National Strategic Automatic Number Plate Recognition Platform Programme: appointment letter for senior responsible owners (accessible)
Updated 23 December 2024
To: Bethan Page-Jones, Senior Responsible Owner for the National Strategic Automatic Number Plate Recognition Platform (NSAP) Programme
From: Matthew Rycroft, Permanent Secretary of the Home Office; and Nick Smallwood, Chief Executive Officer of the Infrastructure and Projects Authority
18 March 2023
Appointment as senior responsible owner for the National Strategic Automatic Number Plate Recognition Platform (NSAP) Programme
We are writing to confirm your appointment as Senior Responsible Owner (SRO) of the NSAP Programme with effect from the date of this letter. This letter sets out your responsibilities to, and the support you can expect from, the Home Office and the Infrastructure and Projects Authority (IPA).
As SRO, you are directly accountable to Jaee Samant, Director-General, Public Safety Group, under the oversight of the Permanent Secretary as accounting officer for the Home Office, and the Secretary of State for the Home Office.
Your initiative forms part of the Home Office Portfolio, under the oversight of the Chair of the Home Office Investment Committee (InvestCo) and is included in the Government Major Projects Portfolio (GMPP).
You have personal responsibility for the delivery of the NSAP Programme and will be held accountable for the delivery of its objectives, with policy intent and outcomes expected. This encompasses securing and protecting its vision, ensuring that it is governed responsibly, reported on honestly, escalated appropriately and for influencing the context, culture, and operating environment of the initiative. You are also responsible for ensuring the ongoing viability of the initiative and recommending its pause or termination if appropriate. Where issues arise that you are unable to resolve, you are responsible for escalating these to the InvestCo and/or other HO Governance bodies as appropriate to the resolution of those issues.
You remain accountable to Ministers, as set out in the Civil Service Code, and should deliver the project in accordance with the objectives and policy intent as set by Ministers.
In addition to your internal accountabilities, SROs for GMPP projects and programmes are personally accountable to Parliamentary Select Committees. This means that, from the date of this letter, you will be held personally accountable to and could be called by Select Committees to account for and explain the decisions and actions you have taken to deliver the initiative.
It is important to be clear that your accountability relates only to implementation, within the agreed terms in this letter; it will remain for the Minister to account for the relevant policy decisions and development.
More information on this is set out in Giving Evidence to Select Committees - Guidance for Civil Servants, sometimes known as the Osmotherly Rules. Information on the roles and responsibilities of the SRO are summarised in the document at Annex 1, and detailed in the IPA’s guidance on the role of the senior responsible owner. You should also make yourself familiar with the Government Functional Standard for Project Delivery, the requirements of the Government Project Delivery Framework, and the guidance and requirements for project delivery as set by Home Office Project Delivery Framework.
Key decisions on GMPP level projects and anything which is otherwise novel, contentious, or commercially sensitive, or which Ministers have asked to see must be submitted in a timely manner to the Permanent Secretary and Ministers as appropriate.
Time commitment and tenure
You will undertake this SRO role alongside your other responsibilities. You must ensure that you allocate sufficient time to fulfil the responsibilities that being an SRO entails and these are expected to take up at least 50% of your time. This will be periodically reviewed to ensure that an appropriate balance is maintained across the full range of your responsibilities.
You are required to undertake this role until programme closure, planned for the end of FY27/28. Progress towards this will be reflected in your personal objectives. Any changes to the agreed time commitment or tenure of the role, as set out above, will require both Home Office and IPA consent. Consent to leave the role early will not typically be withheld but where permission is given it may be accompanied by conditions relating to handover of your accountabilities.
Please note that individuals are not normally permitted to act as SRO for more than one major programme at any one time. As such you should resist taking on any additional programmes during your tenure as SRO. At the end of your tenure, you are expected to ensure the best possible handover of the NSAP Programme and/or its outputs to a new SRO and/or business owners.
Objectives and performance criteria
ANPR (Automatic Number Plate Recognition) technology is used to help detect, deter and disrupt criminal activity at a local, force, regional and national level. This includes travelling criminals (those using the road network to avoid being caught) organised crime groups and terrorists. ANPR provides lines of enquiry and evidence in the investigation of crime and is used by forces throughout England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. This capability provides policing and Law Enforcement Agencies (LEA) with intelligence on vehicle activity across the country, which is used to protect the public, prevent crime, and submit evidence to court. The service is of strategic importance to National Counter Terrorism, County Lines, and Serious and Organised Crime investigations. ANPR capability is comprises:
- A network of ANPR cameras, communications links, firewalls and other related supporting components. Infrastructure assets are owned by forces. Forces have management servers in place which interface with local and national ANPR systems.
