Project Management Masterclass
Project Management Masterclass is the podcast for project professionals who want to move beyond managing tasks and start leading projects with clarity, influence, and strategic thinking.
Hosted by Brittany Wilkins, a Project Management Professional who understands the realities of modern project work, this show focuses on what truly drives project success. It is not just technical knowledge or certifications. The real difference comes from the power skills that allow leaders to navigate complexity, align teams, and turn vision into results.
Each episode explores the principles, frameworks, and mindset required to bridge the gap between strategy and execution. From leadership development and industry trends to practical lessons learned from real world projects, Project Management Masterclass equips you with the tools needed to elevate your career and lead projects with confidence.
Listeners come for the insight and stay for the real world perspective.
One listener shared:
"I listened during a road trip from Arkansas to Texas and was completely hooked. The content is relevant, inspiring, and genuinely memorable."
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"Your calm, articulate cadence makes the content accessible even for listeners who speak English as a second language."
If you are ready to strengthen the skills that separate project managers from project leaders, explore the Power Skills Accelerator, a course designed to help professionals master the leadership capabilities needed to thrive in complex project environments.
Enroll in the Power Skills Accelerator
https://www.developpowerskills.com/sales-page
If you want to assess where execution may be breaking down in your current projects, take the Execution Intelligence Diagnostic to identify gaps across leadership, decision making, and team alignment.
Start the diagnostic
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To learn more about how organizations eliminate execution friction and turn strategy into measurable results, visit Makoway Consulting.
Tap into the insights. Strengthen your leadership. And take your project career to the next level.
Project Management Masterclass
31.How to Identify Execution Collapse Before It Happens (Spirit Airlines Case Study)
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Every business is measured by its financial performance.
Revenue. Profit. The bottom line.
That’s what people look at when something collapses.
But by the time the numbers reflect the problem, it’s already been there.
There are other indicators that get overlooked.
Decision speed starts to slow.
Pressure builds in places no one is tracking.
Options begin to narrow long before anyone calls it a risk.
I didn’t look at Spirit Airlines and think this was sudden.
I thought about how long it had probably been building.
In this episode, I walk through what most people miss when they look at business failure.
Not the outcome. The pattern behind it.
Because collapse doesn’t start with financial results.
It starts inside the system.
And if you’re not paying attention to those signals early, you don’t get time to react. You get forced to respond.
If you are ready to strengthen the skills that separate project managers from project leaders, explore the Power Skills Accelerator, a course designed to help professionals master the leadership capabilities needed to thrive in complex project environments.
Enroll in the Power Skills Accelerator
https://www.developpowerskills.com/sales-page
If you want to assess where execution may be breaking down in your current projects, take the Execution Intelligence Diagnostic to identify gaps across leadership, decision making, and team alignment.
Start the diagnostic
https://brittany-hxfhsf7t.scoreapp.co
To learn more about how organizations eliminate execution friction and turn strategy into measurable results, visit Makoway Consulting.
Where Project Managers Become Project Leaders
I'm Brittany Wilkins
This is Project Management Masterclass
Different day. Same pattern. Another company is collapsing under pressure.
Spirit Airlines is preparing to shut down. Tough news to hear in this economy especially with the job impacts both directly and indirectly. The consumers who made Spirit their preferred choice for their personal and business needs.
If you paid attention or followed this story, what came to mind for me.
They been in business for quite some years, did you view this as a business failure?
I read the articles and said to myself this collapse didn’t start when the headlines hit.
It started long before—inside their execution system.
And that matters.
Because the same pattern is playing out right now inside organizations that still look “stable” on the outside. Inside they are collapsing under pressure.
I want to talk through and show you how to identify execution collapse before it in our world in projects and businesses.
I never traveled Spirit so I don't have the full experience of what it's like as a consumer to be part of their ecosystem. From friends and colleagues I heard some pretty interesting stories.
1. Their Business Model Got Exposed
Spirit built its edge on ultra-low fares and fees.
That worked when:
- Fuel was cheaper
- Competitors weren’t matching prices
But that environment changed.
