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New PMI Research Reveals Strategy-Execution Gap Is Undermining Transformation And How To Close It
(MENAFN- Mid-East Info) Global study of 5,800+ professionals shows only half of projects succeed; the M.O.R.E. approach from Project Management Institute, more than triples success rates in a world of constant reinvention
Dubai, United Arab Emirates – December, 2025 – Project Management Institute (PMI) released new research that directly links the global strategy-execution gap to how organizations run projects, revealing a clear pathway to dramatically improve the odds that transformation efforts actually pay off.
The report, Step Up: Redefining the Path to Project Success with M.O.R.E., arrives as CEOs face unrelenting pressure to reinvent their organizations at a rapid pace. In a companion survey of senior executives, 93% say they must rethink or reinvent their business model or operating approach at least every five years, with nearly two-thirds doing so every two years or more frequently. Two-thirds report they are currently accelerating digital and AI transformation. Yet their biggest obstacle is not a lack of ideas, capital, or technology – it is a widening strategy-execution gap. The top barrier to reinvention, cited by more executives than any other factor (35%), is a disconnect between planning and execution. Only half of projects succeed – and that puts transformation at risk The new global study of more than 5,800 project professionals, key stakeholders, and knowledge workers finds that just half of projects today meet a modern definition of success: delivering value that exceeds the effort and expense involved, as perceived by all key stakeholders. Thirteen percent of projects fail outright and 37% only partially deliver the expected results. “At a time when organizations are pouring unprecedented investment into digital, AI, sustainability, and business model transformation, they simply cannot afford a 50/50 success rate on the projects that fund their strategy,” said Pierre Le Manh, President & Chief Executive Officer at PMI.“Our research makes it clear: the strategy-execution gap isn't abstract. It shows up in the day-to-day reality of projects that are misaligned, under-resourced, or measured in the wrong way.” Le Manh added:“When executives say their biggest challenge is turning plans into outcomes, what they are really describing is project success. If you want your strategy to work, you have to radically increase the hit rate of the projects that bring it to life.” The M.O.R.E. vision for the project profession: from project management to value delivery To understand what separates high-performing organizations, the study identifies four elements that strongly predict whether projects deliver full value. Together, they form the basis of M.O.R.E. – a call-to-action for the project profession:
The report, Step Up: Redefining the Path to Project Success with M.O.R.E., arrives as CEOs face unrelenting pressure to reinvent their organizations at a rapid pace. In a companion survey of senior executives, 93% say they must rethink or reinvent their business model or operating approach at least every five years, with nearly two-thirds doing so every two years or more frequently. Two-thirds report they are currently accelerating digital and AI transformation. Yet their biggest obstacle is not a lack of ideas, capital, or technology – it is a widening strategy-execution gap. The top barrier to reinvention, cited by more executives than any other factor (35%), is a disconnect between planning and execution. Only half of projects succeed – and that puts transformation at risk The new global study of more than 5,800 project professionals, key stakeholders, and knowledge workers finds that just half of projects today meet a modern definition of success: delivering value that exceeds the effort and expense involved, as perceived by all key stakeholders. Thirteen percent of projects fail outright and 37% only partially deliver the expected results. “At a time when organizations are pouring unprecedented investment into digital, AI, sustainability, and business model transformation, they simply cannot afford a 50/50 success rate on the projects that fund their strategy,” said Pierre Le Manh, President & Chief Executive Officer at PMI.“Our research makes it clear: the strategy-execution gap isn't abstract. It shows up in the day-to-day reality of projects that are misaligned, under-resourced, or measured in the wrong way.” Le Manh added:“When executives say their biggest challenge is turning plans into outcomes, what they are really describing is project success. If you want your strategy to work, you have to radically increase the hit rate of the projects that bring it to life.” The M.O.R.E. vision for the project profession: from project management to value delivery To understand what separates high-performing organizations, the study identifies four elements that strongly predict whether projects deliver full value. Together, they form the basis of M.O.R.E. – a call-to-action for the project profession:
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Manage perceptions by shaping stakeholder understanding and building trust
Own success beyond traditional metrics of time and budget, focusing on value delivered
Relentlessly reassess to anticipate change and continuously adjust
Expand perspective to connect projects to broader organizational and societal outcomes
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New learning journeys and resources centered on the M.O.R.E. behaviors
Updated standards and guidance that define project success in terms of value and stakeholder outcomes
Expanded recognition of project teams that exemplify the M.O.R.E. mindset in delivering complex, high-impact work
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