1300 70 13 14
PM Partners
  • Services

    Training and Capability uplift
    Advisory
    Agile
    Scaled Agile (SAFe®)
    Delivery
    Resourcing
    PM-Digital
    Hire an expert

    Recent case studies

    View all case studies

    world map with silhouettes of people in the background

    Shifting from a programme to a solution model through SAFe® to drive CX ecosystem stability

    businessman in suit looking at futuristic tech dashboard against cityscape

    From data to insights: A Power BI dashboard for FOSS component management

    • Training and Capability uplift
    • Advisory
    • Agile
    • Scaled Agile (SAFe®)
    • Delivery
    • Resourcing
    • PM-Digital
    • Hire an expert
  • Industries

    Government
    Higher education
    Construction
    Financial services
    Energy and utilities
    Healthcare and pharma

    Featured case study

    View all case studies

    Two workers in a warehouse holding digital tablet with hardhat and safety vest

    PM-Partners helps Downer set new industry standards for project management workforce development with award-winning ‘Project Plus’ initiative.

    LEARN MORE

    • Government
    • Higher education
    • Construction
    • Financial services
    • Energy and utilities
    • Healthcare and pharma
    • Case studies
  • Resources

    Insights
    Case studies
    Complexity assessment
    Capability hub
    Knowledge hub
    eBooks and white papers
    Checklists and infographics

    Featured insight

    View all insights

    Benefits of implementing SAFe in 2025 - post

    Benefits of implementing SAFe in 2025

    LEARN MORE

    • Insights
    • Case studies
    • Complexity assessment
    • Capability hub
    • Knowledge Hub
    • eBooks & white papers
    • Checklists and infographics
  • About

    What we do
    Who we are
    Leadership team
    Join the team
    Our beliefs
    Our partners

    Upcoming events

    View all events

    tig-events-01

    12 Aug 2025

    Tech in Gov

    • Events
    • What we do
    • Who we are
    • Leadership team
    • Join the team
    • Our beliefs
    • Our partners
  • Contact us
  • Training Courses
    • Promotions & special offers
    • Course list
    • Course Calendar
    • Group bookings
    • In-house training
    • Capability uplift
    • Training catalogue

    Popular pages

    Hybrid classroom
    Learning pathways
    Room hire
    Meet our trainers
    eLearning courses
    Power skills courses

    Popular courses

    View all courses

    Scrum Master Certified (SMC®)
    Agile Project Management
    PRINCE2®
    Project Management Fundamentals
    Business Analysis Fundamentals
    Running an effective Hybrid PMO

    • Promotions and special offers
    • Course list
    • Course calendar
    • Group bookings
    • In house training
    • Capability uplift
    • Training catalogue
    • POPULAR PAGES
    • Hybrid classroom
    • Learning pathways
    • Room hire
    • Meet our trainers
    • eLearning courses
    • Power skills Courses
    • POPULAR COURSES
    • Scrum Master Certified (SMC®)
    • Agile Project Management
    • PRINCE2®
    • Project Management Fundamentals
    • Business Analysis Fundamentals
    • Running an Effective Hybrid PMO
  • No products in cart.
  • Home
  • Other
  • Measuring Value from your Projects
June 17, 2025

Measuring Value from your Projects

Measuring Value from your Projects

Wednesday, 01 January 2020 / Published in Other

What is it that makes a project successful? Is it if the project comes in on time and on budget? If the product is built within scope? Or is it measured by customer satisfaction with the delivered product or service?

Traditionally, project managers have measured and managed time, cost, quality and scope. But by focusing only on these elements, can we truly say whether a project was successful or not?

Take the Sydney Opera House for example. The project delivered a world renown icon that attracts 10.9 million tourists every year. Yet when we look at the project itself it was almost 1400% over budget and delivered 10 years later than expected. Not great if we are measuring time and cost. But can we really claim that the project was a complete failure when we look at the legacy it has created and the impact it has had?

So, what should we being measuring in our projects?

Outputs, outcomes, benefits and value

Let’s start by exploring the difference between outputs, outcomes, benefits and value;

  • Firstly, an output can be defined as a tangible product (in the broadest sense of the term). Let’s say for the purpose of this post, our output is a new email marketing tool for a business.
  • That output, the tool itself, will not offer any benefits or value until the marketing team have begun to use it i.e. an outcome from the delivery of that output. This may require other outputs such as training staff on how to use it.
  • Once these outcomes have occurred, we will then see benefits such as an improvement on email response rates and (ultimately) sales.
  • Simply put, if these benefits outweigh the expense of buying the new tool, training the staff and other costs, that organisation has realised value from the new tool and the project.

Traditionally, projects have focused on outputs, while programmes have been responsible for ensuring that those projects deliver outcomes, and ultimately benefits and value. In our example, the programme to deliver the new tool may have required multiple projects (i.e. purchasing the tool, setting up on the organisations systems and training staff in its use). This is perhaps why project managers have focused on measuring whether their projects are delivering an output which is to an agreed level of quality and scope, and within the agreed time and budget.

Yet, as project management evolves, project managers are more often being asked by their organisations to ensure that their projects are also delivering value. In the 2017 PPM Benchmark study from AXELOS, 74% of project managers agreed that “Budgets and timelines are tighter as clients/stakeholders look for more value from projects”. This is particularly interesting as historically; project managers have not been responsible for ensuring value is delivered from their projects.

Measuring value from your projects

The prominent management thinker, Peter Drucker, is often quoted as saying, “you can’t manage what you can’t measure”, so how exactly should project managers go about measuring value?

