
We have built an entire industry around the wrong obsession.
Walk into any project or programme environment today and tell me what you see. Dashboards. RAG statuses. KPI scorecards. Burndown charts. Milestone trackers. Automated reports that nobody reads in full but everyone references in meetings as though they tell the complete story.
We have convinced ourselves that if we can measure it, visualise it, and put it on a screen, we are in control.
We are not in control. We are comfortable. And those are not the same thing.
Because the thing that actually determines whether your project succeeds or fails, the thing that has always determined it, is not sitting in any dashboard. It is sitting at a desk, joining a call, navigating a problem at 4pm on a Friday when the system throws an error nobody anticipated and the go-live is Monday morning.
It is your people.
And most leaders have quietly forgotten that.
How We Got Here
The shift happened gradually, and it happened with good intentions.
Technology gave us visibility we never had before. We could track progress in real time, surface risks earlier, and report upward with confidence. That was genuinely valuable. Nobody is arguing for less information.
But somewhere along the way, the tool became the answer. The dashboard became the proxy for understanding. The metric became the substitute for the conversation. And the leader who once walked the floor, read the room, and sensed the real mood of a programme started trusting the green status on a screen instead.
The result is a generation of project environments where the reporting is polished and the delivery is fragile. Where everything looks healthy until it suddenly is not. Where nobody saw it coming, except the people closest to the work, who saw it coming for weeks and had nowhere safe to say so.
That is not a data problem. That is a leadership problem.
What the Software Cannot Tell You
Your project management software does not know that your lead developer has been quietly updating her CV for three weeks because she feels invisible on this programme.
Your dashboard does not know that the business analyst who owns the most critical workstream is running on empty and has been covering for a colleague who disengaged two months ago.
Your RAG status does not know that the reason everything is green is because the project manager is too afraid to report amber. Because the last time someone reported amber, the steering committee treated it as a personal failure rather than useful information.
Your metrics do not know that the vendor’s implementation team has internally deprioritised your programme because a larger client demanded more of their attention, and your account manager has been managing that fact rather than disclosing it.
None of this shows up in the data. All of it will show up in the outcome.
Professor Bent Flyvbjerg’s research on major project delivery, one of the most comprehensive analyses of project outcomes conducted, found that 91.5% of major projects experience cost overruns, schedule delays, or both. The primary driver is not technical failure. It is optimism bias: the structural human tendency to underestimate problems, which reporting cultures then amplify. A team that does not feel safe surfacing bad news will report optimistically. And the gap between what is reported and what is real compounds week by week until it cannot be managed.
This is the gap that leaders who have outsourced their judgement to software cannot see. The human information. The signals that travel through relationships, not reporting lines. The early warnings that only surface when people feel safe enough, and trusted enough, to tell you the truth.
People Deliver. Not Platforms
Let me be direct about something that gets lost in every technology conversation.
The software does not write the requirements. A person does. The platform does not manage the stakeholder who keeps changing scope. A person does. The dashboard does not have the difficult conversation with the supplier who is underperforming. A person does. The metric does not hold the team together at the point when the pressure peaks and the temptation to cut corners becomes real.
A person does.
Every single meaningful act in the delivery of a project or programme is a human act. The technology supports it, documents it, and reports on it. But it does not do it.
This sounds obvious. And yet the way most organisations invest their leadership attention, their development budget, and their improvement energy tells a completely different story. They upgrade the tools before they develop the people. They add another dashboard before they ask whether their team leaders have the skills to have honest conversations. They buy new software to solve problems that are fundamentally about trust, capability, and culture.
And they wonder why the new system does not fix the delivery problem.
The People Who Confirm Success
Here is the other half of the equation that rarely gets enough attention.
It is not just the people who deliver the project that matter. It is the people who decide whether it worked.
The clinician who was supposed to use the new system and quietly reverted to the old one because nobody involved her in the design. The frontline manager who was presented with a new process in a one-hour training session and had nowhere to raise the fact that it does not reflect how the work actually happens. The customer who was told the transformation would make their experience better and is still waiting.
These people are the real success criteria. Not the go-live date. Not the project closure report. Not the benefits case that was written eighteen months before anyone understood what was actually being built.
Transformation succeeds when the people it was designed for adopt it, use it, and tell you it made a difference. And they will only do that if they were treated as participants in the process, not recipients of its output.
What Recalibration Actually Looks Like
Leaders who get this right do not look fundamentally different from the outside. They attend the same meetings. They review the same reports. But they do something that most of their peers have quietly stopped doing.
They go to where the work is.
Not to check on it. Not to apply pressure. To understand it. To ask the questions that the dashboard cannot answer. How are you actually finding this? What is slowing you down that is not on the risk register? What do you know that I should know?
Google’s Project Aristotle, an internal study of more than 180 Google teams, found that psychological safety was the single strongest predictor of team effectiveness, above individual talent, structure, and every other measurable factor. Amy Edmondson’s research at Harvard Business School reinforces this from a delivery perspective: teams where people feel safe to raise problems surface them earlier, when they are still recoverable. When people do not feel safe, the information gets filtered. And filtered information is what produces the green dashboard above the failing project.
They treat their team’s energy as a delivery asset, because it is. They notice when someone has gone quiet. They notice when the language in status reports starts becoming defensive rather than informative. They notice when the optimism of the first month has been replaced by the grinding compliance of a team that no longer believes the work matters.
And they act on what they notice. Not with a new metric. With a conversation.
They invest in the human layer of delivery the way that most organisations invest in the technical layer. Deliberately. Consistently. Not as a soft add-on to the real work, but as the foundation of it.
The Investment Gap
The question is not whether your tools are good enough.
For most organisations, the tools are fine. In many cases, the tools are excellent. The dashboards are sophisticated. The reporting is comprehensive. The project management frameworks are mature.
And yet the delivery outcomes have not improved at the rate the technology investment suggested they should. PMI’s research, tracking project performance across thousands of organisations globally, found that communication failure contributes to one in three project failures. The gap between organisations that invest seriously in the human and communication layer of delivery and those that do not is measurable, consistent, and significantly larger than most leaders assume.
The gap is not in the software. It is in the leadership attention.
What would change if you spent the same energy on understanding your people that you currently spend on reviewing your reports? What would surface if your team genuinely believed that telling you the truth was safer than protecting the status? What decisions would you make differently if you had the human information as clearly as you have the data?
Those are not rhetorical questions. They are the questions that separate the programmes that deliver from the ones that drift.
The Skill No Platform Replaces
Every programme failure I have ever been close to had warning signs that the data did not capture. The signs were there in the people. In the energy levels. In the conversations that stopped happening. In the problems that got managed rather than solved.
And in almost every case, the leaders were looking at a screen when they should have been reading a room.
The software is not the problem. The hardware is not the problem. The metrics and the dashboards are not the problem.
The problem is that we have allowed them to replace the most important leadership skill there is.
The ability to understand people. To create the conditions where they do their best work. To recognise when they are struggling before it shows up in a project status. To build the kind of trust that means the real information travels fast enough to matter.
No platform does that. No tool does that.
Only you do that.
And the projects that remember it are the ones worth talking about.








