Stop Guessing What’s Actually Going On In Your Project
Free Live on Zoom April 2 at 300 Mountain Time
I’ve taken over projects where the team, stakeholders, and contract were all working from different versions of the truth—and no one realized it yet.
On paper, everything looked fine.
But the work, expectations, and scope had already drifted apart.
That’s when project managers start second-guessing themselves.
In this workshop, you’ll learn how to see what’s actually happening on your project—so you can stop overthinking and know what to do next.
By the end of this workshop, you’ll be able to:
Know what’s actually happening (not just what people are saying)
Spot where expectations, work, and scope don’t match
Identify what to look at first—so you’re not guessing in front of leadership
Leave with one clear next move
This workshop is the starting point.
If you want to go deeper, I’ll show you what that looks like at the end.
No prep. No templates.
You don’t need to prepare anything.
You don’t need to figure it out ahead of time.
You need to see what’s actually happening.
If this feels familiar, this will make sense immediately…
You’re not missing something.
You’re seeing signals—without a clear way to interpret them yet.
You’ve taken over a project and something feels off—but you can’t explain it yet
You’re being asked for answers before you understand what’s actually happening
The team is moving—but it doesn’t match what leadership expects
Conversations sound confident, but the details don’t line up
You keep thinking: “I should have a handle on this by now”
What you’ll walk away seeing clearly:
Anchor decisions in what was actually agreed (so you’re not defending assumptions)
Know what to assess first—so you’re not walking into leadership meetings guessing
See whether the schedule reflects reality (instead of relying on hope)
Spot where instability is hiding—before it shows up publicly
Raise concerns clearly—without sounding reactive or defensive
You’ll see how to quickly make sense of a messy project—without guessing.
This is where messy projects start to make sense.