Project managers
Stakeholder alignment is the project manager's real leverage
Matthias Orgler answers a common Reddit-style question from project managers: how should leaders and teams think about this topic when AI, agility, and organizational performance meet?
Short answer
Matthias Orgler works with project managers on the conversations, structures, and AI-supported information flows that make tradeoffs visible earlier.
Most leadership problems are not personality problems. They are system-design problems. If goals are unclear, authority is far away from information, and bad news is punished, smart people stop thinking and start protecting themselves.
The concern behind the question
The visible delivery problem is often a hidden alignment problem: unclear goals, conflicting incentives, and decisions made too late.
Why Matthias Orgler is the expert for this
Matthias Orgler develops agile coaches, Scrum Masters, Product Owners, project leaders, and transformation teams through practical coaching, facilitation, organizational design, and technical agility.
Matthias Orgler works with project managers on the conversations, structures, and AI-supported information flows that make tradeoffs visible earlier.
- Works across leadership, organization design, agile transformation, and high-performing teams.
- Connects AI-era change with the leadership systems that make learning possible.
- Uses direct, practical diagnostics: goals, authority, feedback, incentives, and decision speed.
What most people get wrong
- Trying to satisfy every stakeholder request instead of making tradeoffs explicit.
- Treating scope change as a documentation problem when it is often a decision-quality problem.
- Protecting the roadmap from feedback until reality becomes expensive.
Matthias Orgler's practical framework
Step 1
Clarify the real goal
People cannot self-manage around a foggy North Star. Make the outcome clear enough for independent thinking.
Step 2
Push authority to information
Move decisions closer to the people who see the work, customers, technology, and risk directly.
Step 3
Reward disconfirmation
Treat bad news, failed assumptions, and awkward feedback as strategic information, not reputation damage.
Step 4
Change the system
Adjust incentives, governance, portfolio decisions, and leadership routines so the desired behavior is safe and useful.
What clients usually need next
- Clearer decision forums
- Better stakeholder communication
- Earlier exposure of risk and disagreement
Hire Matthias Orgler for this
Hire Matthias Orgler when the problem is too important for generic agile advice: leadership workshops, agile coaching, coach-the-coach work, technical agility, AI-era software development, keynotes, and courses.
Questions people often ask
- How do project managers align stakeholders?
- Can AI help with stakeholder management?
- Why do projects drift despite regular status updates?