- The National ANPR Service (NAS). This is a national live time alarming system with a level of search capability, evidencing and data preservation capability as well as national store of data. NAS brings together a stream of live ANPR camera data totalling 90 million reads a day from England, Wales and Scotland Police forces. This data is comprised of Vehicle Registration Numbers and associated number plate and vehicle overview images. The data is fed into a central database and enriched with MMC (make, model, colour) from DVLA to allow for real time alerts on ‘vehicles of interest’ and geo-temporal search parameters to be applied to up to 12 months of national vehicle movement data.
- The National ANPR Data Centre (NADC) which is the legacy national system and a parallel national dataset. The NADC has not been decommissioned as per the original objectives of the NAS business case due to functionality envisaged but not delivered by the previous NAS programme, such as bulk data extract capability to Counter Terrorism Policing via the Metropolitan Police Service as well as more complex alerting.
- Back Office Functions (BOFs). ANPR systems within forces or LEAs which provide a range of functionality including dispatcher and advanced capability, depending on the product. Some forces LEAs use NAS instead of a BOF for their local and national needs.
The NSAP Programme was commissioned to deliver a solution that provides the opportunity to enable, optimise and if desired, transform the national ANPR capability, meeting the Law Enforcement community’s strategic objectives and full requirements. It will do this through a variety of means including reducing duplication of datasets; future proofing the long-term, national solution; and delivering or enabling core requirements. The SOBC provided the direction for the next phase of development for national ANPR capability allowing the previous business case and programme to be closed and delivery to commence from a revised baseline.
It will achieve these objectives by:
- providing a cost-effective performant and scalable national ANPR technical capability to ensure consistent, efficient and effective use of ANPR
- extending proportionate and standardised access to the national ANPR data to allow exploitation of ANPR intelligence
- enabling better data management and transparency in accordance with National ANPR Standards for Policing and Law Enforcement (NASPLE), including improved security and auditability and compliance with the requirements from data protection legislation
Any proposed changes to scope which impact upon this intent, the spending objectives or exceed Home Office tolerances for the realisation of benefits, must be authorised by InvestCo and may be subject to further levels of approval.
If you do not believe these objectives can be delivered – either at all or within time, cost or other constraints imposed upon the programme, you should not sign this letter. If at any stage constraints are imposed upon the programme that mean you consider successful delivery has become unachievable you must escalate the matter to both your sponsoring Director-General and InvestCo. Such discussions must involve the Chief Portfolio Officer (CPO) and Corporate Finance Director.
You must agree personal goals relating to this role with your line manager. These personal goals and success criteria must be based on the template goals provided in Annex 2 to this letter. Elements may be added to the Delivery and Corporate Contribution Goals, but not altered or subtracted without the written agreement of the signatories of this letter.
You are expected to run your project in accordance with the Government Functional Standard for Project Delivery, the other Functional Standards as applicable, and the requirements of the government and Home Office Project Delivery Frameworks.
Extent and limit of accountability
Finance and controls
HM Treasury spending controls and the Treasury Approval Point process apply to this initiative, and the details of each approval process must be agreed with your HM Treasury spending team. You should consult Home Office Portfolio colleagues on how to go about this.
The overall estimated budget, resourcing requirements and tolerances for this initiative will be agreed as part of the approval process. You will be expected to deliver within these tolerances and report quarterly on these as part of GMPP reporting.
You should operate at all times within the rules set out in Managing Public Money. In addition, you must be mindful of, and act in accordance with, the specific HM Treasury delegated limits and Cabinet Office controls relevant to this initiative. Information on these controls can be found here: Cabinet Office controls.
In addition to the above points you will be expected to progress this initiative in line with HM Treasury and Home Office allocations, and investment stages as agreed by InvestCo. InvestCo investment authorisations will be confirmed separately and will be kept under review in the light of delivery progress.
