Lead the Team
Inputs, tools & techniques, and outputs for this process.
Guide, support, and enable the project team to deliver outcomes by setting direction, modeling desired behaviors, removing obstacles, coaching, and maintaining a healthy, high-performance environment.
Purpose & When to Use
Lead the Team focuses on day‑to‑day guidance of people so the team can deliver value predictably and sustainably. Use it throughout the project, with extra attention during kickoff, major changes, high uncertainty, and when performance, morale, or collaboration needs improvement.
- Align the team on goals, outcomes, and priorities.
- Build trust, psychological safety, and shared ways of working.
- Enable decision-making and autonomy within clear boundaries.
- Develop people through feedback, coaching, and recognition.
- Remove impediments quickly and protect the team from noise.
Mini Flow (How It’s Done)
- Clarify outcomes and success criteria with the team and key stakeholders.
- Co-create working agreements, roles, and decision rules; make them visible.
- Establish cadence for planning, reviews, retrospectives, and daily coordination.
- Model desired behaviors: transparency, respect, focus on value, and learning.
- Delegate with guardrails: define authority, limits, and escalation paths.
- Enable collaboration tools and information radiators for real-time visibility.
- Coach on skills and teamwork; pair people and provide just-in-time training.
- Track team health and performance; inspect and adapt ways of working regularly.
- Continuously remove impediments; escalate only when needed and with context.
- Recognize contributions; celebrate progress and reinforce continuous improvement.
Quality & Acceptance Checklist
- Goals, outcomes, and nonfunctional expectations are clear, prioritized, and visible.
- Roles, accountabilities, and decision boundaries are documented and understood.
- Working agreements cover communication, meetings, quality, and conflict handling.
- Cadence for planning, reviews, and retrospectives is established and followed.
- Measures of progress and team health are defined, tracked, and shared.
- Impediment log exists with owners, due dates, and resolution status.
- Feedback loops with stakeholders and within the team are active and time-boxed.
- Psychological safety is supported; issues can be raised without blame.
- Delegation is matched with authority; decisions are made at the right level.
- Recognition practices are fair, frequent, and tied to outcomes and behaviors.
- Lessons learned are captured and applied to improve current work.
Common Mistakes & Exam Traps
- Micromanaging tasks instead of enabling the team to self-organize within guardrails.
- Skipping working agreements and assuming people share the same norms.
- Focusing only on output volume, not on outcomes, quality, and flow efficiency.
- Delaying impediment removal or escalating too early without team attempts to resolve.
- Avoiding healthy conflict; failing to address dysfunctions and low trust.
- Delegating work but not the authority needed to make timely decisions.
- Recognizing only individual heroes and ignoring team achievements and collaboration.
- Using a single leadership style instead of tailoring to context and team maturity.
- Ignoring distributed or cross-cultural needs such as time zones and communication styles.
- Confusing “manage the schedule” with “lead the people”; exams often test for servant leadership and facilitation.
PMP Example Question
A new cross-functional team is hesitant to raise risks in meetings, and defects are found late. What should the project manager do first to lead the team effectively?
- Ask team members to send risks privately and compile them for the sponsor.
- Establish working agreements that promote psychological safety and add a regular retrospective.
- Escalate the lack of transparency to the PMO for corrective action.
- Replace the most silent team members with more vocal resources.
Correct Answer: B — Establish working agreements that promote psychological safety and add a regular retrospective.
Explanation: Leading the team means creating conditions for openness and continuous improvement. Agreements and a cadence for reflection address root causes better than escalation or replacement.
HKSM