Small & Medium Business Project Management Outlook — 2016

According to a report by Inc.com, 49.2 percent of the U.S. employees in the private sector work for small businesses ( Complete report here). While the SMB market faces its own unique challenges, it continues to grow in size and significance. Over the last decade or so, project management software providers have recognized the growing potential of the SMB segment and have started catering to their specific needs.

In 2015, I wrote an article “How small businesses are looking at project management” based on a report by Software Advice. Based on their 2016 study “Web-Based Project Management Software SMB Buyer Report — 2016”, I bring out my viewpoint on SMB project management outlook for 2016.

SMB Project Management methodology

The 2015 report showed that over 60% of the SMB segment was still using manual methods for project management. In 2016 that number has dropped to 44%. If you look at it with a “glass is half full” perspective, that’s a 16% improvement. But the reality is that there is a huge gap when it comes to technology adoption in small and medium enterprises. Yes the gap is narrowing but it is also important to understand the reasons for lack of adoption. Is it lack of awareness, cost barrier or lack of process mind-set? Experts who watch the SMB space closely believe that the lack of structure and processes in the initial phase lead to indecision in the scale up phase.

Source: Software Advice

Software Advice believes that this is clear indication that first-time buyers remain the largest demographic in the PM marketplace, as SMBs continue to find manual methods and non-specialized software insufficient for managing projects.

For SMB it is still a functionality game

In 2015 buyers preferred advanced functionality over basic. This year, Software Advice found an interesting split between the functionality buyers most often request: Both basic and more advanced capabilities top the chart.

Source: Software Advice

This graph paints a very interesting picture; it almost creates 3 disctinct levels of desired functionalities.

Task management, considered a basic software capability is requested by about 70 percent of buyers. The same goes for time tracking (43 percent). Time and task management are the fundamental drivers of project success, so buyers obviously wouldn’t want to compromise on these features.

The need for scheduling and resource management functionalities indicate deployment of bigger teams and larger projects. These are considered mid-tier functionality and gain relevance as complexity and scale grows. They include Gantt charts (21 percent) and more advanced resource management tools (37 percent).

Finally, capabilities that allow for long-term project planning and analysis, such as reporting and analytics (49 percent), are often reserved for top-tier packages.

You can tie these three distinct categories to organizational maturity. As teams mature in their PM methods, they require more advanced functionality that allows them to forecast farther into the future. Having said that, is graduation the best strategy. Every time you want to add the next level of functional you end up going through the entire journey of evaluation to implementation to adoption. We believe that’s highly inefficient. The money you would end up saving with a modular approach is wasted in learning curve and inefficiencies. In today’s business context, a comprehensive end to end project management platform is the best answer. (Read: The Case for Comprehensive Project Management Tools)

User Experience is gaining prominence

In 2015 buyers said that outgrowing the existing system was the top driver for replacing software. This year better user experience has emerged as the top driver.

Source: Software Advice

The top 2 reasons clearly indicate that buyers are now seeking value and not just functionality. The need for better user experience also indicates the challenges involved in implementation and user adoption. When guiding our potential customers in the evaluation phase, we insist they thoroughly test the following:

  1. Alignment of functionalities with project management methodology & road map.
  2. Speed, responsiveness and down time.
  3. Get users involved in evaluation process — Rate user experience & get a sense of learning curve.
  4. Quality of support provided.

Once a project management solution is implemented, you should not have a reason to replace it. That’s the mark of a good evaluation process.

Conclusion

One of the most obvious insight that emerges from Software Advice’s SMB reports over the past 3 years is that organizations tend to ignore their PM maturity and plans as a factor when it comes to evaluating solutions. It’s pretty much like buying a house. You don’t just buy a house based on how it looks on the outside and replace it later if it doesn’t suit your needs.

Hat tip to @SoftwareAdvice, always a pleasure working with them.

About Me

I am the Head of Product and Customer Experience at Celoxis, an online project management software. I love any food, as long as its chicken or fish and any sweets as long as its dark chocolate. A beer aficionado! You can find me on @sanketpai.