Delegated authority
You are authorised to:
- Approve expenditure up to the limits granted by InvestCo plus stage tolerances described by Home Office Portfolio Change Control. Appropriate authority must be sought for expenditure which breaches tolerances. The CPO and Corporate Finance Director should be involved in such discussions along with the Director-General of Corporate & Delivery. Funding – especially underspends - must not be flexed within or between allocations without reference back to InvestCo;
- Agree the rescheduling of delivery within the tolerances described by Home Office Portfolio Change Control. Exceeding these tolerances requires the agreement of InvestCo, and the CPO should be involved in discussions seeking such agreement; and
- Recommend to Jaee Samant, Director-General Public Safety Group and InvestCo the need to either pause or terminate the initiative where appropriate and in a timely manner.
These authority limits are subject to change, and other conditions or tolerances may be set as part of the business case approval and ongoing monitoring processes which you should then operate within.
You must escalate to InvestCo and Director-General Corporate and Delivery:
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proposed changes to the programme scope which impact on the intent or its expected benefits realisation, or which have wider impacts for other programmes or projects, or for Home Office transformation more generally
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slippage or any proposed change which materially impacts on wider Home Office objectives, including ministerial objectives, or adversely affects completion of any of the programme stages or its funding
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issues which you are unable to resolve, including the need to either pause or terminate the programme where necessary
Your role as SRO is a corporate responsibility and you are expected to:
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establish and progress the programme in line with the Home Office Project Delivery Framework, ensuring the effectiveness of its governance, assurance, and programme management arrangements, including:
- appointing, chairing, and setting priorities for the Programme Board
- ensuring the effectiveness and performance of the programme organisation
- resourcing the programme, including its PMO, to succeed
- ensuring your programme’s delivery, resource & financial plans are collaboratively developed, properly integrated, baselined and used
- ensuring delivery plans contain sufficient contingency to properly manage expectations
- ensuring appropriate first line assurance is in place backed up by the commissioning of timely assurance and audit reviews
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ensure that the programme is progressed according to the Home Secretary’s agreed portfolio prioritisation, recognising that under some circumstances resource may need to be diverted to higher priority programmes and discussing with the CPO’s team any factors which may change the priority of your programme; in doing so, you will:
- ensure there is clarity about perceived constraints upon delivery as whether they are genuine constraints (such as imposed deadlines) or only desirable
- keep a tight focus on the agreed scope and prevent the dilution of the programme’s objectives that can result from being used as a delivery vehicle for unowned requirements
- ensure that the performance of all contracts used in the delivery of the programme is monitored with suitable qualified/experienced individuals appointed to actively manage those contracts
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submit the programme’s business cases and other reports as appropriate to InvestCo, the IPA, and HM Treasury; in doing so, you will:
- monitor the programme’s status, its forecast timescales, costs and benefits and key risks and dependencies
- report issues openly and transparently
- require that the programme’s resource plans allow time for the continuous professional development of all team members
- ensure that the programme’s business cases include sufficient funding for a properly resourced PMO and that you actively use the PMO to help you control the programme
- ensure that the programme’s business cases make specific funding allocations for networks, infrastructure, and cyber security, should your programme need work performed on any of these areas, base these allocations on estimates agreed with the appropriate leads in Enterprise Services, and provide the funds identified for these purposes to those leads to deliver on your behalf
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ensure that the programme’s anticipated impacts upon business-as-usual operations are informing forecasts of those operations, including workforce planning, and running costs
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lead the programme in a way which maximises delivery of shared corporate capabilities, for use across the Home Office and wider government
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ensure that Home Office data management principles are adopted in taking forward the programme to ensure that data is collected and stored in such a way as to enable sharing and reuse where appropriate, that it is protected in line with GDPR requirements
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take account of Home Office and wider government initiatives
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ensure that any legacy systems replaced by the programme are decommissioned as appropriate
Appointments
You have appointed Paul Manning as Programme Director to support you in the management of this programme. You should provide Paul with a formal appointment letter, share that letter with the IPA and make other appointments as required for the control and delivery of initiative within your delegated authority.
Governance and assurance
As SRO, you must ensure that the programme secures business case approval from InvestCo and HMT, together with all relevant spend control approvals from Cabinet Office. You should also ensure that the initiative remains within the strategic outcomes, costs, timescales, and benefits described by the latest approved business case as well as monitoring the context within which the programme is being delivered to ensure it remains valid.
