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My career has always revolved around positioning project management as a core driver of strategy and value. From my early roles in banking and pharmaceuticals to leading multi-billion-euro transformation initiatives across industries, I saw that organizations consistently underestimated the strategic role of projects — and the people who manage them.
This conviction led me to a global advocacy path. I served as Chairman of the Project Management Institute (PMI) — the world’s largest project leadership association — and helped drive its shift toward the Project Economy: the idea that work today is organized increasingly through projects, not processes.
I’ve authored books like the HBR Project Management Handbook, and most recently Powered by Projects: Leading Your Organization in the Transformation Age, to show how project leaders are no longer back-office executors — they are front-line changemakers.
Through the AI in Project Management (AIPM) initiative — which I co-lead with Ricardo Viana Vargas — we began exploring what AI really means for the future of project work. In 2023, we launched our first global survey on AI’s impact in the field. In 2025, that survey expanded to 870 respondents across 97 countries, and the insights are clear: AI is no longer optional — it’s transformative.
Personally, I’ve been experimenting with AI copilots in my own projects. And I can confirm: the technology is already replicating many of the traditional PMO’s functions — with speed, scale, and surprising accuracy. What’s needed now is leadership that knows how to harness this potential.
Three key insights stood out:
These findings are available in our 2025 AIPM Survey.
Boards are evolving their expectations. They’re no longer satisfied with activity-based metrics like project completion rates or milestone reports. Instead, they’re asking:
AI enables answers to these questions through real-time forecasting, benefits tracking, and scenario modeling — but only professionals can interpret and act on those insights.
That’s where modern project leaders come in. We serve as the bridge between intelligent tools and business value. We ask better questions. We connect insights to strategy. And we ensure that technology enhances — not replaces — judgment.
We’re seeing strong momentum across four categories:
As we outlined in our HBR article, the goal is not to add more tools — it’s to embed intelligence into the workflow itself.
Entry-level project roles — especially those focused on reporting, data entry, and timeline tracking — are the most exposed. Our research suggests that 60% of PMOs plan to automate these roles in the next 3–5 years.
But there is a massive opportunity here — if organizations shift from displacement to redeployment.
We’re seeing successful reskilling programs that include:
Some companies are reimagining junior project roles as AI project copilots — embedding new talent where machine intelligence meets human intuition.
Here’s my message to project professionals:
As we said in our HBR article: “AI won’t replace project managers. But project managers who use AI will replace those who don’t.”