Project management is nothing new for your business: You already rely on project managers to keep the deliverables moving, break down information silos, and work toward project success.

But as your business grows, you may reach a point where having a handful of project managers working as peers isn’t enough.

There are a few telltale signs that you’ve reached this point:

  • Your project managers themselves lack direction or may even pull in different directions.

  • The approved projects don’t seem connected to your company goals, vision, or strategy.

  • Individual projects (and project managers) follow wildly different processes with no concern for best practices.

A project management office could be the solution to these and other issues. But establishing this office (and doing it right) isn’t a simple process.

In this guide, we’ll walk you through what you need to know to set up a flourishing project management office in your organization.

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PMO stands for project management office. As a side note, depending on the company (and the level that these groups operate within a business), the “P” in PMO can have different meanings. The term can represent project management, program management, or portfolio management. But in general (and for the purpose of this piece), we’re going to stick to the good old-fashioned version: project management office.

To put it simply, PMOs make stuff run smoothly. Like project managers, project management offices are put in place to make sure projects are done well and on time. But PMOs have a more overarching role than a standalone project manager.

There’s a lot of repetition in project management. If you’re a project manager, you’re in a deeply important role that often involves repetitive work, such as managing several similar projects concurrently. Each project aligns with your company’s goals and strategies and follows a roughly similar path. PMOs jump on this repetition and similarity, codifying it into policies that make project management more efficient and effective.

How do they do this? PMOs provide their organizations and teams with support, mentoring, standardization, and project management best practices to ensure success and improve project efficiency. They create guidelines and keep track of adherence to standards to ensure that projects meet a high standard and are aligned with the organization’s overall strategies.

So, the project management office serves as a kind of quality control monitor within projects. This group defines and maintains standards for project management within their organization.

There can be more than one PMO in a company. Enterprise-sized organizations tend to have a PMO in each department and an Enterprise PMO (EPMO) to maintain standards across departments and regions.

There are also different styles of running a project management office: supportive, controlling, and directive.

This type of PMO exercises a lower degree of control, choosing instead to support teams and project managers as they manage and execute their projects. Supportive PMOs may provide templates, documents, guidance, and best practices but leave most execution to teams and project managers.

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In addition to providing templates and documents, PMOs that use a controlling style may audit a project to ensure that the project managers and teams adhere to their standards. Controlling PMOs are more hands on, exerting a noticeable degree of control over their teams and project managers.

When a directive PMO gives instructions, you’d better listen. These PMOs exercise the highest degree of control of the three and may be seen as having more authority. Directive PMOs take a direct approach to resource management and resource allocation and tend to monitor project performance closely. 

Don’t let the titles fool you: Ultimately, all PMOs should (first and foremost) support the organization and its project managers and teams.

Unfortunately, in the past PMOs have moved into organizations and become rule-enforcing tyrants. But a good PMO works with the team and has the organization’s best interest in mind. So — whether a PMO is supportive, controlling, or directive — the office (and the people who staff it) should always serve and help the project team.

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Though the responsibilities of the PMO and individual project managers overlap somewhat, the project management office is far more than a group of “super project managers.” These are a few of the key responsibilities most PMOs focus on.

PMOs help to establish the culture and values of the broader organization as well as the values and identity of individual projects. They also educate team members in all these areas, helping to align team members philosophically with the projects they work on. The PMO may look at team members’ competencies to guide decision-making that places the right people on the right projects.

While most day-to-day project updates come from the assigned project manager, broader project updates (such as those affecting the project lifecycle), forecasts, or changes to companywide priorities usually come from the PMO.

PMOs allocate resources to teams at a broader scale based on priorities that transcend individual projects. A single project manager likely has access to only certain resources, while the PMO has greater authority to reallocate resources in more dramatic ways.

This responsibility is key no matter which project management methodology an organization, team, or project uses.

Speaking of project management methodologies, the PMO has a central role in determining which methodology makes sense for the organization or various divisions or teams. The project management office also defines workflow processes within those methodologies and requires teams to follow those processes.

The PMO also holds primary responsibility for maintaining project archives, and researching and implementing testing tools.

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Successful project management offices need a mix of skills and roles to keep organizations and teams following, supporting, and executing the company’s strategies.

The typical PMO consists of around nine total members. These members are usually highly experienced professionals who started out in less strategic roles in other departments. About half have their PMP certification; the other half are leaders and managers in the organization with significant job experience.

Here are a few common PMO roles within a PMO team:

  • PMO director: This is the head honcho, and it’s a critical role. They oversee large projects within a department and any projects that cross divisional boundaries. PMO directors keep an eagle eye on all areas of the organization and the progress of its projects, and they oversee the other positions below.

  • Project and program managers: While PMO directors run the show, we’re big believers in the power of a great project manager. Project managers are responsible for the success of individual projects from concept to delivery. They plan, budget for, and manage their assigned projects and provide leadership, guidance, and support to the project team. Program managers take a broader view than single projects, looking at the long-term trajectory and vision of a set of projects: If project managers are like set directors or art directors on a film set, program managersdirect an entire production unit.

  • IT project manager: A well-staffed PMO needs at least one tech-savvy team member. Most PMOs include an official IT project manager, who oversees the technical or IT elements of a project. The IT PM also collaborates with other IT professionals and staff to create any new piece or system of software needed for the project. IT PMs often build and manage websites and databases and are responsible for implementing software integrations.

  • Project support team: The larger the organization or division, the more capacity the PMO will need. Project support staff focus on specific elements of project management that, on smaller projects, might all be handled by the project manager. Roles include project scheduler, project planner, and project controller.

