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November 7, 2025The Hidden Culprit Behind Delays
When projects start slipping, most leadership teams look at resourcing or technology first:
“We need more developers.”
“The vendor missed a deadline.”
“The integration took longer than expected.”
But in reality, most delays have nothing to do with technology at all.
Projects slip because your processes are unclear, inconsistent, bloated, or constantly shifting.
Your team isn’t failing.
Your workflow is.
Where Projects Really Fall Apart: The Process Loop
Transformation projects depend on cycles — requirement cycles, design cycles, testing cycles, approval cycles.
These cycles are necessary. But when they lack structure, clarity, or consistency, they become the silent killer of timelines.
Here’s what it typically looks like:
- Requirements drafted
- Review
- Updates
- Review again
- More updates
- “Final” approval
- Committee presentation
- Committee questions → more updates
- Another review
- Then maybe approval
This loop repeats for:
- Requirements
- Designs
- Test scripts
- User flows
- Architecture diagrams
- Change requests
And if your workflow is not clearly defined, enforced, and understood, everything stalls.
Action items linger.
Your tracking matrix turns red.
Your SI blames your team.
Your team blames the SI.
Executives start asking, “Why are we behind?”
Common Process Bottlenecks That Drag Projects Down
Endless Requirement Cycles
- Business analysts draft requirements.
- The business reviews.
- Edits come back.
- A second review.
- More edits.
- Final review.
- New discoveries → cycle restarts.
Design Review Fatigue
Architects produce designs.
Reviewers request updates.
Someone wants to “socialize it with the committee.”
Weeks disappear before development can begin.
Test Case Delays
Test scripts are created late or don’t match the latest design. Only part of the workflow is covered. Gaps appear during UAT, triggering upstream rework.
Committee Decision Lag
If approvals can only happen every 2 weeks, even small decisions create month-long delays.
Process Drift Mid-Project
Teams quietly “adjust” the workflow without documenting it.
Different groups follow different processes.
No one knows the actual path anymore.
External Team Misalignment
Vendors bring their own processes and templates.
They produce documents that don’t meet your internal standards.
Your team has to redo them — costing time and money.
Documentation Must Be Clear and Digestible
Another major process failure that quietly derails projects is unclear, overly complex documentation. Most teams don’t fall behind because work isn’t getting done — they fall behind because no one can quickly understand the requirements, designs, or decisions in front of them. If your documentation is written for the minority who already know the system instead of the majority who need to consume it, your process will fail no matter how well-defined it is.
Documentation should be simple, visual, and structured so anyone — business, IT, QA, support, or new team members — can understand it without needing a meeting to translate it. That means fewer filler paragraphs, more diagrams, clear personas, and a straightforward list of the questions each document must answer. When people can instantly see what’s changing, why, who it impacts, and how it works, the entire workflow accelerates.
Clear documentation is not a “nice to have.” It is the difference between a project that moves and a project that gets stuck in endless review cycles. If your teams can’t digest the information, they can’t approve it — and no process can save you from that.
The Master Workflow Document — Your Project’s Playbook
The fastest way to eliminate process chaos is to establish ONE authoritative workflow document that defines:
- Step-by-step process for requirements, design, testing, and approvals
- Roles and responsibilities for each step
- Expected turnaround times
- Decision-lock points
- Templates for every artifact
- Links to master references
- Version control and ownership
- Standards that cannot be changed mid-project
This isn’t a “project document.”
This is the operating manual for the entire transformation.
Every team lead must be trained on it.
Every onboarding must include it.
Every review and approval must align to it.
If your workflow isn’t documented, enforced, and accessible, it doesn’t exist.

Close-up of different computer parts inside the PC
Lock Decisions in the Right Place
A major anti-pattern:
Treating Jira (or Azure DevOps) as a documentation repository.
Jira is great for tracking work.
It is terrible for storing decisions, architecture, or finalized designs.
Decisions must live in:
- Confluence
- SharePoint
- A controlled documentation hub
If your biggest decisions live in comment threads,
you don’t have a decision — you have a memory problem waiting to happen.
And when new team members join?
Good luck finding that “one comment from 4 months ago.”
Real-World Example
At a major gas utility, requirements had to pass five separate review cycles.
Each cycle took two weeks.
By the time final approval was granted, 10 weeks had passed — and development was waiting the entire time.
When the company implemented a clear R&R matrix with turnaround SLAs and a proper workflow document, the requirement cycle shrank to 3 weeks.
Two months saved.
Timeline back on track.
Quick Checklist: Is Your Process Killing Your Project?
You likely have a process problem if:
- You don’t have a single Master Workflow Document
- People don’t know who approves what
- Decisions live in Jira comments
- Templates aren’t standardized
- Committees meet too infrequently
- Review cycles drag on
- Processes change mid-project
- Documentation is unclear or overly technical
If two or more of these are true, your process is silently killing your project.
Final Thoughts
Processes are meant to accelerate clarity — not create gridlock.
The goal isn’t to add more steps or more documentation.
The goal is to build a clear, repeatable, enforceable path that moves your team from idea → decision → delivery quickly and consistently.
The next time your project starts slipping, don’t assume it’s a technical issue.
Look inward first.
Death by process is real — but completely fixable.




