127: Your project can't possibly be as bad as working for Mr Beast, Part 1 Titelbild

127: Your project can't possibly be as bad as working for Mr Beast, Part 1

127: Your project can't possibly be as bad as working for Mr Beast, Part 1

Jetzt kostenlos hören, ohne Abo

Details anzeigen

Ever worked with a stakeholder who changes direction faster than your project plan can keep up? Then this episode may feel a little too familiar.

Kim and Kate dive into the rise of Mr. Beast and the making of Beast Games through a project management lens—not to critique content creation, but to examine what happens when vision outpaces execution. From sponsor behavior and scaling challenges to agile gone sideways, they unpack the risks of massive ambition without the systems to support it.

If you've ever managed shifting priorities, difficult stakeholders, or a project that seemed to grow by the hour, this conversation will hit home. Grab a drink and join us for a fascinating look at project sponsors, leadership, and what real-world project management can learn from internet-scale production.

🎙️ Spicy Quotes from the Episode

"Those poor people. Those poor people. I feel so bad." — Kate

"This has to be a textbook case of the absolute worst project sponsor I have ever seen." — Kim

Key Concepts & Takeaways

The Sponsor Shapes the Project
Kate frames Mr. Beast not as a creator but as a project sponsor. Great sponsors create alignment; difficult ones can unintentionally create chaos, rework, and burnout.

Scale Changes Everything
What works at small scale may not work as it scales up - in this case, scaling from Youtube videos to a massive $100m production involving thousands of participants and multiple organizations. Scaling requires stronger processes, decision making, and management support - not just bigger budgets.

Empathy Matters in Project Management
Kate repeatedly returns to the human side of projects: behind every schedule slip or scope change are real people doing the work.

Practical Takeaways

  • Evaluate sponsor behavior early, not just project requirements.

  • Reassess processes when projects scale dramatically.

  • Governance doesn't slow decisions - it can help speed them and ensure your project can effectively absorb changing priorities.

  • Consider the human impact of ambitious timelines and scope changes.

  • Distinguish between innovation and avoidable chaos.

🔗 Links & Resources Mentioned

  • Folding Ideas video: "Why Was I Invited to Beast Studios?" (https://youtu.be/0dwagg5wYY4?si=wNMmjhncv06AqUul)

  • Project Management Happy Hour Website

  • PM Happy Hour Membership

adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
Noch keine Rezensionen vorhanden