Forsidebilde av showet Project Design: The Good, The Bad and the Wild

Project Design: The Good, The Bad and the Wild

Podkast av Danielle Wilkins

engelsk

Business

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Les mer Project Design: The Good, The Bad and the Wild

We interview different people, in different industries, at different points in their careers, about project design- what it means to them, how it helps them and how sometimes, it is a pain in the butt. We don't have all the answers for how to design the perfect project, but through these conversations we try to cut through the theory and the jargon to talk about what works and what doesn't work in different situations. Come join us if you want to learn more about project design in the real world!

Alle episoder

11 Episoder

episode 14 Montages Is Too Many: Film Pre-Production and Project Design Together At Last cover

14 Montages Is Too Many: Film Pre-Production and Project Design Together At Last

What does film pre-production have in common with international development, software engineering, or urban design? More than you'd think! In this episode, Danielle sits down with Kelsey Wilkins - screen writer, script supervisor, and sister extraordinaire - to talk about how pre-production, by any other name, would still be project design. The two get into why the film industry's planning processes mirror challenges we see across many other sectors, why bigger is not always better when it comes to storytelling if you can't align your vision, how strong vision without receptive leadership tanks good projects. Along the way: food trucks, Wes Anderson, theater playwright protections to directors who hate the color red. It's a conversation about clarity, alignment, and why "flexible but firm" is the leadership balance most project leads are missing.

8. mai 2026 - 53 min
episode What Happens After Consensus: Culture Eats Software for Breakfast cover

What Happens After Consensus: Culture Eats Software for Breakfast

What happens when everyone agrees something needs to change, but the software you rolled out to fix it isn't actually fixing anything? In Part 2, Emma Marks and Audrey Damman get real about what happened after they got consensus to roll out Asana to their team at WRI. Spoiler: getting everyone to agree was just the beginning. This is where they learned that culture eats software for breakfast—and that the real work of internal change happens after the design phase is "done." This continues our conversation from Part 1, where we explored how Emma and Audrey designed their Asana rollout. They had consensus. They had a vision. They had a plan. But implementation is where internal change projects get tested, and where Emma and Audrey discovered their biggest blind spot: they'd invested heavily in designing the system, but hadn't invested enough in the culture needed to make that system work. The big twist? Getting consensus was actually the easy part. Emma and Audrey thought they had it figured out after the design phase, but implementation revealed some hard truths about what it actually takes to change how a team works—and what role software actually plays in that equation (hint: it's smaller than you think). They also discovered some surprising things about what you actually need to make internal change happen. Spoiler: it's not what most people think, and it might make your job a lot easier. My Favorite Quotes of the Episode: "Software is not a proxy or replacement for good habits around project design and project management... If you don't have a project kickoff for every internal project where everyone is co-designing a timeline and roles, then the thing that you're putting into the software system is ultimately kind of meaningless." - Emma Marks "Don't wait until it's perfect because you can spend forever trying to design the perfect process... Give it the appropriate amount of thought and then just roll it out and start testing it." - Emma Marks "If you believe in your vision... you need one person, or maybe two... and you can make a change." - Audrey Damman Episode Breakdown 00:00 - 01:48 - Introduction and recap: consensus achieved, now what? 01:49 - 05:32 - From office hours to micro trainings: what worked and what didn't 05:33 - 07:57 - The after-action review and addressing uneven adoption 07:57 - 09:23 - Why vision matters for iterative design and onboarding new team members 09:24 - 13:53 - How their M&E framework evolved (and why flexibility matters) 13:53 - 17:14 - The big realization: culture eats software for breakfast 17:15 - 20:55 - Internal projects vs external: unique challenges and timelines 21:02 - 26:50 - Don't wait for perfect; you don't need leadership buy-in to start 26:50 - End - Final reflections and the importance of working with people who inspire you

4. feb. 2026 - 30 min
episode What Comes After Consensus: The Problem with Shared Problems cover

