- Jul 1, 2001
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Have you ever found yourself assigned to a project at work that's pretty much doomed to failure?
It's for a new software product that nobody on the team seems to know, yet they have the due date for project completion set for 90 days from now. The project also has a 5 person team, where half of the people are clueless about how the product works and the other half are so busy doing other work that they don't really have time to help out. The documentation for the software sucks, as well.
In this particular case, I'm the "new guy" on the project and really don't have the influence to get the "right" things done like get everyone product training or hire an outside consultant who actually knows what they're doing. So, I might need to sit back and watch this one go down in flames. As the "new guy", I'm sure that I'll take the lionshare of the blame for the failure as well.
I'm curious what you did if you ever found yourself in such a situation. How did you stay sane throughout the process?
It's for a new software product that nobody on the team seems to know, yet they have the due date for project completion set for 90 days from now. The project also has a 5 person team, where half of the people are clueless about how the product works and the other half are so busy doing other work that they don't really have time to help out. The documentation for the software sucks, as well.
In this particular case, I'm the "new guy" on the project and really don't have the influence to get the "right" things done like get everyone product training or hire an outside consultant who actually knows what they're doing. So, I might need to sit back and watch this one go down in flames. As the "new guy", I'm sure that I'll take the lionshare of the blame for the failure as well.
I'm curious what you did if you ever found yourself in such a situation. How did you stay sane throughout the process?