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Delivery Discipline8 min read

How to Recover a Failing Project: A Structured Recovery Approach

A practical guide for sponsors and project managers who need to stabilize a troubled project.

Project recovery requires rapid diagnosis, stakeholder reset, and a credible recovery plan, not more status meetings.

Key Takeaways
  • Recovery starts with an honest current-state assessment not a new plan
  • Most project failures stem from scope drift decision delays and resource contention
  • A 30-day stabilization sprint is more effective than a 90-day recovery plan
  • Stakeholder reset is often more important than schedule recovery

Step 1: Diagnose before you plan

The first action in a recovery is assessment not planning. You cannot recover a project until you understand honestly where it stands: real schedule status, true budget position, actual risk exposure, and the underlying causes of the slip.

Step 2: Identify the real root causes

Project failures have patterns. Scope creep without change control. Decision backlogs that block delivery. Resource over-allocation. Vendor performance gaps that were not escalated. Finding the actual root cause determines the recovery approach.

Step 3: Reset the baseline

A recovery plan built on an unrealistic baseline will fail again. Reset the schedule based on what is actually achievable. Get executive endorsement of the revised baseline before communicating it.

Step 4: Run a stakeholder reset

Recovery requires rebuilding confidence. Brief the executive sponsor first with a candid assessment. Then reset expectations with the delivery team. Establish the new reporting cadence, decision process, and escalation path.

Step 5: Execute a 30-day stabilization sprint

The first 30 days should focus on visible momentum: clearing the decision backlog, resolving the top risks, re-establishing a consistent reporting cadence, and delivering the first credible milestone.

Frequently asked questions

Rarely. Most projects can be recovered if there is executive will to make the hard decisions.

Initial stabilization typically takes 30 days. Full recovery to re-baselined objectives takes 60 to 90 days.

Not always but an external consultant adds objectivity and credibility that is most valuable when internal credibility has been lost.

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