Episode 254: The Real Problem with Your Portfolio is Multitasking (Free)
This episode is sponsored by The Agile PrepCast for The PMI-ACP Exam:
This interview with Jack P. Ferraro was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.
In his congress paper and presentation, Jack P. Ferraro, PMP (https://www.myprojectadvisor.com/ [Update: The web page is no longer available so we removed the link]) argues that due to three, seemingly beneficial policies, some widely accepted project management practices, and the prevailing organizational structure, most businesses that continually share resources across projects experience enough multitasking to cut their productivity in half.
In our interview we look at the root cause of project portfolio underperformance and ways to increase the speed of benefit recognition through improved productivity of portfolio components. We start out by looking at what exactly the problem is with multitasking on your portfolio, why it is still so prevalent, how to double your project throughput and we look at the "What You Can Do" section from Jack's paper that discusses what everyone involved on a project can do in order to help achieve this 100% increase in throughput.
This interview with Anne Pauker Kreitzberg was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.
This interview with Rich Maltzman was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.
This interview with Samad Aidane was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.
This interview with Jesse Fewell was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.
This interview with Stephen Townsend was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.
This interview with Frank Saladis, PMP was recorded at the PMI Global Congress 2013 North America in New Orleans.



If you want to know what the “best” way is for you to manage cost, time, resources or quality on your project, then you can open the PMBOK Guide or turn to any of a dozen project management methodologies out there and they will guide you. But what about the best for you as a project manager to be productive and organized? Where can that be found? Personally I don’t recall a single PM methodology or framework that addresses your or my work style and gives us the tools to improve.
In our first interview with Mario Henrique Trentim (



Go ahead... ask a few people whether they think that preparing for and passing the PMP exam will actually make someone a better project manager. Most of them will tell you that they think not.
Any complex project that a company undertakes has a better chance of achieving its goal, vision and the desired results if team executing the project employs both the science and art of project management.