Powerfully simple project management
All the tools in the world can't solve for your lack of a simple, clear methodology that is understood and shared by everyone in your organization.
Describe your current approach to project management in a handful of bullet points. Now ask your team to do the same.
Writing it may be challenging enough, but now compare it to what your team wrote.
If you're like most teams, those bullet points don't match up. You're missing a fundamental shared approach - or methodology - to how you deliver great work on time and in budget.
And without a shared methodology, you can't solve the pain and chaos you're feeling. All the tools in the world, all the templates you can buy, and all the consultants you can hire can't solve for your lack of a simple, clear methodology that is understood and shared by all in your organization.
The ZenPilot Methodology gives your team a common operating system for delivering work on time, within budget, and without chaos. Let's fix that.
Embrace a Single Source of Truth
"If it's not in ClickUp, it didn't happen."
It's impossible to effectively scale when knowledge is scattered. The only way to create a true single source of truth is to capture all project and task-related activity and key information in a single system.
If it's not in ClickUp, it didn't happen
This is a catchy mantra that teams quickly latch onto. Your people are hungry for it.
It doesn't matter how great your system is if your team doesn't use it religiously. It's another way of saying "garbage in, garbage out." Everyone is required to track all work in ClickUp. Every working day, no exceptions.
System mirrors structure
We can't just start throwing everything into a tool without structure. There must be a logical framework that is easy for your team to understand and that produces the reporting needed for smarter decisions.
Your project management system should mirror your organizational structure. For example, if you're running an agency, you have 3 main areas:
Marketing and sales - how you acquire clients. Think of this as the team promising certain results.
Client services - how you serve clients. The team that keeps the promises made by Growth.
HR, finance, legal - the crucial components that help a business function legally and profitably.
The hierarchy of your project management system should reflect that structure and be consistent for ease of use. Embracing a single tool is the first step, but it's incomplete without a consistent, coherent structure.
Follow the framework
Your team is bought into planning, doing, and tracking their work in ClickUp. With the right structure in place, it's time to follow the framework.
Everyone commits to making your single source of truth useful by planning work in the right place and with the right principles. You'll hold each other accountable (see pillar #5) - but it all starts with a clear shared vision and buy-in across the team. Commit and execute.
Prioritize Work Using Due Dates
"Due Dates = Do Dates"
Every team needs a shared approach to prioritizing work. Some teams use daily standups, some use a priority flag in their PM platform, and some even use sticky notes.
Start with a due date-driven approach: every actionable task in your PM system must have a due date, and tasks should be completed on or before that date.
Yes, exceptions happen - and when they do, rules are in place to handle them. But if exceptions become the norm, then estimation, resource management, or priority setting isn't working.
This approach saves time and provides clarity. Even if you use another method, you'll likely return to due dates as your primary means of prioritizing. No more guessing what to work on next.
Make the Process Live Where the Work Gets Done
"Nobody hunts for SOPs"
There's a great feeling when someone tells you they've finished a task for you - but it's awful when their work isn't what you needed.
Often, unclear expectations are to blame. For repeated types of work, clear processes help you quickly communicate exactly what is expected.
When done well, these processes save time and consistently produce high-quality outcomes; when done poorly, they drain efficiency and lead to inconsistent results.
The biggest driver of quality is a team's ability to create, follow, improve, and simplify processes.
This principle emphasizes the Follow part: your team shouldn't have to stop their work to hunt down lengthy SOPs - they need easy, accessible "how-to" resources integrated directly into their workflow.
Healthy Shared Habits Beat the Best Intentions
We've worked with thousands of teams. Almost all have had the best of intentions, but few have truly healthy, shared habits across the entire team.
You might have the best project management tools and processes, but if your team doesn't follow them, all is for naught. So, how do we build healthy shared habits?
Define the habits
Decide on the simple set of habits your team must follow. For our clients, we start with the 10 Commandments of Project Management:
- If it's not in ClickUp, it didn't happen
- Due dates matter
- Track your time
- Leave a trail
- Follow the framework
- Build assets
- Process lives where work gets done
- Plan for the unplanned
- Build healthy habits
- It's not personal
Share the vision & purpose
Start with why. Paint a picture of a more efficient, less frustrating environment for your team:
- Easier access to information means better, faster work.
