The most common PMO launch failure is not poor execution — it is a weak business case. A PMO that cannot clearly articulate its value in financial terms is perpetually at risk of budget cuts, scope reductions, and eventual dissolution. The business case is the PMO's most important governance document.
- Quantify delivery improvement in dollars: what do delays and rework cost your organization annually?
- The business case must address both cost and benefit — include the PMO operating cost clearly
- Executive sponsorship is as important as financial justification
- Tie PMO objectives to corporate strategy — PMOs that justify themselves with delivery metrics alone are vulnerable
Calculate the cost of poor delivery
Start with an honest assessment of current delivery performance: what percentage of projects deliver on time, on budget, and within scope? What is the average cost overrun per project? Multiply the average overrun by the number of projects per year. This is the baseline cost the PMO is positioned to reduce.
Build the benefit case
Conservative benefit targets for a first-year PMO: 10–15% reduction in schedule delays, 8–12% reduction in budget overruns, 20–30% reduction in cancelled projects. Apply these percentages to your current portfolio spend to produce a financial benefit estimate.
Model the PMO operating cost
Include all PMO costs: staffing (fractional or full-time), tools, training, and governance overhead. A fractional PMO at $8,500/month totals $102,000 annually. Compare this to the estimated benefit to produce a first-year ROI.
Tie to corporate strategy
PMOs that justify themselves purely on delivery efficiency are vulnerable. The strongest business cases connect PMO governance to strategic outcomes: faster time-to-market for priority initiatives, better capital allocation, and portfolio alignment to the annual plan.
Frequently asked questions
Most PMO business cases project 2:1 to 4:1 ROI in year one, based on delivery improvement. Conservative assumptions produce more credible cases than optimistic projections.
Find the executive whose goals are most directly affected by delivery failures — usually the COO, VP of Engineering, or CFO — and build the case around their specific portfolio pain.
Position it as a value center from day one. Cost centers get cut; value centers get funded. Every PMO metric should connect to a financial or strategic outcome.
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