Enterprise transformation programs are high-stakes initiatives. They span business units, integrate technologies, and need executive support to stay on track. Many organizations still struggle with unclear decision-making, reactive problem-solving, and program drift.
Weak governance is often the root cause.
At Andrew Reise, we define governance as the backbone of program management—the structure, rhythm, and discipline that keeps strategy, execution, and accountability aligned. Good governance ensures the right people make the right decisions at the right time with the right information.
We’ll explore the foundational elements of program management governance, including the frameworks, roles, and routines that enable delivery at scale.
Foundational Governance Structures
Before you build routines, define your program’s governance structure. This organizational blueprint outlines who makes decisions, who manages risks, and who tracks progress.
We recommend establishing three primary layers:
1. The Executive Steering Committee (ESC)
- Composed of senior leaders across business units, finance, IT, and vendors
- Provides strategic oversight, makes funding decisions, and escalates issues
- Meets monthly or biweekly, depending on program complexity
2. The Project Management Office (PMO)
- Day-to-day owner of delivery, reporting, and coordination
- Facilitates communication across workstreams and tracks benefit realization
- Owns tools such as decision logs, scorecards, and milestone plans
3. Cross-Functional Workstreams
- Business and technical teams responsible for executing specific initiatives
- Governed by workstream leads and supported by project managers
- Reports progress, risks, and dependencies to the PMO
In a recent retail customer experience (CX) transformation, we used this three-tiered structure to align more than 20 workstreams—including point of sale (POS), loyalty, analytics, and training—under one unified program charter, creating clarity and minimizing duplication across efforts.
Governance Routines That: Drives Momentum
Governance isn’t static—it’s a living process that requires routine interaction. These touchpoints keep stakeholders aligned, identify emerging risks, and enforce accountability.
Here’s a sample cadence we’ve implemented in large-scale programs:
Meeting |
Participants |
Purpose |
Frequency |
ESC meeting |
Sponsors, VPs, PMO, vendors |
Strategic decisions, value tracking |
Monthly |
PMO status meeting |
PMO leads, project managers |
Risk review, milestone tracking |
Weekly |
Workstream standups |
Functional leads, subject-matter experts (SMEs) |
Daily execution coordination |
Daily or twice weekly |
Risk and issue review |
PMO, SMEs |
Escalation triage and mitigation |
Biweekly |
Roadmap reviews |
PMO, ESC |
Update on timeline and dependencies |
Quarterly |
These meetings aren’t about process for the sake of process—they’re designed to surface the right issues to the right people. Even well-structured programs lose visibility and momentum without this consistency.
Decision-Making Models to Know Who Owns What
The clarity of decision-making is one of the most overlooked aspects of governance. Programs stall when no one knows who can approve scope changes, resolve conflicts, or shift funding.
We help clients implement a responsible, accountable, consulted, and informed (RACI) model to define decision rights across key categories:
Decision Area |
Accountable Party |
Scope change |
Program sponsor |
Budget adjustment |
Finance lead |
Vendor substitution |
ESC |
Technical design approval |
IT lead |
Change management plan |
PMO and operations |
This approach eliminates ambiguity. Everyone knows who holds the pen.
With one past insurance client, we helped resolve months-long scope paralysis by formalizing decision authority in a governance charter. This resulted in faster approvals, clearer accountability, and less rework.
Change Control Processes That Actually Work
Programs evolve—it’s inevitable. But without a structured change control process, even small adjustments can create downstream chaos.
We help clients implement a lightweight but disciplined model that includes:
- Change Request Form
- Submitted by any workstream lead or stakeholder
- Includes business justification, impact analysis, and proposed timeline
- Impact Review
- PMO reviews against budget, timeline, and interdependencies
- Change categorized by severity (e.g., low, medium, high)
- Approval Path
- Low-impact: PMO discretion
- Medium-impact: Sponsor review
- High-impact: ESC approval
- Stakeholder Communication
- Approved changes are communicated via decision logs and roadmap updates
A past financial services client used this model to triage more than 80 change requests during a 12-month program. It prevented scope creep while maintaining agility.
Documentation and Transparency Tools
Governance works only when people can see what’s happening. We provide clients with tools that make governance visible and actionable:
- Decision logs: Document what was decided, by whom, and why
- Risk registers: Track severity, ownership, and mitigation plans
- Milestone trackers: Map progress against committed dates
- Scorecards: Visualize performance across budget, timeline, scope, and CX metrics
- Executive dashboards: Translate delivery status into business impact for senior leaders
During one enterprise-wide CRM implementation, we developed a dashboard that displayed not only project status but also end-user adoption, training completion, and Net Promoter Score (NPS) shifts by business unit. It kept leadership focused on outcomes, not just activities.
How Does Strong Governance Keep Large Programs on Track?
Governance frameworks provide the necessary decision-making structure, reporting cadence, and escalation channels needed to manage complexity and risk.
A past logistics client needed to modernize its digital platform while integrating with dozens of upstream and downstream systems. The initial program effort struggled with misaligned workstreams, reactive firefighting, and unclear executive engagement.
We designed and implemented a governance framework that included:
- An ESC charter with defined decision rights
- A weekly PMO cadence tied to milestone-based scorecards
- A risk escalation playbook to prioritize and triage issues
- A change control council with documented review thresholds
Within three months, program health improved across all dimensions—fewer escalations, faster decisions, and more confidence in execution. By the time the platform launched, the governance model had become standard operating procedure across the enterprise.
Governance Drives Program Success
Strong program management governance provides the clarity, cadence, and confidence necessary for success.
Effective governance leads to:
- Faster decision-making and fewer escalations
- Proactive risk management and greater confidence in execution
- Executive alignment and accountability
- Real-time visibility into performance and value
If your program is struggling with indecision or a lack of clear direction, it’s time to rethink your approach.
We specialize in helping companies of all sizes implement program management frameworks that drive results and become a standard operating procedure across the organization. Partner with Andrew Reise to create a structure that enables execution at every level.