- By: Áine Byrne
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Let’s be honest, initiatives don’t usually grind to a halt because people aren’t working hard. If anything, stalled programmes or projects are full of incredibly busy people, each doing their best, often in different directions, sometimes using different definitions of the same words. Sound familiar? The problem isn’t effort, it’s alignment.
Over the years, I’ve pieced together a structured, repeatable way of helping teams get unstuck, the kind of approach built from real‑world bumps, lessons, and the occasional ‘WHY IS THIS SO COMPLICATED!???’ moment. In this blog, I’m sharing a generic version of that framework (no client secrets, I promise) so fellow practitioners can borrow whatever is useful for their own initiatives.
I’ve noticed that when initiatives stall, it’s rarely because the technology misbehaved, or someone forgot to bring their laptop charger. The real trouble usually starts when alignment quietly exits the room. The signs are easy to spot:
1 Requirements are fuzzy, shifting, or mysteriously contradict one another.
2 Stakeholders have differing mental models of what the programme or project is and isn’t.
3 Procurement or vendor engagement begins before the organisation actually knows what it wants.
4 Architecture, process, and commercial discussions run on separate tracks.
5 Everyone has energy, but not necessarily the same destination.
These signs don’t mean something went wrong. They mean the initiative has simply reached the stage where clarity, not effort, is the missing sauce.
To break the cycle, I apply an 8‑step realignment and mobilisation approach, but true to Business Architect form, before applying any steps one needs some structured principles, and I use the following four:
Every business or organisation has its nuances, but this high‑level, generic roadmap is a solid starting point for regaining alignment and restarting stalled initiatives.
A reality check on purpose. You’d be surprised how often this alone sparks breakthrough alignment.
Scope boundaries: the backbone of project sanity.
Gather, refine, or re-baseline requirements. Articulate and define enough clarity to avoid arguments later, without writing a 900-page novel.
Check the proposed solution space against your business model expectations, such as architecture alignment, integration, security and service model expectations. Because “we’ll figure it out later” is not a strategy.
This might sound a bit radical but here goes; decide how you’ll make decisions before you make them. For delivery, it may be a prioritisation framework, budgeting principles, or simply agreeing how trade‑offs will be handled.
For procurement, this means defining scoring models, evaluation criteria, and commercial guardrails.
This is the moment where the initiative is finally ready for internal go‑ahead and/or external eyes. Create the artefacts needed to restart selection or mobilisation.
If it’s a delivery initiative, Step 7 becomes a quick but essential checkpoint to validate feasibility, confirm priorities, and ensure the team is still heading in the right direction with the right plan.
If it’s a procurement initiative, this is where the structured evaluation kicks in. Your scoring models and criteria come to life as you run an objective, transparent evaluation process.
In both instances, Step 7 is about making informed choices before moving into the final stage.
Delivery initiatives use Step 8 as the final readiness checkpoint before execution. This includes confirming resourcing, timelines, dependencies, and the appropriate governance sign‑off so delivery can begin with confidence.
Procurement initiatives use this step to bring everything home. You finalise negotiations, BAFO (if needed), commercial alignment, and the approvals needed to award. It’s the moment where the preferred supplier becomes the actual supplier.
In both cases, Step 8 is about locking in decisions, securing commitments, and preparing for a smooth and well‑supported mobilisation phase.
I don’t know about you, but as a true Business Architect I’m a sucker for a visual.
One of my favourite tools for reducing confusion is simply showing how everything connects. Dependency maps, flow diagrams, or PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) charts. Whatever shape or form gets the “Ah! Now I get it” reaction works for me.
Visualising:
…turns a vague sense of uncertainty into something teams can tackle with confidence.
It’s amazing what happens when people can see the whole picture instead of just their corner of it. Or as we say in the Architecture world, consolidating all the ‘viewpoints’.
Once the team shares an agreed set of objectives, scope boundaries, requirements, dependencies, and decision rules, something shifts. Meetings become faster. Decisions become clearer. Risks shrink. Progress becomes real again.
The best part? No secret sauce required, just structured clarity and a bit of patient facilitation.
Alignment is always key, as it brings back momentum, and more importantly, helps it stick.
In moments like these, the “we need to reset but don’t want to start over” moments, Business Architects can be incredibly valuable. We sit at the intersection of strategy, process, technology, and governance, which means we can help translate the big picture into a path teams can actually follow.
Our job isn’t to have all the answers. It’s to help the organisation ask clearer questions.
And occasionally to point out (gently) that please no, three different versions of the truth are, well, not ideal.
From experience, I now see stalled initiatives as invitations rather than failures. Invitations to pause, reflect, and realign before charging ahead. With the right structure, the right conversations, and the right diagrams (lots of visuals please!), teams can transform a frustrating pause into a genuine turning point.
If you ever find yourself staring at a paused project and wondering where to begin, this framework is a great place to start. And if nothing else, it’s a good reminder that ‘stuck’ isn’t permanent, it’s just a signal that something needs a little more attention.
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