Career Advice What does a Programme Manager do? Published on 21 February 2011 - Revised on A Programme Manager (or Program Manager, if you’re on the other side of the pond to me), is the key person for “setting up of the programme through to delivery of the new capabilities and realisation of benefits,” according to the MSP guide. That’s a lot of responsibility. But what does it actually involve? A Programme Manager’s role includes: Appointing project managers and project team members to the individual projects, or facilitating this with input from the PMO and line managers. General management of the programme from initiation through to closure. Being the point of contact for the Senior Responsible Owner and other senior stakeholders as appropriate. Coordinating the individual projects and managing the dependencies between them. Being the point of contact for escalated project risks and issues; helping to resolve these effectively. Monitoring expenditure and managing the programme budget Keeping an eye on the programme’s predicted benefits to check these are in line with the business case and expectations. Creating an environment where everyone knows what to do and how to do it; providing the cultural direction for the programme team. Planning the programme, which could involve using a tool like Seavus ProjectPlanner , or an equivalent scheduling tool. Instigating an effective governance framework and ensuring this is adhered to. Ensuring that programme deliverables are achieved on time, to the desired quality and within the acceptable budget. Allocating resources to tasks and managing resource conflicts. Being the point of contact for third parties such as contractors. Coordinating and/or leading programme communications to all stakeholder groups. Receiving project progress reports and consolidating these into programme-level reports for the Senior Responsible Owner and other senior stakeholders. Rate this article: 3.9 Print ElizabethHarrin Elizabeth Harrin, FAPM, is an author and mentor who helps project managers and their teams get more done with less stress. She does that through straight-talking, real-world advice, based on her 20 years in project management roles. She also writes the award-winning blog, A Girl’s Guide to Project Management. Full biography Full biography Elizabeth Harrin, FAPM, is an author and mentor who helps project managers and their teams get more done with less stress. She does that through straight-talking, real-world advice, based on her 20 years in project management roles. Elizabeth has written 5 books about project management: Shortcuts to Success: Project Management in the Real World (which was a finalist in the Management Book of the Year Awards 2014 and now in its second edition), Collaboration Tools for Project Managers, Communicating Change, Project Manager, and Customer-Centric Project Management. She also writes the award-winning blog, A Girl’s Guide to Project Management. You can find Elizabeth online at GirlsGuideToPM.com or on Twitter @girlsguidetopm. Elizabeth holds degrees from the University of York and Roehampton University. She supports project managers through her mentoring programme, Project Management Rebels, and also contributes to a variety of other initiatives including sitting on the advisory board for the RISE Being Lean and Seen programme at Liverpool John Moores University. Elizabeth has led a variety of IT, process improvement and business change projects including an ERP deployment and compliance initiatives. She spent eight years working in financial services (including two based in Paris, France) and 12 years in healthcare. Elizabeth lives with her family in the UK. x Contact author Google Plus Facebook page Twitter Linked In
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