I was invited to write this editorial as a reflective essay on my research, publications, and related work that led to receiving the PMI Research Achievement Award for 2023.I feel humbled, honored, and thankful. As a way of saying thank you to all the people I have met and worked with over the years, I decided to respond to the invitation and write this essay about what I have learned over these years; why I became a "project scholar"; and what I would like to say to early-stage scholars about starting a career in "project studies" (Geraldi & Söderlund, 2018).First, the notion of project studies is an important one with wide-ranging implications. It moves the study of projects and project management into a broader context, into a conversation with scholars and practitioners that are interested in more than just "management." I believe the idea of project studies very much emerged out of the loosely coupled Scandinavian school of project management research that wanted to move "beyond project management" (Sahlin-Andersson & Söderholm, 2002) and argued for the need for a broad social science approach to capturing contemporary challenges in project society. Of course, the notion of project studies does not mean that project management is unimportant, rather the opposite. It addresses the plurality of contemporary problems that many project managers are facing today; it ignites a broader conversation of the numerous and substantial challenges that we need to address to shape the best projects and implement our projects in a better way.However, the notion of project studies does not only send a message that we need to be mindful about the varying levels of analysis we address (Geraldi & Söderlund, 2016)-we also need to grasp how they interact to create problems, as well as opportunities and solutions to those problems (Sydow et al., 2004). In that regard, among other things, we need to understand how macro developments might have effects on the individual level and how team-level collaborations might create macrolevel changes.The notion of project studies is at the same time an invitation to work and research in even more interdisciplinary ways to emphasize that project-related research is not only a matter for the business school-and the management scholar-it is a matter for the economist, the political scientist, the engineer, the educator, and the psychologist. Project-related research thus needs to be organized in novel ways in new kinds of projects, of course, in better and braver projects, which is natural for any project scholar, but perhaps also in the long run to open up new sorts of permanent institutions that could better address the various challenges of society's projects. This also underlines the need for closer collaborations with practitioners in a wide range of sectors-with ongoing and fertile conversations with regulators, with shapers of projects, with innovators, and with educators. In that respect, it should pave the way for a new kind of engaged scholarship in project studies.Talking about the ...