By Eleanor Dempsey, Director of Advisory Services at Auxilion.
Most organisations do not have a delivery problem. They have a truth problem.
This is the first in a short series of reflections on what a modern PMO is really for.
Years ago, a mentor asked me…Can or should the PMO be the moral compass of an organisation?
After 20 years of setting up, running and reviewing PMOs my answer is now a clear yes.
I have heard every version of "We don’t want a PMO. We want agility." But agility without truth creates false confidence. Delivery at scale still needs clarity, consistency and backbone, especially when things get uncomfortable.
That is where the PMO operates.
Not in the mechanics of reporting, but in what the organisation rewards, tolerates, or challenges when things get difficult.
Over time, it sees:
PMOs are back in discussion. Not because they are fashionable again, but because leaders are rediscovering a hard truth - delivery at scale needs clarity, consistency and backbone.
A major transformation is three months from a regulatory milestone. On paper, it is amber.
In reality, key dependencies are late and delivery risk is obvious.
A weak PMO smooths the message.
Leadership hears "amber" and assumes things are almost fine.
A PMO acting as a moral compass says:
Based on the evidence, this date will be missed unless we decide this week to reduce scope, delay, or add capacity. Without a decision, this is red.
No drama. No blame. Just facts and consequences.
If the red holds, people learn that honesty early is safer than optimism late.
If it does not, they learn to stretch the narrative.
That is the moral code being set.
Whether it intends to or not, the PMO sends powerful signals out
In our recent State of the PMO in Ireland work, we still see many PMOs primarily focused on the operational “how” of managing projects… with clear opportunities to strengthen benefits realisation and stakeholder feedback loops.
That matters.
Because inconsistent feedback loops make it harder to surface issues early and easier to stay in “safe” reporting rather than honest insight.
Behaviour isn’t accidental.
It is shaped by how consistently feedback and truth are handled.
A modern PMO earns its place by being clear, fair and consistent.
When evidence matters more than reassurance, people tell the truth sooner.
When learning is real, failure stops being personal and starts being useful.
This only happens when the PMO moves away from activity and artefacts and towards consequence and organisational grip.
Ultimately, the PMO doesn’t create culture. It reveals whether leadership behaviour and stated values are aligned.
So ask yourself - Is your PMO providing the truth… even when it’s inconvenient…or just more reporting designed not to upset anyone?
I’m currently helping organisations rethink their PMO mandate through our PMO Maturity Assessment - looking beyond spreadsheets to identify the truth signals that drive real behaviour change.