{"id":3909,"date":"2020-02-04T18:58:10","date_gmt":"2020-02-04T18:58:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/leap.staging.ribbitt.com\/insights\/how-to-ship-in-a-world-of-busy-schedules\/"},"modified":"2022-05-23T17:54:31","modified_gmt":"2022-05-23T17:54:31","slug":"how-to-ship-in-a-world-of-busy-schedules","status":"publish","type":"insights","link":"https:\/\/leap.staging.ribbitt.com\/insights\/how-to-ship-in-a-world-of-busy-schedules\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Ship in a World of Busy Schedules"},"content":{"rendered":"
What do 50%, .25, or 100 mean? To anyone that doesn’t track projects, nothing. But, to a project manager, they mean everything! As a project manager at LEAP Group, these numbers tell me:<\/p>\n
When it comes to running a project and creating campaigns in advertising, numbers are essential. They drive the success rate of a project by telling us how over or underwhelmed the team may be, and whether we will finish before, on or after a due date.<\/p>\n
We’re all busy working on a myriad of projects. To manage projects well and show clients they’re our number one priority, we need a measurable standard in order to understand how to move forward with a project, a task or a new client.<\/p>\n
Before creating a project, we typically need to see some type of quantifiable data to understand the reasoning<\/a> behind it. Combing through and analyzing the data, we can then build a project based upon the client’s needs, as well as their consumer’s needs.<\/p>\n With the data collected, we can begin to plan out how much time and resources we’ll need. This is all created through – you guessed it – numbers.<\/p>\nULTIMATE PROJECT MANAGEMENT CHECKLIST<\/h2>\n
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