The challenge for many will be that ultimately, the project will likely not realise all the benefits and value until long after the project closes. However, methods such as PRINCE2® offer some guidance. PRINCE2 advises project managers to ensure tests are in place to check that benefits are realised, but many projects do not undergo this review for (sometimes) years after project closure.

So here are a few tips on how project managers can look to ensure that projects will deliver value in the future:

  1. Is your project aligned to a clear vision? The project itself may not have its own unique vision (it could come from the organisation’s strategic vision or a programme) but it is important that there is alignment. It’s a simple test for a project manager to ask, “Is what we’re delivering aligned to the vision”? If it’s not, then it is unlikely that the project’s outputs will deliver value to the organisation.
  2. Create an environment where everyone in the project is supporting the delivery of value. This might not necessarily be financial. Perhaps a good example of where to start is by reviewing what you are measuring – how many project managers will be reporting on elements that are unimportant to the success of the project and are never actually reviewed by stakeholders?
  3. Consider an agile approach. If you are being asked to deliver value quickly from your projects, an agile approach is well suited to delivering outputs, which can result in outcomes and benefits. There are many blended project management approaches such as PRINCE2 Agile® or AgilePM® that can be adapted to fit your team. This will ensure that benefits and value are realised from early delivery of products. It’ll also ensure the overall project is on track to deliver its goal.
  4. Perhaps the most difficult to enforce is creating a plan to measure value after the conclusion of your project. As mentioned previously, it’s difficult as things move on after a project ends, but it’s worth exploring ways in which measuring value can be made easier or more appealing. Think about the stages where benefits and value can be measured without creating a large gap in time between the conclusion of the project and the benefits realisation. If we take the example of our marketing email tool, could you have quarterly or monthly check ins on performance, what’s the improvement in response rates, sales, etc.?

Are there any tips you have for measuring the value delivered by your projects? And, do you see this trend continuing for project managers to be judged on the value their projects deliver?

For more information on delivering successful projects and how PM-Partners can help you, contact us today on 1300 70 13 14.

What you can read next

Colleagues brainstorming their way to better business
What is the role of an Agile Coach?
Young vietnamese female scrum master organising project working process
Scrum: The Product Owner
Two business colleagues comparing notes
2021 Jan Project Management Professional (PMP)®

GENERAL ENQUIRY
1300 70 13 14

CONTACT US
Send a message

FOLLOW US

  • LinkedIn logo
  • X logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Instagram logo
Partner logos

PM-Partners group is a Project Management Institute (PMI)® – Premier Authorised Training Partner (ATP) (ID: 1394), an APMG-International Accredited Training Organisation (ATO), a Gold partner of PeopleCert (Partner ID: 3800), an Endorsed Education Provider™ (EEP™) of International Institute for Business Analysis™ (IIBA®), a Scaled Agile Gold Partner, an ICAgile Member Organisation, a GPM Accredited Training Partner, and a Microsoft® EPM Solution Partner. PMI, CAPM, Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM), PMP, Project Management Professional (PMP), PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP) and PMBOK are registered marks of the Project Management Institute, Inc. Provider is a member of the PMI ATP Program. PMI does not specifically endorse, approve, or warrant ATP’s products, courses, publications, or services. The PMI ATP seal is a registered mark of the Project Management Institute, Inc. PRINCE2®, AgileSHIFT®, MSP®, P3O®, MoP®, ITIL® , PRINCE2 Agile®, DEVOPS INSTITUTE® and DEVOPS FOUNDATION® are registered trademarks of the PeopleCert group. Used under licence from PeopleCert. All rights reserved. AgilePM®, AgilePgM®, AgileBA® and DSDM® are registered trademarks of Agile Business Consortium Limited. All rights reserved. APMG International Change Management, APMG International Lean Six Sigma are trademarks of The APM Group Limited. All rights reserved. The APMG-International, APMG-International AgilePM, AgilePgM, AgileBA, Change Management, Managing Benefits, Lean Six Sigma and Swirl Device logos are trademarks of The APM Group Limited, used under permission of The APM Group Limited. All rights reserved. SMC® and SPOC® are trademarks of SCRUMstudy. Scaled Agile Framework® and SAFe® are registered trade marks of Scaled Agile, Inc.

IIBA®, the IIBA® logo, BABOK® Guide, Business Analysis Body of Knowledge®, Business Analysis Core Concept Model™, BACCM™, Endorsed Education Provider™, EEP™ and the EEP™ logo are (registered) trademarks owned by International Institute of Business Analysis. Entry Certificate in Business Analysis™, ECBA™, Certified Business Analysis Professional™, CBAP®, Certification of Capability in Business Analysis™ and CCBA® are (registered) certification marks owned by International Institute of Business Analysis. These trademarks, logos and certification marks are used with the express permission of International Institute of Business Analysis.

House of PMO Essentials for PMO Administrators™ and House of PMO Essentials for PMO Analysts™ are trademarks of House of PMO Limited. All rights reserved. Praxis Framework™ is a trademark of Praxis Framework Limited. ICAgile is a registered trade mark of the International Consortium for Agile. GPM® and Green Project Management® are Registered Trademarks of GPM Global ©Copyright GPM Global 2022. www.greenprojectmanagement.org. ©PRiSM™ is used with consent.

Privacy Policy | Sitemap | Timesheets | Terms & Conditions | Capability Hub
Copyright © 1996-2025 PM-Partners Group. Delivery Advisory Capability. All Rights Reserved.

TOP

EOFY Offer: Save 30% on training courses! Use code EOFY25 at checkout. T&Cs apply.

BOOK NOW
X