Holding project sponsors to account

22 Oct 2020 01:25 PM

Blog posted by: Martin Samphire 22 October 2020.

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Many of the common causes of programme and project failures are related to the effectiveness of the sponsor. In many situations the project manager is blamed for perceived failure of a project even though they carried out their role well to deliver what was requested / defined to the stated objectives. Success has to be measured by the impact of the project on the organisation, the benefits or outcome – and that responsibility sits with the sponsor. Throughout this blogI will refer to the executive sponsor, or SRO in the public sector, as the sponsor.

The APM Governance SIG Sponsor Survey of 2020 found that 45 per cent of board directors were poor at holding sponsors to account. Furthermore over 75 per cent of sponsors felt they were incorrectly held to account by the board. We have a fundamental issue of poor governance here that needs addressing and was the focus of the recent online debate hosted by us, the APM Governance SIG.

Projects often don’t meet their objectives and the reasons for failure are evident early in the project. Why wasn’t the sponsor helped so they could understand and face their responsibilities to avoid failure? And where was the organisational board? Too many times, neither the board nor sponsor understand their respective responsibilities and good governance principles go by the wayside.

Some of the issues that get in the way of effectively holding sponsors to account include:

Tim Carroll, formerly of Standard Chartered bank and one of the panellists at our recent webinar on improving sponsor capability stated, "With the amount of change that businesses face in today's volatile world, maintaining alignment between each project or programme and the needs of the business is more critical than ever. Holding sponsors to account helps the board in their governance role, and provides a better environment within which the project manager can deliver"

So, what are the key areas where boards should hold sponsors to account throughout a project life cycle? In large organisations the board might delegate holding sponsors to account to a sub-committee of the board, (e.g. an investment committee). However, the board should still set the overall business strategy and portfolio strategy, the basis for how success criteria is defined and the assurance regime ensuring they are defined, realistic and acted upon. That crucial link back to the main board needs to exist.

Carroll further stated that “including the project's goals and outcomes within the personal, annual objectives of the sponsor has had a significant impact upon project performance; that direct accountability drives better challenge of the business case, improved reporting to the  board and more attention being paid to post-project outcomes".

Holding sponsors to account should be a primary focus, and below are various ways to help boards achieve this:

Project success should be measured by the impact of the project on the organisation, the benefits or outcomes which is the responsibility of the executive sponsor or SRO. Improving project outcomes could be made by organisation boards holding sponsors to account better for project success.

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About the Author

Martin is the owner and Managing Director of 3pmxl Ltd, a consultancy specialises in helping clients to transform their business using structured P3M approaches.   

Martin is Chairman of the Association for Project Management (APM) Specific Interest Group (SIG) on Governance.  The Governance SIG has developed guidelines for Governance of Project Management, including 'Directing Change', 'Governance of Multi-owned Projects', 'Sponsoring Change' and ‘Directing Agile Change’.  He authored chapter 19 on Governance in the 2nd Edition of the Gower Programme Management Handbook (2016).  He is also a member of a voluntary group, the P3M Data Club.

He has over 30 years management consulting, change, project, programme and portfolio implementation experience in both the private and public sectors - in the UK and internationally.

Martin is a mechanical engineer by training and started his career in major capital project contracting in the petrochemical sector.