- Larger airlines adapted
- Customers got fed up with the experience
- Margins disappeared
Now here’s the part most people miss:
The model didn’t fail because it was wrong.
It failed because it only worked under specific conditions.
That’s not strategy.
That’s dependency.
We always say control what you can control.
External environment factors are uncontrollable outside forces—
political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental (PESTLE)
2. External Pressure Crushed Them
Jet fuel prices spiked.
Costs increased beyond what they planned for.
And their recovery strategy depended on those costs coming back down.
That’s not bad luck.
That’s fragile planning.
Because if one variable doubling can break your model,
that variable is not just a cost.
It’s a vulnerability.
Then you look at their strategy
3. Strategic Failure (This Is the Big One)
Their merger with JetBlue got blocked.
They filed bankruptcy twice.
They cut routes. Reduced staff.
And still couldn’t stabilize.
Translation:
They had no viable standalone strategy once consolidation failed.
Which means everything depended on one outcome.
And when that outcome disappeared, so did their options.
So the real question is not:
“What happened to Spirit?”
The real question is:
How do you know when your system is heading in the same direction?
Framework: Identifying Execution Collapse Early
I’m going to walk you through three indicators.
Indicator 1: Decision Lag Under Pressure
When pressure increases, decisions should speed up.
Instead, what often happens is the opposite.
- More meetings
- More alignment conversations
- More waiting
And decisions take longer.
That’s a warning sign.
Because decision speed is not just a leadership trait.
It’s a system output.
If your system requires excessive coordination to move forward,
it will slow down exactly when speed matters most.
Question to ask yourself:
Where are decisions currently slowing down in your organization?
Because that’s where pressure is already building.
Indicator 2: No Clear Breaking Point
Most organizations don’t know their limits.
They operate on assumptions like:
- “We’ll adjust if needed”
- “We’ll figure it out”
That’s not a strategy.
That’s exposure.
Every system has a breaking point:
- Cost thresholds
- Capacity limits
- Timeline compression
If you don’t define those in advance, you don’t control them.
You discover them.
And discovery under pressure is expensive.
Question:
Do you know the exact point where your current execution model fails?
Not generally. Specifically.
Indicator 3: Over-Reliance on a Single Outcome
This is where things become dangerous.
When organizations start depending on one outcome to survive:
- A deal going through
- A project landing
- A market shift
They stop adapting.
They start waiting.
And waiting is the fastest way to lose optionality.
Once options shrink, recovery becomes unlikely.
That’s what happened here.
Question:
What outcome is your organization quietly depending on right now?
Because if that doesn’t happen, what’s the plan?
The Real Pattern
Here’s what execution collapse actually looks like:
- Pressure increases
- Decisions slow down
- Limits are unclear
- Options narrow
- And then it becomes irreversible
By the time leadership recognizes the severity, the system is already
too constrained to recover.
So what do you do with this?
You don’t wait until there’s a problem.
You build awareness into your system.
Here are three things you can do immediately:
1. Map Your Decision Bottlenecks
Where does work slow down when it needs approval?
Not in theory. In reality.
That’s where your execution risk lives.
2. Define Your Pressure Thresholds
Ask:
- What happens if our primary cost doubles?
- What happens if timelines compress by 30%?
If you can’t answer that clearly, you don’t have a resilient system.
3. Identify Your Hidden Dependencies
What are you relying on that hasn’t happened yet?
Call it out.
Because dependency without contingency is risk.
Close
Spirit Airlines is not an isolated case.
It is a visible example of something that happens quietly every day.
Execution systems don’t fail because people stop working.
They fail because the system cannot adapt under pressure.
And by the time it’s obvious, it’s already too late.
Final Line
If your primary cost doubled tomorrow, what happens to your execution plan?
If that question is difficult to answer, that’s not a gap.
That’s a signal.
CTA
If you want to go deeper into how to assess and strengthen your execution system, start with the Execution Intelligence Assessment.
Because the goal is not to react to pressure.
It’s to be built for it.