  • PMO coordinator or analyst: This multifaceted role keeps track of metrics like time, team members, and budgets. The PMO coordinator also oversees knowledge management. (That’s fancy business speak for noting and storing important information like project records, standards, methods, and lessons learned in a project database.) If this team member doubles as the PMO analyst, they’ll make sure that project metrics and statuses are always readily available to the project manager via presentations, charts (from Excel or a more specialized project management solution), and detailed statistics.

  • Change control analyst: Some PMOs include a change control analyst who helps teams quickly adapt when business stakeholders change project direction. On smaller projects, PMO teams can get by with a few spreadsheets tracking and controlling changes or a dedicated project management software solution like Teamwork. But for large projects, having a dedicated team member to help you switch gears can be a big help.

The role of the PMO is vital. This office is responsible for aligning projects to a business’s overall strategy and goals. They navigate risks, manage talent, identify expected project benefits, and maintain these benefits after the project ends.

Creating a project management office can drastically improve productivity and bring greater clarity to your project management process. Check out these surprising data points that reveal the value of having a PMO:

  • 89% of organizations had at least one PMO in 2020, and 50% had more than one.

  • That same study finds that 72% of respondents envision the scope of services continuing to increase within PMO.

  • Businesses that fail to value project management (and PMO) see 67% more projects fail than those that do.

Implementing a PMO brings more than just support to your project teams. PMOs achieve a range of other benefits, including the ones below.

Just as project management is important for improving productivity by getting all your resources aligned and on the same page, instituting a PMO takes that productivity to the next level. Now even your various project managers gain that same level of support, ironing out processes and improving outcomes.

In other words, a PMO makes your efficiency-makers (your project management staff) more efficient.

Staying on budget within a project is a constant challenge, and a lone project manager may feel like they don’t have the authority or the resources to make it happen. PMOs implement policy and direction at a macro scale and bring that missing element of authority, helping teams stay on budget (or reassess the budget when needed).

The more organized and cohesive your project management strategies, the better your teams can meet customer needs and the more satisfied your customers will be.

Projects fail for all sorts of reasons, but those reasons do exist. In other words, projects don’t fail out of nowhere. A more robust approach to project or program management has the power and the capacity to figure out those reasons and solve them before they result in project failure.

With clearer, more consistent policies and oversight in place, teams don't have to deal with countless points of decision and bouts of uncertainty. With renewed focus on what to do, when, and how, teams can reach goals and milestones faster than before.

It’s clear at this point that PMOs help increase an organization's project successes. So, what do the top-performing PMOs look like?

The Project Management Institute (PMI) and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) collaborated on a landmark study on PMO maturity. In it, they outlined the practices of the Top 10 Percent: organizations doing PMO better than the rest. Here are some highlights of what they found.

Governance: The Top 10 Percent are more involved in company wide strategy and build better frameworks to manage risk. They also self-govern, monitoring their own performance as a PMO.

Integration and alignment: 94% of the Top 10 Percent make sure that KPIs and project initiatives are completely in line with the organization’s broader strategic goals. Just 38% of all PMOs do this.

Prioritization: The Top 10 Percent rank three organizational priorities far higher than the average across all organizations, beating the rest of the pack by double digits in all three categories. What did the best organizations prioritize?

  • Accelerating the new ways of working

  • Enhancing their risk assessment and mitigation strategies

  • Using pandemic disruption to demonstrate the value of a PMO within their organization

The bottom line is that successful PMOs set up their teams for success through better governance, stronger organizational integration and alignment, and setting the right priorities.

Project Management Workflow Blog Feature

Thirteen years ago, Paul Lindley decided he wanted to make better food for kids. His company, Ella’s Kitchen, took off and began reaching customers across Europe, Canada, and the United States.

Although Ella’s Kitchen was pumping out perfectly pureed baby food, their project management process was like a fork in a food processor. Up until 2016, new product development and existing product development were run by whichever project team was proposing a change.

Dozens of different projects were running simultaneously. But the various project teams were trying to manage tasks, budgets, deadlines, and details across nearly 150 spreadsheets.

Roles and responsibilities were getting mixed up, people were frustrated, processes didn’t fit their purposes, and products were hitting the market late.

Ella’s Kitchen needed a better system. The company formed the “Makes stuff run smoothly team” in 2016 when they realized that they desperately needed cross-organizational projects to be run by an experienced and impartial team as the company grew.

Their new PMO team (nicknamed Smoothly) moved in, and Ellen Jarrett took the program manager role. One of her first moves was to get Smoothly out of spreadsheets and into project management software. She recalls, “Before using Teamwork, I tried Asana, Basecamp, Wrike, and even a few more, but Teamwork was a slam dunk.”

Teamwork revolutionized the company’s approach to projects. In the following eight months, overdue tasks dropped significantly. In 2018, they entered the APM Project Management Awards and won the APM PMP of the Year award.

Marketing director Mark Cuddigan remembers the company’s transformation, explaining how their old project management system was “the single biggest issue the company faced.” After introducing the Smoothly PMO team, Ella’s Kitchen was named one of the Top 100 companies to work for by the Sunday Times.

The project management office is an important group with wide-ranging responsibilities, one that more and more organizations are establishing and investing in. As your project management and PMO functions mature and expand, your PMO team needs a better set of project management tools to keep project information organized, visible, and accessible.

Teamwork is the ideal solution for project management offices, offering the perfect balance of powerful big-picture visibility and granular data-rich detail. From specific complex projects to an organization-wide view, Teamwork has the tools and the depth that PMOs need.

The best part? You don’t even have to take our word for it! You can see it for yourself to determine whether Teamwork is right for your PMO needs.

Get started with Teamwork for free!