Referred Link - https://www.linkedin.com/posts/saurabhsharma76_your-project-is-delayed-because-nobody-knows-share-7434641273946439680-0Feu
Your project is delayed because nobody knows who's actually in charge.
One simple matrix fixes this forever.
"Who's handling this?"
"I thought YOU were doing it."
"Nobody told me."
"That's not my job."
Sound familiar? That's not a people problem.
That's a RACI problem.
And it's killing your project delivery. Here's everything you need to know 👇
🔴 R - RESPONSIBLE
Who performs the work
The doer.
The executor.
The one who gets it DONE.
🔵 A - ACCOUNTABLE
Who owns the outcome
Only ONE person per task.
No exceptions.
Two accountable = nobody accountable.
Remember that.
🟢 C - CONSULTED
Who provides input Two-way communication.
Their expertise shapes the decision.
Loop them in BEFORE - not after.
🟣 I - INFORMED
Who is kept updated One-way communication.
They don't decide.
But they need to know.
Forgetting this group?
That's how surprises happen at the wrong moment.
📊The numbers don't lie:
→ Projects with clear roles are 30 - 40% more likely to finish on time
→ RACI reduces role conflicts by up to 50%
→ Role ambiguity causes 23% of project delays
→ High-performing teams spend 25% less time on ownership disputes
→ Over 60% of failed projects had unclear accountability structures
Confusion is expensive.
Clarity is free.
🚫 The mistakes that wreck your RACI:
→ Too many "Accountables" on one task
→ Everyone marked "Responsible"
— which means no one is
→ Ignoring key stakeholders completely
→ Building it once and never updating it
A RACI that's never updated is just a document collecting dust.
✅ Best practices the top PMs follow:
→ ONE accountable per task. Always.
→ Keep it simple and scannable
→ Review it WITH stakeholders — not for them
→ Update as the project evolves
→ Integrate it directly into your project plan Use RACI when:
→ Kicking off a new project
→ Managing large or complex teams
→ Navigating multiple stakeholders
→ Driving change management
→ Improving existing processes
The truth?
Most project failures aren't about budget.
They're not about timelines.
They're about accountability gaps.
When everyone owns it - nobody owns it.
Assign it clearly.
Document it properly.
Review it regularly.
That one habit will save your next project.
Tags:
#ProjectManagement, #ProductManagement, #SoftwareProjectManagement,


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