Soccer Strategies for Project Management
                    
                    
                        By Christopher Scordo PMP, ITIL 
                    
                    
                        Soccer is a quick moving, strategic sport. Very much like managing the team at your
                        office, you have to think about the long term outcome and the immediate dangers
                        to your objective and take quick evasive action. Taking a look at these strategies
                        can inform and improve our methods for dealing with progress (and lack of it) on
                        your team.
                    
                    
                        Going Offsides The offside rule can be confusing, but part of it
                        is forcing a player offside. Sometimes when managing a project things get completely
                        out of bounds. It might not be deliberate, but it can happen from time to time.
                        Whether it’s a client requesting something which wasn’t part of the original scope
                        or changing their minds at the last minute, sometimes things can go offside and
                        play is stopped. You then have to restart the game- sometimes with the opposition
                        getting a free kick. The worst case scenario is that you’re offside and a goal you
                        thought you had achieved is disallowed. The important thing to remember is that
                        the game is still on and getting your team together to regroup is crucial. When
                        it comes to project management, regardless of how things went awry, it’s important
                        to get back to working as soon as possible. Readjust your strategy and don’t waste
                        your teams’ time getting restarted.
                    
                    
                        Position Your Team Wisely Sometimes a player gets put in a position
                        with which he’s not entirely comfortable. Whether it’s a forward being played as
                        a winger or a mid-fielder playing defense – when a player isn’t playing in his natural
                        role, he won’t perform as well as he should. As a project manager, it’s important
                        for you to see and utilize your players’ natural abilities and put them in a suitable
                        position. It’s tricky and it will take time, but it will make all the difference
                        in the effectiveness of your team.
                    
                    
                        You Aren’t Playing The Game – Your Team Is Soccer team managers
                        have a frustrating job. They watch the performance of their team from the sidelines
                        without being able to direct in the moment. They’ve trained the team to do certain
                        things and sometimes, things simply don’t go as anticipated. As a project manager,
                        remember that your team is made up of professionals and while they need the guidance
                        of their project manager, you are not the one playing the game. You play a vital
                        part in helping them where you can, but never try to do their jobs for them – even
                        if they have some peculiar ways of making it to the goal.
                    
                    
                        Goalkeepers are a vital part of the team Goalkeepers play a very
                        important role in soccer, sometimes they don’t get much of the action, but when
                        they do – they have to be prepared and precise. Managing a project is much like
                        being the hawk-eyed goalkeeper who is watching and evaluating every move on the
                        field. The project manager role includes both providing consistent guidance and
                        taking decisive action on behalf of the team to block an impending threat to the
                        projects’ goals.
                    
                    
                        We can learn a lot from sports – it’s a great example of people earnestly using
                        their physical skills combined with mental focus to achieve a goal. Just like soccer,
                        projects are a team game and being a successful project manager means having a successful
                        team. As the manager, you are not a spectator. Dedicating yourself to sharpening
                        your skills and focus will help you keep your eye on the ball so you can effectively
                        guide and even intervene for your team.