Project Management Fundamentals: What Actually Makes Something a “Project”
Not everything people call a “project” actually meets the definition, and the distinction matters more than it might seem for how the work gets managed.
Not everything people call a “project” actually meets the definition, and the distinction matters more than it might seem for how the work gets managed.
Whether the field is finance, market research, or data science, the same underlying qualities consistently separate genuinely strong analysts from merely competent ones.
Most strategic plans that fail don’t fail at execution — they fail earlier, at the planning stage, built on incomplete information and no real buy-in.
A remarkable amount of organisational slowness traces back to a genuinely simple, unanswered question: who’s actually supposed to decide this?
A workplace can be efficient and genuinely warm at the same time — the two aren’t in tension, whatever a purely metrics-driven culture might suggest.
Unclear expectations and unrecognised effort quietly cost more productivity than almost any single operational failure — and the cost is easy to miss until it’s significant.
“Delegate more” is common advice, and often not quite right. The more useful question isn’t how much you’re delegating — it’s whether you’re delegating well.
Most leaders are genuinely skilled at the operational side of change. Far fewer are equally skilled at the human side — and that imbalance is where most change efforts struggle.
Most people believe they’re good listeners. A specific, well-documented set of habits says the reality is usually more complicated than that.
A formal complaint isn’t just a bigger version of ordinary workplace conflict — it calls for a genuinely different, more careful, more structured process.
Excellence isn’t a single impressive achievement — it’s a consistent pattern of small choices, repeated often enough to become the default rather than the exception.
The room you work in shapes how well you work in it — temperature, noise, colour, and layout aren’t cosmetic details, they measurably affect focus and mood.