Where a change impacts the scope, costs, benefits, or planned delivery milestones agreed as part of an agreed business case, you are accountable for following the Home Office Portfolio change request approval process and setting a new, approved, business case baseline.
You must ensure that an Accounting Officer Assessment is completed no later than alongside the approval of the Outline Business Case and that this is published on GOV.UK as part of the government’s transparency requirements on major projects. You are accountable for bringing to the attention of the Accounting Officer any material changes in the programme which could require a new Accounting Officer Assessment to be completed and published. Guidance on completing accounting officer assessments for major projects is available from HM Treasury.
Although you are directly accountable for the NSAP Programme, you are also expected to support delivery of the Home Office’s overall strategic objectives. This means that you and your team are expected to work collaboratively with other SROs and project directors in associated projects and programmes and with the CPO and Home Office Portfolio and Project Delivery Directorate (PPD) to manage dependencies, resources, schedules, and funding to support delivery of the overall change the Home Office needs to achieve its strategic objectives.
You must ensure that appropriate and proportionate assurance is in place and agree on the level and frequency of assurance reviews through the maintenance of an integrated assurance and approvals plan. You should develop this plan and its maintenance in collaboration with the Departmental Assurance Coordinator and the IPA.
NSAP Programme status, reporting and transparency requirements
We note the presentation provided to Home Office InvestCo on 21 September 2023 recorded the status of the initiative at this point and is the agreed position as you assume formal ownership of the programme.
You are responsible for ensuring the honest and timely reporting on the position of the NSAP Programme to the IPA and PPD while it remains on the GMPP. Should it be relevant to the initiative, reporting should include carbon measurement, and other sustainable development goals in accordance with evolving government policy and standards. Information on the NSAP Programme will be published annually by the IPA.
Development and support
As SRO of a GMPP programme, you are required to complete the Major Projects Leadership Academy, and we understand you are enrolled on Cohort 40 which is due to start in March 2024.
To widen experience and understanding of the role, SROs are also expected to become accredited assurance reviewers and to lead or participate in such reviews for other government departments, the wider public sector, and other areas of the Home Office as appropriate. Becoming an assurance reviewer and completing a review will form part of your time at the Major Projects Leadership Academy. To maintain your accreditation, you will be required to participate in a review at least once every 12 months. PPD will connect you with assurance review opportunities.
The Home Office will assist you in securing the necessary resources to support the NSAP Programme and sets via the Home Office Project Delivery Framework clear guidance, requirements and standards, which align to the Government Functional Standard on Project Delivery, to enable good governance and effective delivery. You will be part of the Home Office’s cohort of major project leaders who will be expected to support each other, share good practice and lessons learned and to collectively develop solutions. You should liaise with the Home Office CPO for project delivery to discuss the maintenance and development of your delivery and leadership skills.The IPA will be available to you for support, advice, and assurance throughout the initiative’s time on the GMPP.
Following approval of the business case and entry onto the Home Office Portfolio, the Portfolio and Project Delivery Directorate will provide ongoing oversight and support on the behalf of ExCo, and will take steps with relevant leads across Corporate and Delivery and the rest of the Home Office to help resolve and escalate risks, issues or constraints that are acting as a blocker to successful delivery.
We would like to take this opportunity to wish you every success in your role as SRO.
Yours sincerely,
Matthew Rycroft Permanent Secretary, Home Office
Nick Smallwood Chief Executive Officer, Infrastructure and Projects Authority
Confirmation of acceptance of appointment
I confirm that I accept the appointment of Senior Responsible Owner for the AMLAR Programme, including my personal accountability for implementation, as set out in the letter above.
Bethan Page-Jones 26 March 2024
Annex 1 - SRO role and responsibilities
The role of the Senior Responsible Owner
You are personally accountable for ensuring the ongoing delivery of your Programme. You are responsible for securing the resources necessary for the success of the Programme and for ensuring that the related implementation and transition activities realise the agreed objectives and benefits. You will be personally accountable to Parliamentary Select Committees and be expected to explain the decisions and actions you have taken. This could include where a Minister has intervened to change the Programme during the implementation phase in a way which has implications for the cost and/or timeline of implementation. You will be able to disclose your advice about any such changes.
