I see no problem relieving the PM of a lot of the grunt work on planning.
This is not to say that the PM should be relieved of all planning issues, just the time consuming parts of it.
Management is all about planning, implementation, coordination and control. I am not using control in the American usage of the work where it is more like commanding but in the European sense where it is more in comparing actual results to planned results and making the necessary adjustments.
That is where I would concentrate in offering the planning services; make it easy for the PM to do the planning.
The PM’s real job is leadership. In order to lead you have to have a clear vision of where you are going and you have to communicate this vision to the troops. The plan is the road map on the way to this goal and the PM has to have the overall responsibility for the plan.
My style of leadership is to make sure that everyone knows where we are going, their role in getting us there and that they have the tools and resources to fulfill their role. Then I get out of their way by going forward. Usually they follow along, if only to see what I’ll do next.
Project management does not function well in a line-staff organization unless it is the line function that is stronger. I worked for the Canadian Military for several years and they have a much stronger staff function than the line function. This creates no end of problems because the staff wants reports, studies and more reports. This prevents the line function from doing its real job that of making things actually happen.
If the line is stronger then the staff can be told where to go if they get in the way or are not supportive.
The organization that cosmicchris describes is a line staff function. It appears that the line is the stronger and he is trying to make inroads in offering a service to the line managers that they do not se as valuable or that they do not want to give up control of themselves.
IMHO to be successful at giving this service he has to do it in a way that is non-threatening to the line managers. This is to take over the grunt work of scheduling. If the work in providing the inputs into his schedules becomes too time consuming the line managers will not use his services. Therefore he has to start small and take incremental steps as he proves the value to the line managers of his service.
Rick Kitson MBA P.Eng
Construction Project Management
From conception to completion