Why inclusion matters in sustainable projects
How inclusive is your project? We rarely ever are quizzed about this.
How inclusive is your project? We rarely ever are quizzed about this.
There is always a risk that a learning and development programme that is not properly planned ends up being a tick-box exercise that adds little or no value for organisations or for people.
It’s not often an economics story makes the headlines but as we start 2022, inflation is a lead news item.
Setting achievable project goals has always been a problem.
Four thousand weeks.
While researching my previous blog on why the ‘why’ of a project often goes missing, it was notable that another ‘P word’, planning, kept coming up.
Learning can be a tricky thing no matter what stage we’re at in our career, especially when we have to do this by ourselves.
Six months ago, I wrote a blog about my experiences as a project manager over the past four years and my goals for the next four.
In June 2021, I wrote a blog about why sustainable contracting arrangements are vital to the government’s build back recovery plan.
Learning legacy is a structured approach to the capture and dissemination of lessons, good practice and innovation from major projects, aimed at raising the bar in industry.