Is your Project Office getting bigger? If that’s the case then you are not alone. It’s what happens in most organisations. So why is this?
Well, the Project Office is useful. Typically it’s staffed by a group of people who are capable, process driven, good at detail and keen to do a good job. It starts out small and then gets stuff thrown at it.
Typically the Project Office starts life in the IT department. It’s set up so that IT management can get a better handle on what’s going on. “How are we doing? How much are we spending? Do we have enough resources to deliver?”
These are the sorts of questions that the Project Office is set up to answer. The focus is very much on reporting and the outputs are like traffic lights – is what’s being measured red, amber or green?
If the Project Office does well (and usually it does) then after a while it takes on additional responsibilities. Rather than just being a reporting function it starts to be proactive, getting involved in resource planning, getting sign-offs, and reviewing documents. The list starts to build.
And it doesn’t stop there.
At some point, the Project Office remit is extended so that it starts to look after all projects – not just those within IT. By now it probably has responsibility for the project process, project training, and is taking the lead on setting the budget.
The final stage in the evolution process sees the Project Office move from being an admin function to becoming a control function, central to the smooth operation of business change. A “fully formed” Project Office will probably have a gatekeeper role – only project documents approved by the department will be put forward to management.
Perhaps there is now an audit function, perhaps the Project Office will lend out staff to act as project managers. Project documents will now be held centrally, any PPM tools will be supported and maintained by the group.
However you look at it, the Project Office is now at the centre of things. The two-man team from the early days is now seven or eight and it’s not unusual that at this point someone will ask: “Do we really need such a big Project Office?” Often the answer is no and the Project Office is cut down in size and its responsibilities devolved.
So what should you do if this is happening in your organisation?
We recommend the following process:
1. List out all the activities for which the Project Office has responsibility
2. Get views from project managers, the project office team and all other stakeholders as to what the Project Office should be doing.
3. If necessary realign responsibilities and then most importantly document the responsibilities in a Project Office Charter
This is usually a short sharp exercise. By doing this, organisations will end up with a Project Office that is “fit for purpose”, not too big, not too small and focused on supporting the project governance process.
* Photo by JESHOOTS.COM on Unsplash