Project management tools can measure whether you're achieving your goals. But you have to know what you want to accomplish CIOs and project experts may favor certain project management software and techniques, but the tool doesn’t matter so much as having a formal structure to measure project progress. Without clear metrics, work can go undone and accountability disappears, says Michael Krigsman, president of Asuret, a consultancy that specializes in helping companies avoid project failures. More on CIO.com Failure and What You Can Learn from It Project Management: The 14 Most Common Mistakes IT Departments Make Project Management – When Failure Is Not an Option Using a project management methodology, such as the practices recommended by the Project Management Institute (PMI), provides a way to structure a project so that major steps are taken in a logical order. Key players, including the project manager, sponsor, creators and ultimate users of the finished product, have designated roles and responsibilities. Management tools, such as Artemis ProjectView, Microsoft Project and the open-source Project.net, can help the team record accomplished tasks and track overall status. However, the best project methodologies cannot overcome problems created by personal agendas, conflicts and lack of alignment between groups inside the organization, says Krigsman. CIOs must work hard to make sure everyone agrees on a project’s goals and mostly agrees on how the project will run, says Adam Bricker, CIO at World Vision International, a non-governmental relief, development and advocacy organization. Getting agreement entails not only talking about key points, but also recording them, Bricker says. World Vision did this recently for an ongoing project to install financial management systems in 45 developing countries. Start by stating your goals and the scope of the project, Bricker advises; define what, specifically, you expect to accomplish. Also, write out examples of how people’s everyday work lives will change as a result of the project. All stakeholders should then sign the papers. Just as CIOs sign contracts with consulting firms, colleagues at the same company can formalize their understanding this way, he says. “There’s a sense of commitment when people sit across the table and say, ‘Do we have agreement?'” Do you Tweet? Follow me on Twitter @knash99. Follow everything from CIO Magazine on Twitter @CIOMagazine. Related content brandpost Sponsored by Catchpoint Systems, Inc. Gain full visibility across the Internet Stack with IPM (Internet Performance Monitoring) Today’s IT systems have more points of failure than ever before. Internet Performance Monitoring provides visibility over external networks and services to mitigate outages. By Neal Weinberg Dec 01, 2023 3 mins IT Operations brandpost Sponsored by Zscaler How customers can save money during periods of economic uncertainty Now is the time to overcome the challenges of perimeter-based architectures and reduce costs with zero trust. By Zscaler Dec 01, 2023 4 mins Security feature LexisNexis rises to the generative AI challenge With generative AI, the legal information services giant faces its most formidable disruptor yet. That’s why CTO Jeff Reihl is embracing and enhancing the technology swiftly to keep in front of the competition. By Paula Rooney Dec 01, 2023 6 mins Generative AI Digital Transformation Cloud Computing feature 10 business intelligence certifications and certificates to advance your BI career From BI analysts and BI developers to BI architects and BI directors, business intelligence pros are in high demand. Here are the certifications and certificates that can give your career an edge. By Thor Olavsrud Dec 01, 2023 8 mins Certifications Business Intelligence IT Skills Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe