Saturday, May 24, 2025

AI Driven PM: AI Doesn’t Replace Project Managers—It Replaces Their Worst Tasks

 How I’m Using Prompt Engineering to Turn Reports Into Results


If you’ve ever lost half a day rewriting a status report for the fourth version of the same slide deck, you’re not alone. It’s one of the most frustrating parts of the job—and one of the least strategic.

That’s why I started using large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT and Copilot. Not just for experimentation, but to systematically take work off my plate. But here’s the truth:

Generic AI gives you generic results.
Prompt engineering changes the game.


Why Prompt Engineering Matters (More Than You Think)

When most people talk about AI in project management, they focus on flashy dashboards or automated ticket creation. That’s fine—but it's not where the real leverage is.

The real impact happens when we combine clean project data with deliberate prompts—the kind that generate output we can actually use in executive reviews, steering meetings, and stakeholder updates.

“You can’t automate what you haven’t standardized.” — Rick Morris

Prompt engineering isn’t just writing a better question. It’s a system. And once you build it, the results speak for themselves:

  • Weekly status reports in minutes, not hours
  • Risk logs that auto-rate severity and recommend mitigations
  • Steering decks that don’t require a weekend to assemble

The Three Prompts That Changed My Workflow

Here’s what I actually use week-to-week—no gimmicks, no fluff:

1. Status Narratives That Make Sense to the C-Suite

I feed in structured data from Jira, Smartsheet, or even a quick bullet summary. My prompt is tuned to produce something short, plainspoken, and focused on action.

Key Tip: Ask the LLM to quantify variance and end with a one-sentence ask.

2. Dynamic Risk Logs

Instead of manually rating every risk, I now have AI assign RAG status based on impact × likelihood. It also flags missing mitigations or inconsistent timelines.

Bonus: Add a Markdown or JSON output format so you can plug it straight into SharePoint or your PMIS.

3. Steering Committee Slide Drafts

I use a slide-friendly prompt that generates headlines, bullet points, and speaker notes—based on live data from my working files. I still review and polish, but I’m no longer starting from scratch.

“If you’re doing the same thing every week, it should be automated.” — Rick Morris


It’s Not Just About Speed. It’s About Focus.

The first time I used prompt engineering to prep a risk log, I cut my turnaround time by 80%. But the real win? I used those hours to coach a product owner through a launch delay instead of formatting slides.

Here’s what’s changed in my actual metrics:

  • Status report time: Down from 6 hours/week to ~2
  • Risk updates: From 2 days to under 4 hours
  • Exec clarity: Survey scores on reporting jumped from 3.8 to 4.6 out of 5

“It’s not just about saving time. It’s about reallocating it to what matters.” — Rick Morris


What You Actually Need to Make This Work

You don’t need an AI team or a budget line. You just need a repeatable process:

  1. Know where your data lives – PMIS, Confluence, Slack threads, spreadsheets
  2. Standardize your outputs – Markdown for risks, JSON for status, PowerPoint XML for slides
  3. Build and iterate your prompts – Make them tight, structured, and outcome-focused
  4. Add guardrails – Validation scripts, human-in-the-loop reviews, compliance checks
  5. Track the impact – Time saved, errors avoided, decisions accelerated

“A good process is one you don’t notice—because it’s working.” — Rick Morris


Final Thought: The Point Isn’t the AI—It’s the Outcome

LLMs didn’t make me a better project manager. What they did was give me time back—so I could show up where I was most needed: in risk meetings, in product launches, in conflict resolution.

Prompt engineering didn’t remove me from the loop. It just got rid of the noise.

“We don’t manage projects. We make dreams come true.” — Rick Morris

So if you’re spending more time narrating progress than driving it, prompt engineering might be your next best move. And if you want to see my actual prompts or workflows, just ask—I’m happy to share what’s worked and what didn’t.

Let’s build project management that works for the people doing the work.