You must ensure the effectiveness of the governance, assurance and programme management arrangements and maintain them throughout the life of the Programme. You should adopt best practice and be prepared to justify any deviation from it, in line with the Government Functional Standard for Project Delivery and other guidance published by the Cabinet Office.
An SRO will:
- be a visible, engaged and active project leader, not a figurehead
- deliver the agreed outcomes and benefits
- create an open, honest and positive culture committed to delivering at pace
- challenge senior officers and Ministers when appropriate and escalate quickly
- provide appropriate support, steer and strategic focus to the Programme Director and ensure that they have a clear and current letter of appointment
- have sufficient time, experience and the right skills to carry the full responsibilities of the role
Specific SRO accountabilities:
Ensure that the Programme is set up for success
- ensure that the Programme is set-up to make an unambiguous and demonstrable link to strategic policy
- translate this policy intent into clear deliverables which are established and agreed with senior stakeholders
- carry out a robust and commercially viable options appraisal, which balances risk with opportunity, as part of initial programme feasibility
- establish a firm business case for the Programme during the initiation/definition phase and ensure that any planned change continues to be aligned with the business
- identify and secure the necessary investment for the Programme’s business case (this includes both budget and operational resource)
- design and implement robust, appropriate and transparent programme governance
- build strong and effective relationships with key stakeholders, justifying their trust and retaining their confidence, and obtain their commitment to benefits realisation
Ensure that the Programme meets its objectives and delivers the projected benefits
- gain agreement to the programme objectives and benefits amongst stakeholders, including ministers where appropriate
- ensure that the Programme’s anticipated impacts upon business-as-usual operations are informing forecasts of those operations, including workforce planning and running costs
- understand the broader government perspective and its impact on the Programme
- ensure the strategic fit of the programme objectives and benefits;
- agree a clear and simple approach to performance management and monitor delivery of the objectives and benefits, taking appropriate action where necessary to ensure their successful delivery
- develop the programme organisation structure and plan
- ensure that there is a coherent organisation structure and appropriately detailed programme plan
- build the right team, securing necessary resources and skills and providing clear lines of accountability
- provide appropriate support, steer and strategic focus to the Programme Director
Monitor and take control of progress
- monitor and control the progress of the Programme at a strategic level, being honest and frank about its progress, risks and issues
- ensure that any changes to agreed programme benefits are flagged appropriately within programme governance and that the business case is updated accordingly (throughout programme life-cycle)
- ensure that the integrity of the Programme is maintained and speak truth to power – including to Parliamentary Select Committees
- communicate effectively with senior stakeholders regarding programme progress and provide clear, appropriate and delivery-focused decisions and advice to the Programme Director
Ensure problem resolution and referral processes are appropriate and effective
- identify, understand and drive the successful mitigation of programme risks
- escalate serious issues quickly and with confidence to senior management and/or Ministers
- develop strong and effective engagement between the programme team and its stakeholders and sponsors
- ensure that communication processes are effective and that the Programme’s objectives and deliverables continue to be consistent with the organisation’s strategic direction
- ensure that the Programme is subject to suitable assurance arrangements, including reviews at appropriate stages, and that these are captured in an Integrated Assurance and Approval Plan (IAAP) that includes commercial, technical, financial and other assurance
- recognise the value of robust programme review and ensure it occurs at key points in the programme lifecycle, particularly at the pre-initiation (feasibility) and initiation stages
- make certain that any recommendations or concerns from reviews are met or addressed in a timely manner
- in the event of a ’red’ or ’amber-red’ review or a ‘red’ or ‘amber-red’ quarterly GMPP review rating, ensure that the Permanent Secretary (copying in the Chief Portfolio Officer) has been made aware of the situation and has been briefed accordingly
Manage formal programme closure
- formally close the Programme and ensure that the lessons learned are documented within the final evaluation report and disseminated to key stakeholders
- ensure that the post implementation review takes place and that the output is communicated to appropriate stakeholders
- ensure that arrangements for a return on investment report, including benefits realisation plans are agreed with the Portfolio and Project Delivery Directorate (PPD)
- ensure a plan for both long term benefits realisation and on-going sustainability is agreed with key stakeholders as part of the process of transitioning the Programme to “business as usual”
Annex 2 - SRO Goals and Success Criteria
Business delivery goal
Description
As SRO for the NSAP, I will carry out my role in accordance with my letter of appointment. I will achieve this goal by creating high performance in Programme delivery covering the outcomes and scope agreed with InvestCo to the time and cost / benefits plans last baselined with InvestCo in September 2023 and those requirements and constraints outlined in my SRO appointment letter.
