Pitfall - Leadership Reimagined

Scott Lewis, Senior Project Manager, MMR Constructors, Inc

Navigating Complex Construction Projects: Insights from a Veteran in Project Management

Jack Whitworth, Director of Project Management, NE Construction LLC

The Digital Evolution of Design-Build: From Silos to Seamless Integration

Coe Norton, DBIA, Director Project Management, Dant Clayton Corporation

The Data Driven Builder

George Watts, Director of Project Management - Central Region, SLS Consultants

Understanding the Dynamics of a Project Manager

Kiran Marri, Chief Scientist, Digital Engineering & Testing Services, CSS Corp

Understanding the Dynamics of a Project ManagerKiran Marri, Chief Scientist, Digital Engineering & Testing Services, CSS Corp

The typical job of the project manager is to plan, execute, deliver, and close projects. Based on the role, level, responsibilities, size of the team, these managers perform with an objective of maximizing profits and minimizing losses. A software project manager and operational manager may have differ­ent areas of responsibilities or job description, but as managers, their job demands to achieve the best use of one or more param­eters (time, cost, quality). Every project task is driven by set of internal constraints (within the project boundaries) and external constraints (outside the line of control). The goal of the manag­er is to manage the triple constraints (time, quality and cost). In other words, without any constraints, the role of a manager is questionable. Thus, a manager is a person whose job is to plan activities, assign them to right people, collaborate with external members, utilize resources cost effectively, monitor the sched­ule and risks, control scope, measure stakeholder expectations, and ensure that the tasks are completed within the timelines at the benchmarked quality. In short, project managers need to work smartly under constraints and get the best done from what they have.

Project execution is highly dynamic in nature, and changes are the only constants that one needs to manage. Similar projects assigned to the same team at different time periods have shown such as higher productivity or lower cost expectations. Understanding the dynamics of a project is one of the key elements for success. Project dynamics include combination of scope, environment, technology, stakeholders, constraints, deliverables, and business expectations. Processes, tools, and measurements have become an integral part of projects as they control the dynamics in a structured manner, and they should be adjusted, calibrated and made suitable, based on the complexity of projects.

Some of the myths on project management and about project managers are:

▪ There is only one possible way to manage a specific type of project

▪ A specific way of management will work in most of the situations, environment and people

▪ A project manager who has successfully delivered one project (or few projects) can repeat the same success (or levels of successful measures) across every other type |of projects

▪ Similar techniques, methods, process works on similar types of projects

▪ Good managers are also good leaders

▪ Good leaders are also good managers

In a recent report from Harvard Business Review, it was stated that there are 4 types of managers (Prophets, Gamblers, Experts, Executors) in all organizations, based on reliable business case and growth opportunity in the line of existing strategy. However, one often comes across managers who fail due to multiple reasons. One of the dimensions of failure is the interpersonal conflicts between the individual (manager) and their reporting manager. In this article, an alternate category for a manager is proposed namely: Inactive (a misfit or a person who in far behind current times), Reactive (has sufficient or limited knowledge but performs based on triggers or direction), Preactive (has sufficient knowledge and can reasonably forecast, and uses sufficient skills to view what is next) and Proactive (has wisdom to create the path and designs future that is best for the stakeholders). The inactive and reactive types usually have a “doer” attitude by nature, and the pre-active and proactive types have qualities of “leader”. The interpersonal conflicts in the hierarchy system is driven by the nature of two individuals, and this can influence the structure and functioning of the business or the organization. Figure 1 is a representative hierarchy structure with different combinations of “nature” of individuals. Leaders usually reach out to people at different levels and the doers are people who create hurdles.

The dynamics of such projects is influenced by these individuals and their inherent nature. Thus, it is important to have an ideal structure to minimize the ‘doer-leader’ alignment. The matrix is represented in Figure 2, and the representative dynamics of the projects are shown in Figure 3. Within any organization, it is important to identify the “doers” and ensure that a balanced structure is maintained at all levels.

A survey was conducted across different individuals from 14 organizations (IT companies, Government organization, Research Institutes) covering people who have over 450 years of experience to understand the characteristics of good-great manager and qualities that distinguishes them. The group of respondents were categorized into nature of work (IT Projects and Research-Consulting Projects) and based on their experience (over 20 years, between 10-20 years, under 10 years). It is observed that integrity, collaboration, and problem solving skills are very important and are of top quality among IT projects and research-consulting streams. However, it is also observed that unlearning-learning, integrity and empathy are the rarest attributes found among managers. Similarly, across the age groups, three qualities that was selected among 20 attributes were integrity, problem solving and empathy.

It can be concluded that project dynamics are highly complex and contextual. While it is a challenge to get project managers with 15 different best skills quoted above, but maybe it is better to have a manager who can see the big picture, get deep into details, connect with people to get the best from each individual, and willingness to learn, and owns the project. A successful project manager is one who has eye for detail as a detective, analyzes data points as a statistician, gets the best from the team members as a coach, learns as a student and asks the right questions as a child.

Read Also

Reframing Application Engineering for the Digital Age

Reframing Application Engineering for the Digital Age

Mark H. Wayne, PhD, PE, F. ASCE, Director of Application Technology & Engineering, Tensar, a division of CMC
The Human Side of Construction Safety Leadership

The Human Side of Construction Safety Leadership

Brett Smith, Global Safety Director, Gardner Builders
Leading with Safety at Scale: A Practical Approach to Risk Management in Construction

Leading with Safety at Scale: A Practical Approach to Risk Management in Construction

Donovan Seeber, CHST, Corporate Safety Manager, Griffith Company
Engineering Roadway Design with Accountability and Vision

Engineering Roadway Design with Accountability and Vision

Maria Luchey, Project Manager, Roadway Design, Keck & Wood
How Early VDC Involvement Reduces Risk and Rework on Complex Projects

How Early VDC Involvement Reduces Risk and Rework on Complex Projects

Nicholas DiRenzo, Virtual Design & Construction Director, Meyer Najem
Coaching, Not Blaming: Building a Stronger Construction Safety Culture

Coaching, Not Blaming: Building a Stronger Construction Safety Culture

Jesse Garcia, Safety Manager, E-Z Bel Construction, LLC
follow on linkedin follow on twitter Copyright © 2026 All Rights Reserved | by:

Construction Tech Review

| Subscribe | About us | Sitemap| Editorial Policy| Feedback Policy
Top