

Often tasks appear unmanageable. For example, you need to implement a new URL structure for a thousand page site. Or, you need to coordinate content development for a brand new topic. Or, better yet, you are made responsible for moving your website to a new Content Management System (CMS). A complicated task just graduated to a project.

Complex projects require careful planning. In order to meet deadlines, you need to have a road map, anticipate problems and manage communication. Any project starts with planning, continues to execution, completes with a roll-out, and transforms into support.

How do you plan a project?

Step 1: Project purpose, scope and outcome.

Nothing good comes out of any project if you don't know why you are doing it. What is the big problem you are trying to solve? Are you sure that your solution will solve the problem?

Another useful question to ask is, "Why now?" The answer will help determine not only the scope of the project but will allow you to be flexible and focused during the execution phase. If the project is critical to the success of the company, then your deadlines will be more rigid. If the project is a functionality improvement or "nice to have", then you can be more liberal with your deadlines and priorities. So, how does your project fit in the overall strategic and competitive plan for your company? How does it relate to the business goals and direction?

Define your project boundaries and parameters. What are the rules? In other words, write down the scope of the project and the standards you follow to make decisions.

Determine what outcome you expect after the project is complete. How will you know it is done? What are your success metrics? If down the road it is unclear what to do next, you can review the outcome definition to clarify the roadmap.

Step 2: Brainstorming

Gathering ideas and converting them into tasks is a critical part of a project. Write down absolutely everything that comes to mind.

Inform your team of the goal, scope and expected outcome. Start with the baseline - what is your current situation? What do you know and what you need to find out? What do you need to consider to ensure success?

I suggest you separate your brainstorming parameters into 2 categories - internal and external. For best results, have a brainstorm session for each and invite only principals.

External tasks affect people outside your team. These are stakeholders in your project and people overseeing the operations of the company.

Internal tasks affect your team members. They encompass all the tasks you and your team needs to do before the project can be called done and you pop the champagne.

Your project success depends on quality of work and anticipating of risks. Who is going to ensure the quality? Anticipate risks and outline ahead of time how you will handle them.

Step 3: Organizing

After brainstorming, you need to group the tasks into sub-projects anticipating task sequences (dependencies) and priorities. Identify critical tasks without which you cannot complete the project. These tasks will be your milestones. Define deliverables, who is responsible for them, and set deadlines. Deadlines will slip. Leave some room to account for that.

Create charts, outlines, lists, processes to help with the project flow, review and control. Create guidelines. For example, if there is a new URL structure - what is it? What is the document-naming convention? What directories contain which content?

Finally, look at your sub-projects and identify next actions. Assign people to tasks and set deadlines.

Final Thoughts

The middle of every successful project looks like a disaster.
- Rosabeth Moss Cantor

The better your planning, the more likely your project will be a success. Imagine doing every action. Is the flow natural? Keep lines of communication open, meet frequently to discuss the status of the project, and address problems as soon as they arrive - that way you will complete your project on time.

Have you managed a complex project? What was your experience?

See also: