The maturity review gave Frame a clear picture of the IT PMO and how the university could improve project governance and delivery capability: by focusing the IT PMO on better management, engagement and reporting.
During the review, Frame found that the IT PMO lacked the maturity, effectiveness and capability to commission and direct complex and/or high risk projects. This has restricted its ability to adapt to constantly changing circumstances and deliver meaningful benefits or large-scale innovation.
What’s more, significant slippage against plan, with lower than expected rates of progress, was revealed when Frame’s Portfolio Tool was used to build a roadmap of the IT portfolio of projects. Slippage is often associated with cost overruns, as well as delaying promised benefits.
To address these shortcomings, Frame recommended a Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) approach. This would provide guidance of how and where to raise the maturity of the PMO processes, as well as raise the maturity of the team to follow the improved processes.
With a comprehensive remediation plan, Frame put in place a framework which would assist the university to:
- upskill project and program managers by implementing PRINCE2 Lite and applying a people-process-technology focus to projects and programs
- commence the PMO lifecycle earlier by simplifying the way business cases are started and emphasising earlier and greater engagement with stakeholders
- improve handover by implementing proper change management and better stakeholder management
- streamline the governance framework, with ways to introduce more accuracy in business cases and reduce the level of budgeted contingency
- formalise project, program and portfolio governance by standardising reports, aiming at the right level of engagement with senior managers, and tracking progress against plan and benefits realisation.
In addition, Frame’s Portfolio Tool has given the university the means to track, re-plan and re-balance the portfolio of projects against strategic, financial and risk-tolerance criteria.