• jubilationtcornpone
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    2 days ago

    A good project manager is worth their weight in gold. Large scale projects are complex and have lots of moving parts. Someone who understands this and is good at keeping all the “parts” moving while heading off any potential issues is extremely valuable.

    The problem is that often the people doing the hiring don’t know what it takes to run a large project, much less what good project management looks like. They just hire some idiot with an agile certification whose only skill is moving items around a kanban board in a way that gives the illusion that progress is being made.

    • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Our project managers are salespeople, they over promise our capabilities, mostly because they don’t even know what we can do, and disappear the moment a contract is signed. Leaving it up to the employees who actually do the work to meet impossible expectations.

      There’s been a few good project managers who get involved and check in on things, but there’s only been one (out of a dozen+ or so) in my 7 years working here who’s actually asked us what we can do and how long things take before taking in contacts. I’m sure they, or at least that kind of approach, will not last very long.

    • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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      3 days ago

      I would add to that: A lot of a good project manager’s job is shielding the team from bullshit from above.

      You can push back on people randomly deciding that changes need to be made to the project, push back on requests for mandatory overtime or whatever, fight to expand the team when it needs to be expanded, intervene when someone “high up” is trying to single out some person on the team for blame, and so on and so forth. Even on projects where a lot of the organization can be done by the team itself (which is a lot of them), there’s a vital role just in having an advocate for the team present in “management.”

      • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        there’s a vital role just in having an advocate for the team present in “management.”

        As a bench level employee, every time I’m asked how long something will take I have to take time to assess where I’m at, what needs doing, and when people in other departments will be able to get to their portion of the project (answer: fuck if I know), which takes even more time away from the project. Then I have to go back and figure out where I was and what I was doing on the project that I was working on. I’m typically on three or so projects at a time in various stages of complete, with one or two waiting in the wings. When you have a different person every day asking you about a different project than the one you’re working on at that exact moment, it seriously slows things down.

      • Waldelfe@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        I was a project manager for a pretty large project last year at my job. I really tried my best to shield the developers from all the bullshit. We had a very difficult customer who changed their mind almost twice a week about things, demanded meetings about the progress 2-3 times a week, didn’t understand that the requested changes won’t be in the testsystem within a day of mentioning them (not even sending us a proper change request in writing, just mentioning them in a meeting) and so on. Not to mention talking with the higher-ups who got nervous when the customer kept complaining and explaining to them that we/the devs are working as fast as possible and that the customer is being unreasonable.

        The worst part about that role was not the utterly irrational customer but our own colleagues in development. They unloaded all their frustration about the project on me. I tried to handle it, in a way it’s part of the job. I got shit on by the customer for not meeting their unreasonable demands and ridiculous timelines, got shit on by upper management because this project with this very important customer is having trouble, had to defend myself AND the rest of the team by showing that the customer doesn’t know what they want. Just to then turn around and get screamed at by a dev because he’s sick of having to go to our 1/2-hour-a-week meeting and also how come there’s been four change requests already. He told me I wasn’t doing my job, because all he wants is to implement the requirements as planned half a year ago but I kept sending change requests instead of doing my job as a project manager and shielding him from this shit. Wouldn’t believe me that if the customer had his way, he’d be getting four change requests per week.

        Yeah, I’m pissed and also currently looking for a new job. And no way am I ever doing this shit job again, where you’re just everybody’s doormat and get yelled at by customers, bosses and your own team alike.

        • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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          2 days ago

          Yeah. Life is short man. I wish you luck in the search, 100%.

          An old friend of mine was in a similar situation (worse, I think, if you can believe) and also getting shit for pay. After a while, he went to his boss and explained that he needed things A, B, and C to change if he was going to stay in this role. His boss started yelling at him and belittling him, he stuck to his guns and basically just reiterated what he had said.

          Obviously, nothing changed, and so he told his boss he was out. When the next day he didn’t show up, his boss called him at home and started yelling at him again. He said it was like all the cares of the world, all the heaviness and stress just fell away suddenly, during the conversation. As it happened his boss was in the middle of yelling, “We don’t need you, you son of a bitch” or something like that, and he was able to cut in to say something along the lines “Hey, man, if you don’t need me, don’t call me. I’m at home. I did my part. You called me. Anything else I can do for you?”

          The smile on his face when he relayed this part of the story to me was a wonderful thing to behold.

      • edric@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        Agreed. I was involved in a project that lasted several years and the project manager was great at filtering out the bullshit and politics so it doesn’t go down to my level. They were also great as an interface between teams so I wouldn’t need to directly deal with people who are difficult to work with. I wish she was the project manager on the other projects I’m involved in right now.

    • Sundray@lemmus.org
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      3 days ago

      Dependencies! Deliverables! Blockers!

      Put me in coach, I’m ready!

        • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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          18 hours ago

          “Have you looked at the gantt chart? Are you on schedule?”

          • Project Manager (keeps everything on their personal drive and somehow expects everyone to have access to it)

          “The fuck is a gantt chart? I handle piss all day long”

          • Me (smelling of piss and not giving a shit about whatever that is)
        • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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          3 days ago

          Dear God… I tried to think of some more from my time in that world, and all I could come up with was “when the rubber meets the road.”

          There must be more, but I have forgotten. Is it finally wearing off? I’m free now, after so many years? I can just be happy?

          • JaymesRS@literature.cafe
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            3 days ago

            I’m absolutely thrilled on your behalf to hear you’ve successfully sunsetted that legacy temporal paradigm—those kinds of linguistic feedback loops can really create mindshare bottlenecks, leading to suboptimal ideation and a lack of disruptive communication innovation. At the end of the day, it’s about leaning into agile thought leadership, pivoting away from antiquated verbiage, and unlocking next-gen linguistic bandwidth to drive scalable, high-impact dialogue. Remember: It’s not just about thinking outside the box—it’s about disrupting the box, burning the box, and monetizing the ashes for maximum stakeholder engagement!

            • RobotsLeftHand@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Your clear grasp on the language as a SME goes a long way towards breaking down the silos within our resources. We’ll need to set a strong cadence in order to drive these new workflows from storming to norming. I’ll set a friendly follow-up to make sure your progress doesn’t get yellow-lighted in this week’s board review. I really appreciate your time on this task. Keep up the good work! Best, Robot.

              Edit: Looks like I can give everyone 5 minutes of their day back!

    • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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      2 days ago

      This and the following thread are great guidelines for would-be PMs.

      Personally, however, I will avoid the role for the rest of my life, because it’s too much work.

    • jj4211@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Another problem is when management somehow manages to make a simple project into a crazy complex project.

      I see two drivers of this: General empire building, more headcount under me == I am more important

      Trying to use unvetted, low quality labor to do something being their abilities and trying to make it up with volume because corporate leadership declared it should be possible and anyone who says otherwise it’s a bad fit for the company.