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Project methodology and management
Kytom guides

Project methodology and management

Kytom methodology for managing an office fit-out without interrupting operations, without overrunning deadlines and with teams on board.

11 cities covered
1 200+ spaces transformed
66 passionate people

A successful fit-out project rests on three pillars: precise phasing, structured change management and data-driven oversight. Since 2006, Kytom has delivered more than 1200 projects, 60% of them on occupied sites, with an average lead time of 12 weeks for 850 m². Our methodology is built on a proven quality system and on recognised best practices for transforming workspaces. The workplace director remains the project owner, while Kytom manages the schedule, the budget and the coordination of the trades. Each milestone is documented, each decision tracked, each snag cleared before delivery. Change management starts as early as the programming phase, not after delivery.

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Frequently asked questions about this category

Which guide should I start with?

If you are launching a project, start with the guide on the duration of a fit-out project: it sets out the 5 phases and the non-compressible lead times. Then read the guide on the role of the workplace director to frame your scope. HR directors will go straight to change management. Real estate departments working on occupied sites will start with works phasing, which drives 80% of operational decisions.

How much time should you really plan for?

For a standard 850 m², allow 12 weeks of works after the programme is approved, plus 4 to 6 weeks of design and 2 to 4 weeks of tendering. That is 18 to 22 weeks in total. For an occupied site with phasing, add 20 to 30%. Regulatory lead times (building permit, public-access building authorisation) can add 2 to 5 months depending on the municipality and the nature of the works.

How do you avoid team resistance to flex office?

Three measured levers: involve 15 to 20% of employees in workshops from the programming phase, appoint ambassadors per department (1 for every 15 people), and publish a co-written usage charter. Kytom measures adoption at 3 and 6 months through a questionnaire and observation. Projects with structured change management reach 78% adoption, compared with 45% without dedicated support.

Who manages what between Kytom and the client's workplace director?

The workplace director remains the project owner: they approve the budget, the programme and strategic decisions. Kytom handles the project management, coordinates the 8 to 12 trades, keeps to the schedule and runs the weekly committees. The workplace director has a dedicated Kytom project manager, reachable 7 days a week during critical phases. A monthly ExCom report is provided, formatted to be read in 10 minutes by senior management.