Episodes

  • The Necessary Adversary
    Jan 10 2026

    In this episode, we explore the role of the “necessary adversary” in project management — the stakeholders, team members, or processes that challenge assumptions, push back on decisions, and create tension that feels uncomfortable but ultimately strengthens the project.

    We discuss why conflict isn’t inherently bad and how skilled project managers can leverage adversarial perspectives to uncover risks, clarify objectives, and drive better outcomes. Listeners learn practical strategies for engaging constructively with difficult stakeholders, including active listening, reframing resistance as feedback, and maintaining focus on shared goals rather than personal disagreements.

    By embracing the necessary adversary, the episode reframes friction as a tool for clarity, resilience, and smarter decision-making.

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 - Meet Your Necessary Adversary
    • 1:22 - Understanding the Frustration
    • 4:28 - The Necessary Adversary Mindset
    • 6:50 - Stories from the Trenches
    • 9:39 - The Psychology of Resistance
    • 12:10 - Strategies for Engagement
    • 16:05 - Closing Thoughts
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    18 mins
  • Project Management Tools: The Modern Alchemy
    Jan 7 2026

    Somewhere along the way, we decided that if we just bought the right tool, our messy projects would magically turn into gold. In this episode of Project Management Is Boring, we go after the cult of dashboards, workflows, and AI-powered everything — and why so many teams mistake tooling for transformation.

    We talk about how PM tools don’t fix broken processes, unclear priorities, or bad leadership… they just make them faster, louder, and more expensive. From Jira sprawl to reporting theater, we unpack how “modern alchemy” convinces organizations that software can replace thinking.

    If you’ve ever been buried under tools that were supposed to “make things easier,” this episode will help you understand what tools are actually good for — and when they’re just shiny distractions from the real work.

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 - The Eternal Quest for the Magic Wand
    • 1:52 - The Human Problem
    • 4:50 - The Lure of the Shiny
    • 6:50 Tools Amplify, They Don’t Solve
    • 8:39 The Alchemy of Adoption
    • 10:17 Case Study: “The Great Tool Migration”
    • 12:49 When Tools Actually Help
    • 14:51 The Human Lessons Behind the Hype
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    19 mins
  • Scope Creep and the Monsters We Make
    Jan 3 2026

    Scope creep doesn’t show up wearing a villain cape.

    It shows up as “just one more thing.” In this episode of Project Management Is Boring, we rip apart the myth that scope creep is caused by demanding stakeholders or sloppy users. Most of the time, it’s created by us — by vague requirements, unchallenged assumptions, and teams that are afraid to say no early.

    We break down how undefined outcomes, fuzzy success metrics, and political pressure quietly turn small requests into runaway projects… and why the monsters that wreck timelines, budgets, and morale are usually built inside the project, not outside it. If your projects keep “mysteriously” getting bigger, messier, and harder to finish, this episode will help you spot the warning signs — and stop feeding the beast before it eats your delivery alive.

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 - Meet the Monster
    • 1:21 - Why Scope Creep Feels So Harmless
    • 3:39 - The Myth of Infinite Capacity
    • 7:29 - How Stakeholders Feed the Monster
    • 10:51 - How Teams Accidentally Encourage It
    • 13:37 - The Emotional Side of Scope
    • 16:22 - Taming the Monster
    • 19:17 - The Boring, Heroic Truth
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    23 mins
  • Project Charters are Useless (and Why That's Our Fault)
    Jan 1 2026

    Project charters were supposed to be the north star of every project. So why do they feel like paperwork nobody reads? In this episode, we tear down how charters became bloated, vague, and disconnected from reality — and why that isn’t a tooling problem, a PMO problem, or a leadership problem. It’s a practice problem. We unpack how teams turned a powerful alignment tool into a ceremonial document, what charters were actually meant to do, and how to reclaim them as something that drives decisions instead of gathering dust. If your charter lives in SharePoint and dies in meetings… this one’s for you. Timestamps: 1:36 - What Charters Were Supposed to Do 3:18 - Why Charters Don’t Work in Real Organizations 6:07 - Where the Charter Came From 7:55 - Why Teams Stop Using Them 10:09 - The Charter Became a Lie We Tell Ourselves 11:32 - What a Useful Charter Would Actually Do 14:42 - Why This Would Make PM Life Easier 17:06 - Closing Thoughts

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    19 mins
  • Meetings, Mayhem and the Myth of Alignment
    Dec 27 2025

    Everyone talks about alignment. Everyone schedules meetings to get it. And yet, most projects still fall apart in slow, confusing ways.

