Having now finished reading it, I think it should be compulsory reading for anyone leading a project (in any capacity) and anyone thinking of initiating one – politicians included. And the bigger and more ambitious the project, the more important it is to read it, reflect and absorb the learnings synthesised from a database of 16,000+ projects 20+ different fields in 136 countries.
The insights are too numerous to do justice to in this post, but the book’s chapter structure provides a great roadmap and a flavour for the sentiments:
*Frank Gehry is the world leading architect who delivered the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Spoiler alert – this chapter is all about prototyping, iteration and experimentation (the closest reference to “agile” I came across in the book!)
Its title notwithstanding, How Big Things Get Done is not just for commissioners of large projects. It’s relevant for everyone, because most people will manage a project at some point in their life, and that project may be very “big” for them – a mistake in budgeting or planning a house renovation can cost thousands more, sometimes multiples of what was budgeted. Forewarned is forearmed!
Happy reading.
#projectmanagement #gettingbigthingsdone #projectgovernance #riskmanagement #execution