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April 17, 2021

Raising the Bar on Benefits Management

Raising the Bar on Benefits Management

Wednesday, 01 January 2020 / Published in Uncategorised

Let’s be realistic – benefits don’t just get realised by themselves. In fact, benefits from programmes and projects are often not realised unless they, and the required business changes, are proactively managed during and typically post-initiative closure.

We have all seen it, the dilemma when a programme or project is closed out: resources, decision makers and funding are all disbanded, but the benefits are not yet realised. Benefits take time, money and resourcing to be realised. But whose role is it? The project manager is onto the next project, other resources are consumed elsewhere and senior management’s attention is focussed on the next challenge.

So yes, we need to get better at understanding and managing benefits, regardless of size or type of organisation. It isn’t about finger pointing but rather recognising that benefits management is an integral element of strategy, portfolio, programme and project management. To be successful it needs to be incorporated throughout the business change life cycle.

5 tips to embarking on benefits management

  1. Be pro-active. It is not enough to just document expected benefits in a business case and then get signoff. Ongoing questions need to be asked and reviewed: are we going to realise the benefits originally expected? Are there potentially new emergent benefits? Are there threats to achieving benefits? Have any benefits been diluted?
  2. Transparency, transparency, transparency. Easily said, but harder in reality. Yes, reports and benefit forecasts need to be open and honest. Yes, realism needs to prevail – be aware of being overconfident and over-optimistic in benefit forecasting. Ensure at all times there is the link back to strategy.
  3. Forward-looking focus. For many organisations, benefits management is still relatively new, and let’s face it, maturity levels for benefits management tend to be low. We need to focus on learning and continuous improvement of benefit management practices as opposed to a culture of blame.
  4. Roles, responsibilities and ownership. Working backwards, who is the benefit owner? Who is really going to ‘benefit’ from the benefit? Who is responsible at a programme/project level for ensuring that benefits are understood, planned and reported? Who is accountable for the initiative meeting its objectives and being setup to optimise benefit realisation? Benefits management requires clear and agreed accountabilities and responsibilities.
  5. Think value. The focus should be on benefit optimisation, not necessarily maximisation. Optimisation of benefits considers constraints and potential other uses of funding. Realising 80% of potential benefits for an initiative may, for example, be greater value for money as opposed to spending additional budget to achieve the last 20%. Understanding value is a crucial element of successful benefits management.

“Benefits management should be coordinated with, and integrated into, the organisation’s strategic planning, project and programme management and performance management systems…”

Managing Benefits, Steve Jenner (APMG International)

Benefits Management tools and techniques will help to optimise benefits and deliver measurable value for the organisation. Speak to our Principal Consultants today to find out how we can help you realise outcomes. 1300 70 13 14.

PM-Partners group offer Managing Benefits Foundation and Practitioner certification workshops, speak to us today for more information.

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