Marketing teams are starting to get more serious about project management, but wasteful practices still persist. As a marketer, your environment is very dynamic. Naturally, your project requests—and the ways you receive them—tend to also be very dynamic. Right from the start, this can get your projects off on the wrong foot. Ultimately, it hurts yoru productivity, makes your projects late, and wastes time and money.
For the sake of your team’s success—and with a little help from PM expert Hala Saleh—it’s time to get your project request intake process process in order…
1. PM 101: Project Request Intake
A crash course from project management pro Hala Saleh
2. Introduction
Marketing teams are starting to get more serious about project management, bu twasteful
practices still persist. As a marketer, your environment is very dynamic. Naturally, your
project requests—and the ways you receive them—tend to also be very dynamic. Right
from the start, this can get your projects off on the wrong foot. Ultimately, it hurts yoru
productivity, makes your projects late, and wastes time and money.
For the sake of your team’s success—and with a little help from PM expert Hala Saleh—it’s
time to get your project request intake process process in order…
4. Email Abuse
If you want to understand how the misuse of email can cause your projects
to go haywire, you need only watch your own inbox…
5. “Email is problematic because somebody will decide they want to email the
director. But it hasn’t gone through the stages of vetting. Email can be a
great way to ensure we’re not all on the same page.”
--Hala Saleh, President, 27Sprints
6. Drive=By Requests
This is where someone with authority or
somebody who has the ability to drive where
you go with your work comes by and says,
“Hey, can you get this thing done for me?”
7. “Unless we make very visible what is on our plate and what things are
high priority, then those interruptions will continue happening.”
--Hala Saleh, President, 27Sprints
8. Sticky Notes
It’s not just about sticking a
note on somebody’s desk and
saying, “Get this done.”
9. “It’s more about how we make our work
more visible. There is benefit to using sticky
notes, but only if you’re using a very specific
process.”
--Hala Saleh, President, 27Sprints
10. Hallway Conversations
These can be start of a conversation,
but they don’t ensure that you and
everybody else on the team are on the
same page with regard to priority and
specifics of what the requests are.
12. 1. Spread the word
One of the most important things is to spread the word about what the process is—or what
the process changes are that you intend to make.
13. “You can adopt any process you want,
but the only way it’s going to work is if
you and everybody else on your team
are on the same page. You want to
make sure to educate your requestors
on your process, why you’re changing
it, and how it works.”
--Hala Saleh, president, 27Sprints
14. And then hold firm, especially when it comes to things like pushing back on requestors and
saying, “I’m sorry, I can’t work on that unless you go through the process the way that we
agreed on it.”
Repeat this again and again until it becomes second nature.
15. 2. Streamline requests
Of course, you need to make your request intake process as simple and uncluttered as possible.
Here are some suggestions, which may or may not be what you need for your environment…
16. Shared email
If you set up an email address where all project requests are received, make sure you also
have the following:
• A clear process for how that email folder is managed and who’s responsible for managing
it
• Regular organizing and prioritizing of the requests in the folder
• A strong project request form, so that all request submissions are uniform and consistent
17. Shared folders
Just like it sounds, you can have a shared folder where all requests are submitted before
getting reviewed.
18. Project or Work Management Software
Before you run out and purchase work management software, take a minute.
19. “There’s always going to be a time and
place for utilizing project management
software. But if you don’t have your
process nailed down first, then you’re
just exacerbating the problem. First
step, figure out your process. Make sure
everybody agrees on how you receive
project requests and then put a toll in
place that actually serves your needs.”
--Hala Saleh, President, 27Sprints
20. Google Docs
This works well with smaller teams, but the same principles apply. Make sure you nail down
who’s managing that Google Doc and who’s looking into the prioritization of the list. Also, make
sure that other people aren’t overriding or making updates and changes to the Google Doc.
21. Request Form
Whatever method you try to implement in order to streamline your requests, make sure that
you’re using a strong request form that captures the data and the information that you need to
execute what you’re being asked to do.
22. Apply the Goldilocks Principle: make you’re capturing just the right amount of information, not
too much and not too little.
23. Think about who’
S benefitting from this request. Who’s your customer? Who’s your user? What benefit do you
expect to deliver with this request?
24. Finally, build your request form to help the requestor show the value that their request
will create. This will help those will be prioritizing and working on fulfilling the request.
25. “Start to think through the business
justification and giving the people
doing the work a sense of purpose of
why they’re actually working on a
task—versus just turning it into a task
and asking somebody to execute that.
Giving people context that way helps
them understand the value that
they’re driving.”
--Hala Saleh, President, 27Sprints