What communication methods would a project manager use for overall effective project communication?

Being a good communicator is an attribute that invariably finds its way onto every list of highly desirable qualities for any project manager, worldwide. And with good reason: Communication plays a critically important role in Project Management. If you do not communicate with your team, they will not know what they are supposed to do, or when. And, in turn, if you do not know what your team is doing, you will not be able to monitor the progress of your project, which will then lead to failure of the project. 

You need to be able to maintain open and accurate communication channels with all levels of a project, including project members and stakeholders—starting from the bottom all the way to the top. Communicating insufficient or unclear information can lead to faulty assumptions and poor quality of work while overloading a stakeholder with information can lead to them shutting you off.

Communication that is interactive and relies on either nonverbal, verbal, written, contextual, or subjective components, to convey a message and to rely on the same to attain feedback is effective communication.

Now, let's get started with the topic "Project Management: Interactive Vs. Push Vs. Pull Communication"


The PMBOK® Guide identifies 3 types of communication:

1. Interactive Communication2. Push Communication

3. Pull Communication

Interactive Communication is a fairly self-explanatory term. As the name suggests, it is a multidirectional form of communication. When you require an immediate response, and when the information you are communicating is sensitive with the possibility of being misinterpreted, you turn to interactive communication. It involves one or more people exchanging thoughts and ideas, where participants respond in real-time.

Project managers prefer in-person interactive communication. When communication is performed over media, like video conferences, phones, meetings, etc., a project manager may not be able to pick up on facial expressions and body language of the stakeholders.

To understand this concept better, consider an example. Let’s say you need to have a meeting with the stakeholders about the progress of a project, or you have a glitch in the project. Interactive communication would be preferred over using mails to convey messages and having them respond by email. Rather than being unsure of what is happening, you’d be better off calling for a meeting or a video conference so you can convey the problem to them and receive feedback.

Examples of Interactive communication:

Any face to Face contacts:

  • Meetings
  • Phone Calls / Conference
  • Video Calls / Conference

This kind of communication is from sender to receiver, and is preferable when you distribute information, yet are not looking for an immediate response—or if the matter you are trying to convey is not urgent or sensitive. However, as soon as the recipient views the message, some action is required.

Push communication includes memos, letters, emails, reports, faxes, etc. It is not face-to-face but is instead typically done through some written medium. The one disadvantage of this type of communication is that the sender can only identify that the message has been successfully sent. Some email systems can notify you when an email has been opened, but this feature can’t guarantee that the recipient has understood the message trying to be communicated.

As another example, you have a technical issue that demands immediate attention, and you alert the tech department of your company to fix it. You email IT, but no one is available that day, so no one received your email. You only know that the mail you wrote has been successfully sent. You do not know if it has been received. You will only know the email has been received when desktop support comes to fix the problem.

Examples of Push communication:

What communication methods would a project manager use for overall effective project communication?

Pull communication doesn’t involve pulling in a reader to read your message. Instead, pull communication is all about providing group access to common information. The receiver, however, must recover this information. This method is used for a large audience who require access to information for their use.

When your communication is informational, make use of this kind of information. If a receiver does not read your message, it will in no way affect the project. Since information will be accessed only when the need arises, pull communication is known to be the most appropriate kind of communication. Methods of pull communication include posting information on websites, wikis, knowledge repositories, bulletin boards, etc.

A sample pulls communication scenario would be when you have enrolled in one of Simplilearn’s project management courses. You need access to more information about the subject, and you begin to search for relevant information from the Articles/eBooks that are available on our website.

Examples of Pull communication:

Next, let's have a look at the differences between Project Management: Interactive Vs. Push Vs. Pull Communication

Below is a table that describes and compares Interactive Vs. Push Vs. Pull Communication in project management.

  Interactive Communication Push Communication Pull Communication
Definition – What it is Involves one or more people exchanging thoughts and ideas and responding in real-time Sender to receiver type communication – usually some barrier in between Providing information that is accessible to all members – but they must retrieve this information
Nature of Communication Sensitive and urgent Casual – not so important Informational purpose - casual
Required Action Immediate response required Immediate action not required but once recipient notices message must take some action No action required
Media to communicate Video conferences, phones, meetings, etc Memos, Letters, Emails, Reports, Faxes, etc websites, knowledge repositories, bulletin boards, etc
Example An important meeting with stakeholders over a video conference Sending a mail to the tech team to fix a problem but not receiving an immediate response Browsing through websites for information

That was all about the differences between Interactive Vs. Push Vs. Pull Communication.