- More accurate workloads lead to better balance and less stress.
- Shared visualization of the plan reduces client fires.
- A process that lives where work gets done means more consistency and better outcomes.
But building these habits requires commitment to new ways of working.
Train your whole team
The 10 commandments are brief to be memorable. Now train everyone so they know exactly what that means for their daily routines. Show them what is required and test their understanding to ensure habits stick.
Daily accountability
We'll dive into this further in pillar #5, but know that without daily accountability, these new habits won't take root.
Consistent Accountability Is Not Optional
"Without accountability, even the best systems fall short."
Building any habit is hard - multiply that by the number of team members you expect to change at once, and it becomes even tougher. That's why accountability is our best tool.
Our tip of the spear is the ClickUp Champion, a person who plays both a reactive and proactive role:
- Reactive: Be the go-to support for any how-to questions or issues.
- Proactive: Ensure accountability for both activity and results.
To cement this accountability, the following 4 habits are key:
Monitor daily activity and coach improvements in real time.
Review activity trends and address individual accountability.
Present results to leadership for strategic decisions.
Guide system optimizations based on performance trends.
Investing in tools without investing in habits and accountability is like buying new workout gear and never going to the gym.
Track Your Time
Time tracking is critical - it's about intentionality, accurate billing, improved estimates, better resource allocation, profitability insights, process improvement, and scope management.
There are hundreds of excuses for poor time tracking, but the main issue is that teams often don't gain meaningful insights from it. If you can't point to a decision made because of your time-tracking data, then it's a colossal waste.
Time tracking must be done well - or not at all.
It creates benefits in three key areas:
Use real data on task durations to create more accurate estimates, price profitably, and address scope creep.
Balance workloads, identify bottlenecks, and enhance efficiency by understanding where time is spent.
Regularly review client performance to decide on strategic actions - retaining, adjusting pricing, or even parting ways with unprofitable accounts.
When teams understand the "why" and see positive changes from time tracking, it becomes a powerful driver of better decisions.
Plan for the Unplanned
No team can predict every hour of work in advance. Even teams with repeatable processes know that some work will always be unplanned.
The key is to plan for what you can and allocate a portion of your capacity for the unpredictable. Aim for 80-90% pre-planned capacity per team member, leaving room for those unexpected tasks.
This percentage should be tailored by organization, role, and season. For instance, an accounting firm might have 70-80% of its workload planned during tax season, with the remaining 20-30% reserved for ad hoc work.
The goal is to avoid booking team members 100% of the time, which inevitably leads to overload when new work appears.
Manage Resources with Bottom-Up & Top-Down Resourcing
Resource management is one of the top issues many teams face. Balancing client demand with the available supply of skills, time, and budget requires clear ownership and strategy.
Instead of relying solely on fancy capacity planning software, teams benefit from using both approaches together:
Use high-level estimates to forecast staffing needs over the next quarter and make strategic staffing decisions.
Break down contracts into deliverables and tasks with specific time estimates, then view the aggregated workload for tactical management.
Example: Website project over 6 weeks
| Role | Wk 1 | Wk 2 | Wk 3 | Wk 4 | Wk 5 | Wk 6 | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strategist | 6h | 2h | 1h | 1h | 2h | 4h | 16h |
| PM | 4h | 2h | 2h | 2h | 2h | 2h | 14h |
| Designer | 2h | 10h | 5h | 1h | 1h | 1h | 20h |
| Developer | 2h | 2h | 18h | 18h | 10h | 10h | 60h |
| QA | 0h | 0h | 4h | 8h | 8h | 10h | 30h |
| Total | 14h | 16h | 30h | 30h | 23h | 27h | 140h |
Bottom-up resourcing handles day-to-day work, while top-down helps with long-term strategic planning. Together, they ensure you're prepared for both predictable and unforeseen workload fluctuations.
Ready to adopt the methodology?
You don't have to do this all by yourself. ZenPilot exists to build productive, profitable, and healthy teams. We help your team fully adopt the right methodology - not just at a high level, but fully implemented across your tools, processes, and habits.