Large-scale ERP implementations and digital transformations rarely fail suddenly. Instead, performance begins to erode gradually as assumptions evolve, dependencies remain unresolved, and risk accumulates beneath otherwise stable-looking programs. Dashboards may stay green, governance meetings continue, and milestones appear within reach, even as time, budget, and leverage are steadily slipping away.
In this environment, many organizations take comfort in structural safeguards they believe will protect them from material failure. Among these is the assumption that hiring a well-known implementation partner eliminates delivery risk and provides a measure of safety if challenges arise. In practice, brand recognition alone does not eliminate structural misalignment, commercial pressure, or governance fatigue. When drift persists, accountability does not remain abstract or shared; it ultimately rests with the leaders responsible for outcomes.
This session explores why enterprise programs quietly go off track, why common assumptions about risk and safety no longer hold, and how effective leaders intervene before incremental issues compound into escalation.
Join UpperEdge Project Execution experts for insights on:
- Recognizing Program Drift Early: How to identify structural erosion beneath surface stability and distinguish manageable complexity from compounding delivery risk
- Challenging the “Safe Hands” Assumption: Why brand recognition does not transfer outcome accountability and how modern delivery models have shifted risk back to sponsors
- Understanding the Cost of Waiting: How delayed intervention reduces leverage, narrows decision-making options, and increases both financial and leadership exposure
- Leading a Mid-Stream Reset: What recalibration looks like in practice and how to restore transparency, accountability, and control without completely restarting delivery
This session is designed for program leaders overseeing in-flight enterprise initiatives who want a clear, defensible approach to protecting outcomes before drift becomes a crisis.