Why Every Corporate Accountant Needs Project Management Skills
April 03, 2023
By Tina Golsh, CPA, MBA
I have no doubt that your organization has goals and objectives—probably some of them are annual initiatives as well. Whether the goals are cascaded down from your board or CEO, or you help to define them based on the most urgent business needs finance identifies, having strong project management skills can position you as a leader in your organization, a go-to resource for help in achieving and executing the organization’s business goals and initiatives.
A solid foundation for your project management skills starts with a sound understanding of the three-legged stool of project management: time, cost, and quality. If quality needs to go up without additional costs, additional time will be required. If your timeline includes a fixed deadline, then your only variables are cost and quality. Project management is always a balancing act in this regard, and you must be able and willing to be flexible and ask all the questions needed to ensure your project goes as planned.
When it comes to project planning, I’ve found the best approach is the SMART approach (and I assure you this works in both your personal and professional life). The meaning of SMART has been updated by numerous management experts since its debut in 1981, but it can be broken down into the following:
- Specific (simple, sensible, significant)
- Measurable (meaningful, motivating)
- Achievable (agreed, attainable)
- Relevant (reasonable, realistic, resourced, results-based)
- Time bound (time-based, time limited, time/cost limited, timely, time-sensitive)
Utilizing the SMART framework puts your mind in a different state, one that ensures your goals or objectives are clear and reachable. By conforming to the SMART criteria, you are forced to think about the steps needed to achieve your goals and the questions that must be asked throughout the planning and implementation phases.
For instance, you might be reading this column, thinking about a year-end goal you still need to complete, and asking how you can reach it in a specific, measurable, and achievable way.
Have you identified exactly what you need to achieve? Have you broken the work into tasks and milestones? What work needs to be sequential, and what work could happen in parallel? What work effort is needed to complete the tasks? Have you accounted for not just work effort but also total duration? Within your plan of action, have you identified your dependencies?
One common pitfall of project planning and project management is not accounting for resource constraints. In a corporate setting, you’re going to have to rely on other resources, and you’re going to have other responsibilities, which means you must account upfront that you will never be able to work toward your goal 100 percent of your time. Consider not only your busy times but also those of the other people you may need, and then account for the extra time that may be needed if your project occurs during a busy period. Similarly, you can’t afford to assume that other resources will automatically be available or able to help you. Anytime a project includes external resources, account for their time constraints and accommodate them. This may mean establishing a longer runway for the project or getting buy-in from other stakeholders in your organization.
When tasked with executing a project, it’s common for our corporate finance minds to take command and get things moving as efficiently as possible. That may be fine if it’s just your project, but a project or initiative that affects the organization is going to require the support of other stakeholders that could make or break your success—on this project and future ones. Do you know who your stakeholders are? Are they supportive of these goals and your plan to achieve them? Will you need their help? If so, are they willing to actively support you? Which stakeholders are the most impacted? If they are in a different part of the organization do their goals conflict with yours? How will you work through this? Will your goals need to be adjusted? Are there harmonization efforts needed? Do you get my point? I am cautioning you that stakeholder impact and support cannot be overlooked if you want to be a successful and respected project manager.
Another common project management pitfall is working under the assumption that everything will work perfectly and according to plan: The first draft of the project plan being reviewed will be able to be sent out immediately; the resources you need will be available; the person who sees your ideas for the first time will be an immediate and enthusiastic supporter. Building those sorts of assumptions into your plan just makes it harder for you to stay on target. Rather, I encourage you to build baseline sidesteps into your project management plan as a natural part of proceeding on your path. Doing so will help you along the way, reduce any potential frustration when you encounter challenges, and create realistic expectations of your plan.
Alongside setting realistic expectations, identifying risks to your plan actually helps to de-risk it, because you then must think about how you can mitigate your risk. Does altering your plan slightly mitigate that risk, or is a larger contingency plan more beneficial? Creating a contingency plan for certain risks can help you stay on track during critical time periods since you will not be wasting time trying to determine a new course of action.
Time is critical when it comes to project management—even when a strict deadline isn’t set. The schedule of a project’s plan of action is often the piece that is the most analyzed. If time is on your side, put quality first. If time is working against you, put in the effort and standards that allows you to avoid rework while meeting deadlines. I particularly find it helpful to set milestones to keep me on schedule.
To do this, it’s critical to know how and when you’ll be measured on the project’s success when creating your project management plan. What is the frequency of the project, and then will progress updates be expected weekly, monthly, quarterly, or just as issues arise? Consider if there are tasks that you should incorporate into your plan to help measure progress and safeguard your milestones. Also take note of whether the project is essentially a stretch goal or a business-critical initiative that could impact you if the goal is not completely achieved. Ensuring your project management plan is based on clear and thorough corporate expectations is the only way to effectively meet those expectations.
So, whenever you’re tasked with being a project manager, be SMART about it. Being recognized as an effective and respected project manager can do amazing things for your corporate finance career.
Tina Golsh, CPA, MBA, works in enterprise finance services for Boeing. This article was originally posted by the Illinois CPA Society.
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