
The governance is running. The reports are flowing. The steering committee met on time, every question got a confident answer, and the pack looked clean.
And the programme is in more trouble than anyone in that room is prepared to say.
This is not an unusual situation. It is not a sign of dysfunction or dishonesty. It is, in my experience, the most common information environment in large-scale programme delivery. The data supports that reading. Research by Milliken, Morrison and Hewlin, published in the Journal of Management Studies, found that 85% of employees have withheld important information from their manager because they feared the consequences of speaking up. The fear is not of formal punishment. It is relational: the fear of being seen negatively, of damaging a relationship, of being labelled someone who creates problems rather than solves them.
This is not a minority behaviour. It is the default.
The question is not whether a filter exists on your programme. The question is how thick it has become, and whether you would know.
Nobody Decides to Build the Filter
The pattern I have watched play out more times than I can count begins with a capable, experienced leader who genuinely means what they say. They have told the team, in kick-offs and town halls and one-to-ones, that they want to hear the bad news early. They are not performing openness. They believe it.
But then someone raises a concern in a steering committee and the leader’s body language shifts before the words are out. A risk gets flagged and the first question is why it was not caught earlier rather than what needs to happen now. A project manager delivers a difficult update and spends the following week under a level of scrutiny that has nothing to do with fixing the problem.
Nobody announces a new policy. Nobody says: do not bring me bad news.
But the room notices. Every single time.
And slowly, without anyone deciding to do it, the filter gets built. The team learns which concerns land well and which ones create friction. They learn how to frame things to reduce the emotional temperature in the room. They learn the difference between the truth and the version of the truth that keeps the meeting moving and their professional standing intact.
The updates keep arriving. The reports keep flowing. The governance keeps running.
But the signal has been stripped out. What remains is noise dressed up as information.
You Do Not Build This Through Negligence
This is the part that most leadership development will not tell you directly. You do not build a closed information environment through negligence. You build it through a series of entirely human, entirely understandable responses to difficult moments.
A flash of impatience when a problem arrived at the wrong time. A habit of moving to solutions before the problem is fully understood. A preference, however subtle, for the reassuring narrative over the complicated one.
These are not character flaws. They are instincts under pressure.
But at leadership level they are not private. The CIPD’s 2024 evidence review on psychological safety identifies leader and manager behaviour as the most critical driver of whether people feel safe to speak up, and specifically notes that what matters is not what leaders say about wanting honesty, but what they demonstrate through their actions when honesty arrives. The research is unambiguous: psychological safety is fragile. A single punitive response to good-faith feedback can damage trust that took months to build.
Every reaction is observed, interpreted, and factored into how safe it feels to tell you the truth next time. The leader who says they want honesty but visibly struggles to receive it is not running an open culture. They are running an organisation that has learned to give them what they can handle rather than what they need.
The most dangerous status report is not the one with red items on it.
It is the one everyone is comfortable with.
Four Practical Moves
The filter is not permanent. It is a learned behaviour, and learned behaviours can be unlearned. But reversing it requires something more specific than an open-door policy.
Stop asking questions that invite the managed answer. “How are things going?” will get you the curated version every time. Try instead: what is the one thing you would not put in a status report but think I should know? If this programme were going to fail, what would the early sign look like? What are we not talking about that we probably should be? Those questions signal that you are interested in the reality, not the performance of it.
Go to where the real work is happening. Not to inspect. To listen. The people closest to delivery carry an understanding of programme health that rarely makes it into formal reporting. A single honest conversation with a delivery lead or a technical team that has been carrying a quiet problem for weeks will tell you more than three months of steering committee updates.
Create a visible moment where surfacing difficulty is rewarded rather than merely tolerated. When someone raises something uncomfortable and your public response is genuine appreciation followed by a real conversation about what to do next, the entire room recalibrates what is safe to say. One moment like that shifts the culture more than any open-door policy ever will. The inverse is equally true: one moment where the messenger suffers sets the filter back months.
Learn to read silence as data. The steering committee where every question gets a confident answer. The risk log that has not changed in three weeks. The team that delivers polished updates but never raises anything unexpected. These things can mean a programme is running well. They can also mean the filter is fully operational and the real conversation is happening somewhere else entirely. If nobody is telling you anything that surprises you, that is not necessarily a sign that everything is on track. It may be a sign that you have stopped being the kind of leader people bring hard news to.
The One Question That Cuts Through
There is a question I now use when a programme looks clean but feels wrong.
I find someone close to the real work. Someone who has been there long enough to know where the bodies are buried. And I ask them one thing.
What does everyone here know that nobody is saying out loud?
The answer to that question is almost always where the programme actually is. The gap between that answer and what appears in the formal reporting is almost always where the real leadership work needs to happen.
Comfortable Information Is Borrowed Time
PMI’s research on complex programme delivery is consistent on this point: early warning signals are frequently present and frequently ignored, causing problems to compound in severity before they are addressed. The pattern is not exceptional. It is systematic.
Every week a real problem stays hidden is a week where the options for addressing it narrow. Manageable risks become serious ones. Recoverable situations become critical ones. And the longer the filter operates, the more the team’s trust erodes, because people who know the truth and watch it go unacknowledged eventually stop believing that leadership is operating in good faith.
When the programme finally tells you the truth, and it always does eventually, the question is rarely how to get back on track.
It is whether getting back on track is still possible.
The Leaders Who Get This Right
The leaders who consistently deliver in high-stakes environments are not always the most experienced or the most technically skilled.
But they share something that is harder to develop than either of those things. They have learned to want the truth more than they want to be comfortable. They have built the self-awareness to notice when they are receiving a managed version of reality, and the discipline to go looking for the unmanaged one. They have created environments where people bring problems early because they have learned, through consistent experience, that doing so leads somewhere useful.
That is not a natural state for most leaders. It requires sustained effort, genuine self-awareness, and a willingness to sit with difficult information and resist every instinct to make it someone else’s problem.
But the alternative is a programme that looks healthy until it does not. A team that has learned to give you what you can handle. A steering committee that runs on time and misses everything that matters.
When your team tells you how things are going, are they telling you what is happening?
Or are they telling you what they have learned you can live with?
The gap between those two answers is where most programmes are won or lost.








