Project Sponsor

Purpose of this page

This document defines the scope, accountability, and boundaries of the Project Sponsor role on projects at Agile Collective. It creates clarity for sponsors, project managers, delivery teams and clients, and is intended to reduce friction around scope decisions and shared ownership.

This document should be referred to when:

About the role

The Sponsor is a lightweight, optional role that supports the PM in keeping scope clear and controlled on more complex or high-risk projects.

Primary accountability

The Project Sponsor's primary accountability is to guard the vision and scope of the project, to ensure that what is being built remains true to what was agreed and funded.

While the PM manages delivery, the Sponsor watches the boundaries. When scope comes under pressure, they work through it together.

Ownership

The Sponsor has ownership of:

Where the role begins

The Sponsor is confirmed during Initiation, alongside the Project Manager. They use this phase to develop a clear understanding of what was agreed in Pre-project, the assumptions, constraints, and scope boundaries, so they can watch for drift as delivery progresses. From Initiation onwards the Sponsor stays alongside the project, not in the detail of delivery, but close enough to notice when something has shifted.

How the Sponsor and PM work together

The Sponsor and PM are a pair. The PM runs delivery; the Sponsor ensures vision and watches scope. When scope pressure arises, a client requesting something extra, assumptions quietly expanding, the team building beyond what was agreed, they name it together and decide together what to do next.

Those decisions do not happen in isolation. When scope is being questioned or changed, the Sponsor and PM keep the Projects Coordinator and Account Manager informed. The Projects Coordinator needs to know because scope changes affect the portfolio; the Account Manager needs to know because scope changes affect the client relationship.

Out of scope

The Sponsor is not accountable for:

Key working relationships

Success indicators

A Sponsor is doing well when:

Last updated: