Project Management is Boring

Target Canada - The Deal That Started the Clock

37 min · I går
episode Target Canada - The Deal That Started the Clock cover

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Primary Focus: Target’s acquisition of Zellers lease locations PM Lesson: Strategic commitments can become project constraints before the project team is ready. This episode examines the real estate decision that gave Target rapid access to the Canadian market. Acquiring lease interests allowed Target to enter Canada at scale, but it also created enormous pressure to open stores quickly. Once money was committed and locations were secured, delay became expensive and politically difficult. The PM lesson is that projects often inherit constraints created by strategy. A project manager may not create the business case, but they must manage the consequences of it. Key PM Questions: When does a strategic opportunity become an execution trap? How do sunk costs distort decision-making? What should PMs do when the timeline is driven by business commitments rather than readiness evidence?

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Alle episoder

40 Episoder

episode Target Canada - The Deal That Started the Clock cover

Target Canada - The Deal That Started the Clock

Primary Focus: Target’s acquisition of Zellers lease locations PM Lesson: Strategic commitments can become project constraints before the project team is ready. This episode examines the real estate decision that gave Target rapid access to the Canadian market. Acquiring lease interests allowed Target to enter Canada at scale, but it also created enormous pressure to open stores quickly. Once money was committed and locations were secured, delay became expensive and politically difficult. The PM lesson is that projects often inherit constraints created by strategy. A project manager may not create the business case, but they must manage the consequences of it. Key PM Questions: When does a strategic opportunity become an execution trap? How do sunk costs distort decision-making? What should PMs do when the timeline is driven by business commitments rather than readiness evidence?

I går37 min
episode Target Canada — The Launch That Outran Reality cover

Target Canada — The Launch That Outran Reality

This opening episode introduces the Target Canada case, the major causes behind the failure, and the core themes of the season. It explains why this case matters to project managers: it was a major strategic initiative with compressed timelines, technology implementation challenges, data quality problems, supply chain breakdowns, weak readiness signals, and customer expectation gaps. The episode frames Target Canada as a project system, not merely a retail failure. It introduces the central idea of the season: the launch date became more real than operating reality. Key PM Questions: What assumptions were treated as facts? Where did urgency begin to overpower readiness? How should PMs listen for weak signals before failure becomes visible?

2. juni 202631 min
episode The Anti-Knight Framework cover

The Anti-Knight Framework

We’ve spent this season studying one of the most expensive operational failures in modern markets. Knight Capital lost approximately $440 million in about forty-five minutes. That headline is dramatic. But the deeper lesson was never the dollar amount. It was the structure. Or more accurately— the absence of it. Because Knight Capital did not fail from one mistake. It failed from multiple weaknesses interacting inside a high-speed system. A flawed deployment. Legacy logic still alive. Unclear escalation. Delayed containment. Insufficient safeguards. Governance that did not match velocity. And that’s why this final episode matters. Because the real goal of this season was never to simply point at Knight and say: “They got it wrong.” That’s easy. The real goal was to ask a better question: What does right look like? What is the boring architecture that protects high-speed systems? What operating model helps organizations move quickly without becoming fragile? What structures allow leaders to scale speed without scaling chaos? Today we assemble everything. Not blame. Doctrine. Not hindsight. Design. This is the Anti-Knight Framework.

28. april 202618 min
episode Technical Debt is Leadership Debt cover

Technical Debt is Leadership Debt

This season has explored a pattern many organizations miss: Failures rarely begin in the moment of collapse. They begin earlier. In assumptions left unverified. In controls left untested. In drift left unmanaged. In governance that looked stronger than it was. Today we’re talking about another one of those quiet beginnings: Technical debt. Usually, technical debt is discussed like an engineering inconvenience. Messy code. Old systems. Deferred cleanup. Something the technical team should “handle later.” But technical debt is rarely just technical. Because every unresolved weakness survives through organizational choice. Someone funded features instead of remediation. Someone accepted short-term speed over long-term resilience. Someone tolerated fragility because the consequences were not immediate. That means technical debt is often leadership debt. It reflects decisions about what risk is allowed to remain. And this episode is about how project management helps make that risk visible. Because leadership decides what gets fixed. And leadership also decides what risk lives.

23. april 202624 min