Your project manager needs to create a reliable schedule… with resources that are beyond their control.
They plan, commit to dates, and anticipate risks. But they don’t have control over the actual availability of team members.
Managers, however, have other priorities: the operational management of their team, daily emergencies, and their own objectives.
Project planning isn’t their focus.
They therefore often provide theoretical availability, which can change at the last minute.
Result:
The project manager discovers too late that a key resource is ultimately unavailable.
The schedule slips. Again.
It’s not the planning.
It’s not the methodology.
It’s not the project manager.
It’s the lack of communication and synchronization between managers and the project manager.
As long as project needs and team constraints aren’t aligned smoothly and continuously, schedules will remain unstable.
Create a shared space where:
Because good planning isn’t just about organization…
It’s primarily about communication.