Here are some sample questions you may see on your PMP certification exam.

  1. What term describes the information that is sent to recipients at their request via Web sites, bulletin boards, eLearning, knowledge repositories like blogs, and other means?a. Push communicationsb. Pull communicationsc. Interactive communicationsd. Customer communications
  2. Communication between two or more parties performing multi-directional exchange of information is called ______?a. Interactive communicationb. Pull communicationc. Push communicationd. Multi-directional communication
  3. You need to resolve a workplace conflict involving several members of your project team. Which communication technique is best suited for this?a. Pull Communicationb. E-mailc. Interactive Communication

    d. Push Communication

If you are considering working toward your PMP exam, Simplilearn offers a variety of project management courses that will help you pass, including the PMP Certification Training Course. Our PMP training courses are conducted by certified, highly experienced professionals with at least 10 years of experience.

Hope you like the article on Interactive Vs. Push Vs. Pull Communication., in case of doubts please leave a comment below.

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PMP® and PMBOK® have registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc.

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Posted by: Lucid Content Team

As a project manager, you have the singular gift of being able to handle a hundred responsibilities at once, including delegating tasks, removing any blockers from a project, and making sure everyone has the same goal in mind.

But while effective project management involves breaking down high-level goals into smaller assignments that ultimately adhere to a set deadline, a truly great project manager knows that no project—big or small—will be successful without a project management communication plan.

A project management communication plan identifies how important information will be communicated to stakeholders throughout the project. It also determines who will be receiving the communication, how those people will receive it, when they’ll receive it, and how often they should expect to receive that information.

For instance, if you’re a project manager in charge of launching a new website, you’ve probably already segmented the project into tasks like wireframing, copywriting, and coding. But have you determined what you’re going to tell your stakeholders at each stage of the project? Probably not.

When formulating your project communication plan, make sure it includes:

  • The purpose or goals of the communication plan
  • Information about stakeholders and their roles
  • The types of information that needed to be shared with stakeholders
  • The methods used to communicate
  • The frequency that each stakeholder would like to receive information

Going back to our example, after wireframing, your communication plan may dictate that you give an update to your CTO by email with the wireframe attached in PDF format.

Why is a project management communication plan important?

Poor communication contributes to project failure, and therefore, it could spell massive financial loss to the company. At the opposite end of the spectrum, high-performing businesses communicate more frequently and do so more effectively than their low-performing counterparts.

A project management communication plan will keep your project on track because it:

  • Creates written documentation that the team can reference
  • Sets expectations of when stakeholders will receive updates
  • Increases stakeholders’ visibility into the project and its status
  • Provides the opportunity for stakeholders to give feedback, which can help the team detect issues early on and decrease wasted work
  • Increases productivity during meetings or eliminates them altogether

So, if you want your project to be completed successfully and on time, make sure you know how to create an effective communication plan.

How to make a project management communication plan

Based on the benefits explained above, we’re sure you’re anxious to start your own project management communication plan. Follow these steps to get started.

1. Choose a format

Choose a platform where it will be easy to gather feedback on your communication plan and to share or store the plan for your team and stakeholders to reference.

Many project managers create their communication plan on a word document or a spreadsheet, starting from a project communication plan template, but you might also consider choosing a more visual option, such as a timeline or a flowchart, to clearly explain the frequency of communication or the best method to use based on the stakeholder.

What communication methods would a project manager use for overall effective project communication?
Communication Plan Example (Click on image to modify online)
What communication methods would a project manager use for overall effective project communication?
Communication Matrix (Click on image to modify online)

Whatever you hope to achieve, the first step to crafting a successful communication plan is to write that goal down. Referring back to the importance of a communication plan, your goal will likely be to keep stakeholders updated on the project status or even to keep stakeholders mindful of the project’s benefits so they’ll continue to advocate for it. Use our weekly project status report template to help you keep everyone up-to-date on projects.

3. Identify stakeholders

Most projects have many stakeholders, most of whom have different levels of interest in and influence on the project. You’ll need to identify the stakeholders with whom you’ll communicate throughout the project and list them.

Get the buy-in you need by performing a stakeholder analysis.

