The Deadline: Steadfast or Flexible?
I’ve gotten into a lot of conversations with fellow project managers about deadlines. Should they be steadfast like a concrete pole or flexible like a reed in the wind?
Personally, I’m torn.
On the one hand, deadlines ensure that things get done, which is the name of the game in project management. Even though I consider myself a pretty efficient, dedicated worker, I find myself procrastinating even stuff I want to do without deadlines. The first novel I meant to write took me 8 years to complete, mostly because I found other things to do with my time. The second novel I wrote, I enforced strict deadlines and got it written in 1.5 years, a significant improvement.
On the flip side, deadlines sometimes create an urgency that is a detriment to the project. One a software project I worked on, my manager wanted to ship it out the door by September, no matter what, to coincide with an industry conference. When I pointed out we would lose significant features to ship on that date, he didn’t care. So the product got shipped without those key features. And guess what – those key features were the main point of differentiation between our product and the competition’s. Guess who lost market share?
So I’m not a purist either way. Deadlines are good to motivate when you need a kick in the pants, but can also create false tension. They definitely should be used with an understanding of what’s important to you and your project.
-Deborah Fike
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