    In this episode of Project Management Is Boring, we dig into why alignment is so fragile — and why meetings often create the illusion of agreement without producing real shared understanding. From polite nodding and slide-deck theater to unspoken disagreements and shifting incentives, we explore how teams end up “aligned” in name only.

    True alignment isn’t about everyone agreeing. It’s about everyone understanding the same reality — the goals, the risks, the trade-offs, and what success actually means. And that kind of clarity doesn’t come from more meetings. It comes from better ones.

    If you’ve ever left a meeting feeling good, only to watch the project unravel later, this episode will feel uncomfortably familiar — and surprisingly useful.

    Timestamps:

    • 0:00 Alignment, the Word that Promises Everything
    • 1:07 Why Meetings Feel Productive (Even When They Aren’t)
    • 4:43 Polite Agreement and the Cost of Being “Easy”
    • 6:10 Alignment Is Not Agreement (And Never Was)
    • 8:25 Why Meetings Drift Toward Theater
    • 10:39 Slide Decks and the Myth of Shared Reality
    • 12:04 The Moment Alignment Quietly Breaks
    • 13:24 The Question That Haunts Every PM
    • 15:59 When Misalignment Is Useful
    • 18:24 What Real Alignment Actually Looks Like
    • 20:01 Why Boring Alignment Is the Goal

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    22 mins
  • "The Myth of the Rockstar Project Manager"
    Dec 21 2025

    The “rockstar PM” sounds impressive — until you look at what it actually creates.

    In this episode, we break down why the myth of the heroic, always-on, fire-fighting project manager damages the profession and sets impossible expectations. We talk about how organizations use the idea of a rockstar PM to compensate for broken systems, unclear strategy, and unrealistic timelines — and why that pressure eventually burns out even the most capable professionals.

    Great project management isn’t flashy. It’s not loud. And it doesn’t rely on individual heroics.

    It’s boring — and that’s exactly why it works.

    If you’ve ever been praised for “saving” a project and quietly wondered why it needed saving in the first place, this episode is for you.

    Timestamps:

    - 1:52: On New Project Management Certifications

    - 5:50: The Seductive Idea of the Rockstar PM

    - 9:15: Rockstars Don't Say No

    - 11:26: Distortion is For Guitars, Not Project Management

    - 13:47: Juggling Crisis Like a Rockstar

    - 15:32: Rockstars Shine by Themselves

    - 19:43: Alternatives to the Rockstar Lifestyle

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    23 mins
  • "The Quiet Comeback of Planning"
    Dec 19 2025

    For years, “planning” has been treated like a dirty word in project management. Too slow. Too rigid. Too waterfall. Too… boring. And yet, here we are.

    In this episode of Project Management Is Boring, we talk about why detailed planning is quietly making a comeback — even in organizations that swear they’re agile. Not because frameworks failed, but because reality has a way of punishing wishful thinking.

    This isn’t an argument against agility. It’s a conversation about why strong execution still depends on thoughtful upfront work, clear assumptions, and plans that are allowed to evolve instead of being avoided altogether. If you’ve ever watched a project stumble not because the team lacked talent, but because no one slowed down long enough to think, this episode is for you.

    Timestamps: -TBD

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    19 mins
  • "Boring is the Goal"
    Dec 15 2025

    Project management doesn’t need hype, hustle culture, or superhero narratives—and honestly, it shouldn’t have them. In this first episode of Project Management Is Boring, we unpack why “boring” is actually the highest compliment a project can earn. We talk about what calm, predictable delivery really looks like, why executives secretly love uneventful status meetings, and how good project managers design work so nothing feels dramatic at all. No fires. No miracles. No late-night heroics—just clear plans, steady communication, and risks handled before anyone notices them. If you’ve ever felt like you were doing it “wrong” because your projects weren’t exciting, this episode is for you. Boring isn’t a failure. Boring is professionalism.

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    20 mins