Project Command

Peter Younes

Project Command is a podcast dedicated to exploring project management and execution in the fire service. Hosted by Captain Peter Younes, PMP, and Lieutenant Duke Cuneo, PMP, the show dives into the art and science of leading complex projects, building effective teams, and integrating proven project management practices into fire department operations. Each episode brings practical insights, real-world examples, and lessons learned from initiatives that shape the future of public safety—helping fire service leaders at all levels turn ideas into action and get things done.

  1. 5 DAYS AGO

    ChatGPT for Fire Service Grant Writing: How Fire Departments Can Unlock Millions Through Smarter Grant Writing

    Grant writing is one of the most important and most frustrating tasks in the fire service. In this episode of Project Command, I break down my seven step grant writing process and show exactly how ChatGPT and other AI tools can support you at every stage. From identifying needs and aligning projects with funding priorities, to drafting narratives, strengthening justifications, and refining final submissions, AI can save time, improve clarity, and help you produce more competitive grant applications. This episode focuses on practical, real world use cases, not hype or theory. This is the fourth installment in the AI in the Fire Service series, following ChatGPT for Firefighters, ChatGPT for Fire Chiefs, and ChatGPT for the Fire Training Officer. If your department is short on time, staff, or grant writing experience, this episode provides a clear framework and ready to use ideas to help you get started.   Example AI Prompts Used in This Episode Prompt 1: Find and Rank Grants for Extrication Equipment You are acting as a grant research specialist for a municipal fire department. I am looking for grant opportunities that can fund the purchase of new extrication equipment. Please: Identify federal, state, local, and private grant programs that commonly fund fire service equipment or rescue tools Filter to grants open to municipal fire departments or public safety agencies Note which grants are currently open or have upcoming application windows, if available For each relevant grant, provide: Grant name Funding purpose Typical award amounts Key eligibility requirements Application timeline or cycle A direct link to the official grant website or application page Rank the grants based on alignment with purchasing extrication equipment. If exact deadlines are unavailable, include the most typical application periods based on past cycles. Present results in a clear table or bullet format. Prompt 2: Identify and Coordinate Grant Stakeholders You are acting as a project manager and grant coordination specialist for a municipal fire department. I am preparing a grant application to fund new extrication equipment. Please identify all internal and external stakeholders involved in both the grant application and post award project execution. For each stakeholder group, include: Their role in the grant process The information or support they provide When they should be engaged in the process Consider stakeholders across: Fire department leadership Operations and field personnel Finance and budgeting IT and data systems Procurement and logistics Training divisions Legal or compliance, if applicable Community partners or governing bodies, if applicable Present the results in a clear table or structured list that can be used as a stakeholder coordination plan. Prompt 3: Analyze Operational Data with Methodology and Assumptions You are acting as a data analyst and project evaluation specialist for a municipal fire department. I will provide four to five data tables related to department operations and project outcomes, such as incident volume, response times, equipment usage, training records, and costs. Please: Analyze each table to identify key trends and findings Cross analyze the tables to identify relationships or correlations Summarize insights that support a grant application or project evaluation Also include: A clear explanation of the methodology used A list of assumptions made during analysis Any limitations or data gaps that impact accuracy Present the results with: Key insights in bullet points Supporting references to the provided data A short methodology and assumptions section at the end The goal is transparent, defensible analysis suitable for grant narratives or reporting.

    42 min
  2. 1 JAN

    Flashpoints: If It Isn't Assigned, It Isn't Going To Happen

    If it isn't assigned, it isn't going to happen. On the fireground, unassigned tasks don't magically get done — and projects are no different. In this Flash Points episode of Project Command, Lieutenant Duke Cuneo breaks down one of the most common (and quietest) reasons projects fail in the fire service: lack of ownership. Not bad ideas. Not missing funding. But the dangerous assumption that "someone else is handling it." Using clear fireground parallels, this episode challenges vague project language like "let's circle back" and "someone should probably own this" — and replaces it with a simple, tactical truth: until a task has a name next to it, it's just smoke. You'll learn: Why unassigned tasks create delays and resentment in projects How small gaps between ownership and execution stall progress The leadership difference between collaboration and accountability Why explicit ownership enables initiative instead of limiting it A simple test to keep your projects moving with momentum If you want your projects to run with the same clarity, purpose, and follow-through as a well-managed incident scene, this episode gives you a practical framework you can apply immediately. Because in projects — just like on the fireground — if it isn't assigned… it isn't going to happen.  Project Command: Flash Points delivers quick, high-impact lessons that turn big project-management concepts into everyday tools for the fire service. If you found this episode valuable, please like, share, or subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Questions or comments? Email us at projectcommandpodcast@gmail.com

    5 min

About

Project Command is a podcast dedicated to exploring project management and execution in the fire service. Hosted by Captain Peter Younes, PMP, and Lieutenant Duke Cuneo, PMP, the show dives into the art and science of leading complex projects, building effective teams, and integrating proven project management practices into fire department operations. Each episode brings practical insights, real-world examples, and lessons learned from initiatives that shape the future of public safety—helping fire service leaders at all levels turn ideas into action and get things done.

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