What Comes After Consensus: The Problem with Shared Problems

What is happening when your whole team agrees on what's broken, but at the end of the day, nothing changes? In this episode I sit down with Emma Marks and Audrey Damman to talk about what they learned rolling out a new work management system to their team. We get into some of their findings about how just because everyone agrees that something is a problem, it doesn't mean that solving that problem is a priority for everyone. Agreement is definitely not commitment! This is part one of a two part conversation about designing internal change projects- the kind where you're trying to shift how your team works, not just deliver a product to external stakeholders. Emma and Audrey walk us through their design process, what they wish they'd done differently, and why leading with vision matters more than listing pain points. If you've ever wondered why your well-designed project lost momentum, or why stakeholder buy-in seemed solid until it wasn't, you might find some tid bits in this conversation. My Favorite Quotes of the Episode: "...you don't want to over-index for your point of view because your pain point isn't necessarily everyone's pain point." - Emma Marks "We might reach consensus and be all on the same page about what the problem is, but how meaningful that problem is to people varied. People didn't see it as needing the same level of intervention or the same level of time investment." - Audrey Damman Episode Breakdown 00:00 - 07:00 - Introductions and setting up the project 07:00 - 14:00 - What project design means for internal change projects 14:00 - 20:00 - The theory of change rollout that inspired this work 20:00 - 29:00 - How they facilitated problem definition without over-indexing 29:00 - 34:00 - The gap between consensus and commitment 34:00 - End - Why vision matters and preview of Part 2

27. jan. 2026 - 36 min
episode Project Alignment: Tug of War - Part 3: Guardrails vs. Galaxies cover

Project Alignment: Tug of War - Part 3: Guardrails vs. Galaxies

In this final part of the conversation with Sebastian Varela, we get into something that might be the most important piece of the puzzle: how do you build organizational structures that create coherence without crushing the diversity of perspectives that actually makes your work valuable? Sebastian is the Director of Strategy and Institutional Alignment for the Cities Program at the World Resources Institute (WRI), a global think-do tank focused on environmental work. Over the course of this three-part series, he's walked us through the tensions of alignment, how organizational vision creates space for flexibility, and now—the organizational foundations that make any of this possible. Part 3 digs into what Danielle calls "designing for the design." Sebastian shares how WRI spent years building frameworks and vision—the guardrails that let you actually prioritize instead of trying to do everything at once. Without them, you can't commit to metrics, you can't attract larger grants, and decisions get made by whoever's loudest rather than what's most evidence-based. It's painful work that involves real organizational transformation, redistribution of power, and discomfort. But here's the tension: those guardrails aren't meant to shut people down. Sebastian's closing message is about embracing diversity—of intentions, values, ways of doing things. "Every person is a universe," as one of his bosses used to say. The goal isn't to constrain those galaxies of perspective, but to create enough structure that you can actually harness them. Use facilitation to make space for the people who aren't naturally vocal, because they often have the most transformative insights. If you've ever struggled with balancing the need for organizational clarity with the messiness of multiple voices, or wondered how to build structure without stifling creativity, this episode is for you.

31. des. 2025 - 17 min
episode Project Alignment: Tug of War - Part 2: Vision vs. Voices cover

Project Alignment: Tug of War - Part 2: Vision vs. Voices

Welcome back to Part 2 of my conversation with Sebastian Varela! If you haven't listened to Part 1, I recommend starting there — we set up the core tension between clear, top-down alignment and the flexibility that local teams need to actually get things done. In Part 2, we dig into the "how." If too much rigidity backfires, how do you know how much flexibility to give? Sebastian's thinking on this has evolved over the years. He used to be more lax about whether teams even needed a shared framework. Now he sees it differently — having that collective vision isn't what restricts flexibility, it's what makes flexibility possible. When everyone understands the "why," you don't have to micromanage the "how." But here's the thing that really stuck with me: without a shared vision, anything can be a priority. And when anything can be a priority, the loudest voices in the room end up driving decisions. That's not alignment — that's just politics. A clear vision gives you something to point to when you're making hard calls, so decisions are grounded in shared understanding rather than whoever talks the most or pushes the hardest. Key Takeaways from Part 2: * Without a shared vision, anything can be a priority — and the loudest voices end up winning * Frameworks don't have to be restrictive; when everyone understands the vision, teams have the freedom to adapt the "how" * A clear vision gives you something to anchor decisions to, so you're not just navigating internal politics * The donor dimension is real — building shared understanding with local teams about constraints is essential, but that understanding has to go both ways Want to hear how organizations can set themselves up for this kind of clarity? Subscribe to Project Design: The Good, The Bad, and The Wild so you don't miss Part 3, where we get into "designing for the design" — the organizational foundations that need to be in place before any of this works.

11. des. 2025 - 21 min
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