show/hide this revision's text 2 extra point
  1. Get an official charter to manage the project. This is how you assume the project manager’s role, this gives you the authority to make decisions and take responsibility. It will prevent many power struggles from taking place. Power struggle is the last thing you want as a less experienced manager.

  2. Whether you joined a new project or you took an existing job over one of the essential things to do is to take stock of decisions that had been made before you assumed the role. Look for these things that you're not comfortable with. Make the stakeholders involved aware of your concerns, re-negotiate. You steer the ship and you're the one who takes responsibility. This is why being a software development project manager really worth it when you care about outcome: you have a great opportunity and actual ability to make real impact on very broad range of issues.

  3. Never take part in cover-ups; never cover up yourself, never lie. The truth will eventually surface and will cause irreparable damage to your reputation, to the relationship with the team and stakeholders and to the project itself. Communicate the bad news as soon as you're reasonably confident things are or going to turn out sour. Communicating bad news is, unfortunately, part of the job, and probably the most difficult one. However, by doing it timely, accurately, not waiting before you have no other option by break the news, you earn trust.

  4. Make effort to avoid making decisions outside project management scope that are better made by owners of respective functions. As an example, avoid making technical decisions when your team has a specialist to consult with. Unless you officially wear multiple hats try to stick to your area of responsibility, even if feel very strongly about something outside your job scope. You can always make suggestions though.

  5. Never loose your temper, never panic. When you feel like it, try to think of some constructive questions to ask instead. Information helps you re-gain the control over situation. Nothing is a "cock-up", "problem" or "disaster". It is a situation. Your job is to manage situations; as opposed to let them happen in unmanaged manner.

  6. Do not worry about making wrong decisions. Just run them past your team or stakeholders involved, they will always correct you. You are not alone.

  7. Get formally trained in project management if you're not yet.

show/hide this revision's text 1
  1. Get an official charter to manage the project. This is how you assume the project manager’s role, this gives you the authority to make decisions and take responsibility. It will prevent many power struggles from taking place. Power struggle is the last thing you want as a less experienced manager.

  2. Whether you joined a new project or you took an existing job over one of the essential things to do is to take stock of decisions that had been made before you assumed the role. Look for these things that you're not comfortable with. Make the stakeholders involved aware of your concerns, re-negotiate. You steer the ship and you're the one who takes responsibility.

  3. Never take part in cover-ups; never cover up yourself, never lie. The truth will eventually surface and will cause irreparable damage to your reputation, to the relationship with the team and stakeholders and to the project itself. Communicate the bad news as soon as you're reasonably confident things are or going to turn out sour. Communicating bad news is, unfortunately, part of the job, and probably the most difficult one. However, by doing it timely, accurately, not waiting before you have no other option by break the news, you earn trust.

  4. Never loose your temper, never panic. When you feel like it, try to think of some constructive questions to ask instead. Information helps you re-gain the control over situation. Nothing is a "cock-up", "problem" or "disaster". It is a situation. Your job is to manage situations; as opposed to let them happen in unmanaged manner.

  5. Do not worry about making wrong decisions. Just run them past your team or stakeholders involved, they will always correct you. You are not alone.

  6. Get formally trained in project management if you're not yet.