11 Steps to successful Project Management

Gligor Chavdarov
5 min readFeb 17, 2016

What is Project Management?

Project management is the process and activity of planning, organizing, motivating, and controlling resources, procedures and protocols to achieve specific goals in scientific or daily problems. A project is a temporary endeavor designed to produce a unique product, service or result with a defined beginning and end (usually time-constrained, and often constrained by funding or deliverables) undertaken to meet unique goals and objectives, typically to bring about beneficial change or added value.

The following 11 steps will help you successfully setup and manage every project:

Step 1: Define the Project

When you define the real purpose of a project, things get clearer. Your mind starts buzzing with ideas. Knowing where you want to end up is especially important at this stage. Your vision for the most successful outcome helps you establish guidelines for keeping yourself and your team on the right path.

Step 2: Identify & Meet with Stakeholders

It’s important to remember that stakeholders aren’t only the people who hired you to manage the project; a stakeholder is anyone who’s affected by the results of your project. That includes your customers and end users, too. Make sure you identify all stakeholders and keep their interests in mind when you create your project plan. Meet with the project sponsors and key stakeholders to discuss their needs and expectations, and establish baselines for project scope, budget, and timeline. Then create a Scope Statement document to finalize and record the details of the project scope, get everyone on the same page, and reduce the chances of costly miscommunications.

Step 3: Set & Prioritize Goals

Once you have a list of stakeholder needs, prioritize them and set specific project goals. These should outline the objectives of the project — the benefits you hope to accomplish. Write out your goals in your project plan so it’s clearly communicated and easily shared.

Step 4: Establish measurable criteria for success

How can you know if your project is going to be successful if you don’t have any way of measuring success? You will need interim milestones, especially for an endeavor that will span a long time, so that you can determine if you are staying on track or straying from the project’s goals. You must have both internal checkpoints and client checkpoints. Never leave incorporating a client’s feedback until the very end of the project!

Step 5: Define Critical Project Milestones & Deliverables

Identify crucial moments throughout the project. You can provide a life cycle of the project by including the four main phases: initiation, planning, execution and closure. Perform a real evaluation at the end of each phase. Make sure to examine every deliverable. From parts of the product to the technical documents to the project plan, you will need all of the elements involved to ensure the product is meeting the project specifications.

Step 6: Select team members, and assign responsibilities

Gather your team members, and make sure that skill-sets align with required roles. This is an important first step: If you assign the wrong person to a task, you are reducing your chances of success before the project even begins. Make sure each team member is clear on what is expected from them and when. Clear and open communication is mission-critical.

Step 7: Choose the right software for project management

Behind every successful project there is a stable and comprehensive software solution that provides the necessary background for effective project realization. When searching for the right project management software solution for your company have in mind that a quality solution should provide the following functionalities:

  • Ability to define project tasks
  • Ability to track if the project tasks are on schedule
  • Effective communicate with stakeholders
  • Manage resources — people, money, tools, time, needed to achieve the project goals
  • Define project templates
  • Budget versus Actual
  • Project planning in Phases & Tasks
  • Budgeting of Projects & Milestones
  • Generate cost and revenue against projects
  • Invoice-based project milestones
  • Generate Project Profit & loss Statement
  • Add resources, time & expenses to projects
  • Set realistic deadlines
  • Manage scope changes

When searching for the right project management software solution for your company do not forget to add the VIENNA Advantage solution. Our Project Management Module can be easily integrated with our ERP and CRM solutions, and it can be extended to your specific needs.

Download full brochure here: VIENNA Advantage Project Management Module

Find more about other ERP Modules here: VIENNA Advantage ERP Core Modules

Step 8: Create the Project Schedule

Look at each deliverable and define the series of tasks that need to be completed in order to accomplish each one. For each task, determine the amount of time it will take, the resources necessary, and who will be responsible for its completion. Next, identify any dependencies. Do certain tasks need to be completed before others can begin? Involve your team in some of the planning process. The people doing the work have important insight into how tasks get done, how long they’ll take, and who’s the best person to tackle specific tasks.

Step 9: Complete a Risk Assessment

No project is risk-free! You should carefully examine all issues that you know of upfront that will affect your project. Consider the steps you could take to either prevent certain risks from happening, or limit their negative impact. Conduct a risk assessment and develop a risk management strategy to make sure you’re prepared.

Step 10: Test Deliverables

Deliverables should be tested at every critical milestone and the final product must meet the project requirements. Before moving on to the next phase of the project, you need to be sure that the product is coming along as planned.

Step 11: Evaluate Project Results

Once a project has been completed, it’s important to do a “post-mortem” report, even if it is only for internal purposes. You can pinpoint what went right and what went wrong, determine what could or should have been done differently, and establish the best practices for use in future undertakings.

Now download VIENNA Advantage Project Management Brochure.

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Gligor Chavdarov
Gligor Chavdarov

Written by Gligor Chavdarov

Growth Hacker | ERP, CRM, DMS, POS, SaaS & AI enthusiast | Follows innovation trends and digital transformation practices.

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