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Your CTO never checks his email but is on Slack all day. On the other hand, your head designer never installed Slack but checks her email constantly. And you’ll need to hire a skywriter to communicate with your art director.

One purpose of your communication plan is to get the right eyes on the right information, so along with listing who your stakeholders are, your communication plan should also list how you intend on communicating with those stakeholders.

Consider the following methods depending on what your stakeholders are most likely to see or attend:

  • Weekly check-ins
  • Meetings, whether in person, over the phone, or through video conferencing
  • Meeting summaries
  • Status reports
  • Formal presentations
  • Surveys
  • To-do lists
  • Project dashboards
  • Collaboration apps, such as Slack or Google Hangouts

The communication method you choose may also depend on the information you need to deliver. You likely don’t need a formal in-person meeting every week to share updates on the project; you could send a weekly email with updates and hold meetings when the team reaches a major milestone.

5. Determine frequency of communication

List how often you will send out each type of communication (e.g., send a weekly email on Mondays with project progress, links to completed deliverables, current budget, etc.) or how often you need to loop in each stakeholder (e.g., each team member should send daily emails to update the project manager but only include the executive stakeholder on the video conference following each milestone).

In addition to including this information on your project management communications plan, make sure to schedule communication frequency on your calendar or into your task management software.

6. Determine who provides communication updates

Most often, this task will fall on the project manager, but if not, the owner of a specific update needs to be clearly identified in your communications plan.

What should you do if your project changes?

No business is immune to scope creep, so even the best-organized companies will face times when projects change, and the communication plan needs to change along with it. If change becomes necessary, refer back to your project overview and realign your communication plan to the revised project. A communication plan will act as your North Star when problems start to arrive.

How should you communicate sensitive information?

There may be times when knowing whom to contact and with what information could be a security risk. Plan for this possible scenario when crafting your communication plan. We recommend crafting a flowchart that shows how to share sensitive information.

What communication methods would a project manager use for overall effective project communication?
Process for Communicating Sensitive Information (Click on image to modify online)

Once you’ve got your communication plan in order, you need to put it to good use. Your communication plan should be distributed to everyone in your team and all the stakeholders involved.

And this is where the real magic comes in: In addition to keeping everyone apprised of the project’s status, your team members and stakeholders also won’t be needlessly bothering you with updates.

If your CTO knows from the project management communication plan that he will receive a Slack with a link to the meeting minutes after every weekly check-in, he won’t be checking his email or walking over to your desk for an update. Instead of your team members working in sad silos, they’ll feel more motivated because they’ll know they’re not alone on the project and that things are getting done.

Furthermore, it’s encouraging to receive regular communication with updates: It drives the momentum of the project and keeps the hard deadline at the forefront of your team’s minds.

Don’t get mired in the details

While a communication plan is vital to the success of your project, don’t get caught up in the necessity of communicating every detail along the way. There’s a big difference between clarity and minutiae. If you communicate too much, too often, your communication is just going to get ignored.

Be precise and purposeful in your emails. You also may want to craft an email template that clearly defines the most important aspects of the project. That way, if you’re tempted to start drifting into communication that may or may not be of value to your stakeholders, the plan will keep you focused on the important things.

Standardize the process

If this is your first time incorporating a project management communications plan into your project, it might be tough to get everyone to see its importance. And if the first time doesn’t go as smoothly as you’d hoped, learn from your mistakes and try again. You’ll find with enough practice that communication makes projects go smoother, relieves stress, and helps deliver more projects on time. That in itself is worth the effort it takes to develop a communication plan in the first place.

Keep your plan up to date

No business is immune to scope creep, so even the best-organized companies will face times when projects change, and the communication plan needs to change along with it. If change becomes necessary, refer back to your project overview and realign your communication plan to the revised project. A communication plan will act as your North Star when problems start to arrive.

Cover sensitive information

There may be times when not knowing whom to contact and what information to give them could be a security risk. Plan for this possible scenario when crafting your communication plan. We recommend crafting a flowchart that shows how to share sensitive information.

Overall, a project management communication plan visualizes project expectations for all relevant team members and makes your plan clearer to follow. But don’t stop there! There’s lots of other visuals that can help you manage your projects from start to finish. Try a Gantt chart or a dashboard to track project progress and keep team members accountable.

Use Lucidchart to visualize your project management communication plan and more.

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