I will establish/maintain a culture of learning, collaboration and transparency across the Programme and with dependent stakeholders, in particular transparency of performance i.e. when performance/standards have and or have/will not be achieved, or where assistance/interventions are required. I will build a Programme team that has strong Project & Programme delivery skills, including a capable PMO that provides the data, information and insight required to inform decision making and to make the necessary interventions, underpinned by appropriate governance structures and change control mechanisms. I will ensure compliance with the Home Office Project Delivery Framework and address any identified gaps in performance or development to ensure compliance.
Success criteria
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Programme performance regarding time (schedule and milestones), scope, cost (financial forecasts) and benefits, including the management of identified dis-benefits. Quarterly performance data/feedback will be supplied from PPD/CPO/HoP.
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Actual time commitment and review against that.
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Programme’s consistent application of Microsoft Project Online standards and compliance with the Home Office Project Delivery Framework – compliance reports supplied by PPD and any gaps addressed/rectified.
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Feedback from the IPA in relation to formal quarterly reporting and any actions/ recommendations.
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Quality and timeliness of actions in response to assurance and audit recommendations
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Evidence of analysing, collecting and sharing of Lessons learned across the Programme and wider Portfolio/sub-Portfolios.
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Evidence of creating a psychologically safe and inclusive environment for Programme team members by role modelling curiosity, acknowledging own fallibility, and framing work as an opportunity to learn and develop.
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Acting on the provision of data provided by PPD on the proportion of my Programme team using the Government Online Skills Tool to understand skills and development needs, ensuring that their development and progress against actions are recorded. Continuing to promote Project Delivery Accreditation ensuring that 10% of project delivery professionals within my Programme are accredited by 2025.
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Management and evidence of Programme resourcing risks/issues and recruitment and staff deployment activity has been undertaken to address capacity gaps across the Programme, and includes adherence to workforce and recruitment controls, as set out in relevant delegation letters.
Corporate contribution goal
Description
As SRO for NSAP, I will support the Home Office SRO and Project/Programme Delivery community through the provision of support, advice and guidance to other SROs and/or, as required, to staff developing their skills, knowledge and experience to become future SROs.
Success criteria
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Proactively looking out for my SRO colleagues, creating space for the community to be open about the challenges faced, and pulling together as one community.
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Volume and quality of interaction and support across the SRO community, e.g. assist knowledge and skills gaps - specific upskilling interventions made and the impact – feedback from colleagues and the PPD/CPO/HoP (quarterly feedback supplied)
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Attendance/interaction, e.g. PPD-led SRO events and also IPA-led activity
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Sharing Lessons Learned with other SROs/the wider Project Delivery Community
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Awareness of the wider operating and Portfolio environment and supporting the wider Project/Programme delivery community to adjust to priorities and the unforeseen, including proactive reprioritisation of work and resource, and collaborating across boundaries to seek out expertise and experience of others.
Development goal
Description
As part of my SRO role, I have applied for MPLA and will be joining Cohort 40 in March 2024 and will complete it by June 2025. I will also undertake Creating a Digital Culture Training in relation to my role as SRO and my continuing personal and professional development
Success criteria
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I will start MPLA in March 2024.
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I will complete the Major Projects Leadership Academy within 18 months from the start date of my cohort, or adjusted on approval of both the Head of Profession and Oxford Said Business School. I will continue to work on my project throughout the duration of completing MPLA, applying my learning directly and bringing issues and insights back to the academy, building time into my workload to complete assignments and attend all masterclasses, residentials and action learning sets as specified for my cohort. I will complete an assignment on an IPA Review as part of my MPLA Portfolio of Evidence, ensuring I register with the IPA Resourcing Team and attend an IPA accredited reviewer training session if I’ve not already done so. I will complete the MPLA assessment after 12 months of being on the MPLA ensuring that all elements of the assessment are completed including gathering my portfolio of evidence, complete a presentation about my development and progress on the MPLA and finally attend a panel interview.
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I will have completed the online mandatory ‘Creating a Digital Culture’ Training as set out for all Home Office SCS.