The Professional Services Transformation Paradox #4 – Accountability vs. Alignment

1. April 2026
Kategorien
Newsletter abonnieren

In large transformation programs, accountability is rarely missing. It is distributed. It sits with executive sponsors, steering committees, transformation offices, service line leaders, and partner groups, each with a defined role and a legitimate claim to involvement. On paper, this creates alignment. In practice, it often removes ownership, because when accountability is spread across too many actors, it becomes increasingly difficult to identify who is ultimately responsible for the outcome. Decisions are made collectively, risks are reviewed collectively, and progress is monitored collectively, but when a transformation underdelivers, ownership becomes blurred.

Who actually owns the result?

The CEO, CIO, or COO who sponsors the program, the transformation office coordinating execution, the steering committee governing decisions, the service line leaders affected by the change, or the partner group that approved the investment?

The honest answer is often uncomfortable.

No one, clearly.

That is the gap.

Professional services firms are highly disciplined when it comes to accountability in their core business. Revenue, utilization, and client delivery are measured with precision, performance is transparent, and consequences are explicit. There is no ambiguity in who owns a missed revenue target and no committee responsible for utilization, because ownership is individual, visible, and enforced. But for internal transformation, the same discipline does not apply. Ownership becomes collective, and collective ownership is often just a polite way of describing diluted accountability.

This becomes more problematic as the scale of transformation increases. These programs involve tens or hundreds of millions, reshape operating models, and cut across service lines, geographies, and partner groups, which inevitably expands governance and increases the number of stakeholders involved. What emerges is a structure designed to ensure that everyone is heard, but not a structure that ensures that someone is accountable. This is the tension. Alignment requires distribution, accountability requires concentration, and the two do not scale together. As governance expands to maintain alignment, accountability becomes diluted, decisions slow down, trade-offs become harder, and risks are escalated rather than owned. From the inside, this feels like good governance. From the outside, it often looks like drift.

When transformation programs underdeliver, the explanation usually focuses on execution, on complexity, technology, scope, or change management. These factors matter, but they rarely explain the full picture, because they assume that the primary challenge lies in delivery. In many cases, the deeper issue lies in governance. If no single person is clearly accountable for the outcome, the organisation will not optimise for results, but for alignment, risk distribution, and internal consensus. The program may appear well-managed and well-governed, while still failing to achieve its intended impact. This is not a failure of execution alone. It is a failure of accountability.

The paradox is not that professional services firms lack accountability. It is that they apply it selectively, enforcing it rigorously in client-facing work while relaxing it in internal transformation, where outcomes are more complex and politically sensitive. The result is predictable. When accountability is clear, performance follows. When accountability is shared, performance becomes optional. Alignment is necessary, but alignment without ownership does not deliver transformation.

For boards, the question is simple but uncomfortable. Who is personally accountable for the success or failure of this transformation, not in theory but in practice? If the answer is unclear, the outcome will be too.


This article is part of a series exploring the tensions at the heart of the Professional Services Transformation Paradox.

The paradox is simple. Firms that excel at transforming their clients often struggle to transform themselves. Deeply embedded incentives, partnership structures, and legacy operating models create internal resistance to the very change they advocate externally.

Each article in this series focuses on a specific contradiction. Structural, economic, or cultural. These tensions are not side effects. They sit at the core of how decisions are made, how transformation is executed, and why many programs underdeliver.


Most transformation failures do not start with strategy, technology, or vendors. They start with governance, incentives, and blind spots at board level.

If you are currently overseeing a critical transformation, I offer a focused board-level diagnostic to identify where your program is at risk before those risks become visible in financials and delivery.

If this is relevant, get in touch.

Das könnte Sie auch interessieren

Why Every Critical Project Needs a Steering Committee

28. Juli 2024

Critical projects are like Formula 1 races—you don’t just need a driver; you need a pit crew, strategists, and decision-makers ready to adapt in real time.  That’s your steering committee. Big projects come with big risks, competing priorities, and high expectations. Without a steering committee, those challenges turn into roadblocks. Decisions get delayed, alignment falters,

Weiterlesen

The Most Important Role on Any Large Transformation Project

22. Juli 2024

The most important role on a large transformation project is the project sponsor.  Not the project manager.  According to the Project Management Institute (PMI)’s 2018 Pulse of the Profession In-Depth Report, «1 in 4 organisations (26%) report that the primary cause of failed projects is inadequate sponsor support«.  By contrast, «organisations with a higher percentage

Weiterlesen

Project Trouble Assessment for Executives

17. Juli 2024

Is your project headed for trouble?  Find out! If you are a senior executive or a board member in the role of executive sponsor, project sponsor, or steering committee member it is key to recognise potential issues before they become critical. Recognising early warning signs can make the difference between a project’s success and failure.

Weiterlesen

Boards Must Understand Technology. Period.

1. Juli 2024

Reflecting on the 2024 Swiss Board Day in Bern it has become even more clear to me that understanding the current technological landscape and its associated opportunities, challenges, and risks is now essential for both executive and non-executive board members. Equally important is staying informed about governance issues related to these technologies, including regulatory challenges

Weiterlesen

How To Select a Good Project Manager for Your Large and Complex Transformation Project

14. Juni 2024

One of your most important jobs as a project sponsor is to select a good project manager for your project.  Selecting the right project manager is crucial for the success of your project.  Here are the five key factors to consider when choosing the right person for the role: 1) Experience Nothing beats relevant experience when

Weiterlesen

How Your Rollout in Waves Can End in a Tsunami

14. November 2022

Many multinational organizations are bringing larger system implementations to a screeching halt because they misunderstand what it means to do a rollout in waves.  We’re probably all familiar with the “phased rollout”. A phased rollout means you roll a project out to all targeted users at once but don’t deploy all of its planned functionality.

Weiterlesen

White Elephant Stampede: Case Studies in Policy and Project Management Failures

15. Oktober 2022

This month one of the book projects I have been part of has been published by Connor Court Publishing in Australia.  The book is titled «White Elephant Stampede: Case Studies in Policy and Project Management Failures«, and it examines the seemingly endless cavalcade of projects that fail to meet their objectives, cost more than expected and

Weiterlesen

Doing Something That’s Never Been Done

14. August 2022

Executives, project sponsors, project managers, and steering committee members can learn a lot from how some deep technology startups approach their projects. This isn’t true for all kinds of projects, but it is for every project that involves doing something that hasn’t been done before and has a high risk-reward profile. This isn’t another lean

Weiterlesen

Why Are Your Best People Not Working on This?

7. August 2022

A phenomenon I see happening again and again in larger organizations is destroying employee morale and economic value.   There’s that big internal project (think ERP, CRM, HCM/Payroll, Core Banking/Insurance) that has the potential to stop the whole organization in its tracks and will cost the organization millions of hard-earned cash to implement.   And

Weiterlesen

Don’t Forget SaaS Performance Testing!

7. Juli 2022

I wrote about application performance a few years ago in my article “It’s Never Too Early to Think About Performance”. Since then I have learned and witnessed a few things that warrant a new article on this topic. As more and more companies leverage SaaS for their business applications the number of companies that suffer

Weiterlesen