COMPEL Certification Body of Knowledge — Module 2.1: Engagement Design and Client Discovery
Article 6 of 10
A COMPEL engagement does not exist in an organizational vacuum. It operates within a network of stakeholders — executives, managers, technical leaders, frontline workers, and external partners — each with their own interests, concerns, and influence over the engagement's success. The COMPEL Certified Specialist (EATP) who designs a technically sound engagement but neglects stakeholder alignment is building on sand.
This article addresses the dual challenge of establishing governance for the engagement itself and aligning the stakeholders whose support, participation, and decision-making will determine whether the engagement delivers its intended value.
Engagement Governance vs. Organizational Governance
A critical distinction must be made at the outset. Engagement governance refers to the structures and processes that manage the engagement — how decisions are made about scope, timeline, deliverables, and resources within the engagement's boundaries. Organizational governance refers to the client's standing governance structures — how the organization makes decisions about Artificial Intelligence (AI) strategy, risk, investment, and operations.
The COMPEL methodology addresses organizational AI governance extensively in Module 1.5, Article 3: Building an AI Governance Framework. This article addresses the engagement's own governance — the temporary but essential structure that manages the transformation work itself. The two governance systems must be designed to interact effectively, but they are not the same thing.
A common mistake is assuming that the client's existing governance structures are sufficient to manage the engagement. They rarely are. A COMPEL engagement cuts across functional boundaries, challenges existing assumptions, and requires decisions that the organization's routine governance processes were not designed to handle. The engagement needs its own governance layer — one that connects to the organization's governance but operates with the speed, focus, and decision-making clarity that transformation work demands.
The Engagement Governance Structure
The EATP should establish a governance structure that is proportionate to the engagement's scale and complexity. Over-governance (creating cumbersome structures for a small engagement) is as harmful as under-governance (leaving a large engagement without decision-making mechanisms). The standard COMPEL engagement governance model includes three tiers.
The Steering Committee
The steering committee is the engagement's highest governance body. It provides strategic oversight, makes critical decisions, resolves escalations, and ensures that the engagement remains aligned with organizational strategy.
Composition. The steering committee should include the executive sponsor, two to four additional senior stakeholders who represent different organizational perspectives (for example, a business unit leader, the Chief Information Officer (CIO) or Chief Technology Officer (CTO), a governance or risk leader, and a Human Resources (HR) or change management leader), and the EATP as engagement lead. The committee should be small enough for genuine discussion — more than seven members creates a reviewing body rather than a governing body.
Cadence. The steering committee typically meets monthly for engagements of six months or longer, or bi-weekly for shorter engagements. Meetings should be brief (sixty to ninety minutes), focused on decisions and direction rather than status updates, and structured around a consistent agenda.
Decision authority. The steering committee should have clear authority to approve scope changes, resolve cross-functional disputes, reallocate resources, and approve key deliverables. The SOW, as described in Module 2.1, Article 5: The Statement of Work — From Proposal to Contract, should specify the steering committee's decision rights explicitly.
The Working Group
The working group manages the engagement's day-to-day operations. It is the coordination mechanism for the engagement team — both practitioner and client-side members.
Composition. The working group includes the EATP, the client-side project manager (a role whose importance cannot be overstated), workstream leads from both the practitioner and client teams, and any standing subject matter experts whose ongoing involvement is required.
Cadence. The working group meets weekly, with agendas that cover progress against plan, upcoming activities, risks and issues, cross-workstream dependencies, and decisions required.
Decision authority. The working group makes operational decisions within the scope approved by the steering committee. It can adjust activity sequencing, reallocate team effort within workstreams, and resolve minor scope questions. Issues that exceed its authority are escalated to the steering committee.
The Executive Sponsor Role
The executive sponsor occupies a unique position in the governance structure — simultaneously a steering committee member and the engagement's primary champion within the organization. The sponsor's role extends beyond governance meetings. They are the engagement's advocate in executive discussions, its protector when competing priorities threaten resources, and its escalation point when organizational resistance blocks progress.
The EATP must invest in the sponsor relationship throughout the engagement. This means regular one-on-one updates (separate from steering committee meetings), transparent communication about risks and challenges, and proactive consultation on politically sensitive findings. The sponsor should never be surprised by what they hear in a steering committee meeting — surprises erode trust and undermine the sponsor's ability to support the engagement effectively.
Stakeholder Alignment Before Work Begins
Governance structures create the mechanisms for decision-making. Stakeholder alignment creates the conditions under which those mechanisms function effectively. The EATP must invest significant effort in alignment before the engagement's delivery phase begins.
Identifying Alignment Requirements
Not all stakeholders require the same type or depth of alignment. The EATP should categorize stakeholders into alignment tiers based on their influence over the engagement and the degree to which their active support is required.
Tier 1: Active alignment required. These stakeholders must understand and actively support the engagement. They include the executive sponsor, steering committee members, and the leaders of organizational units that will be directly affected by the engagement's findings and recommendations. Tier 1 alignment requires individual conversations, shared understanding of objectives, and explicit agreement on each stakeholder's role and commitments.
Tier 2: Informed alignment required. These stakeholders need to understand the engagement's purpose and approach but do not need to be actively involved in governance. They include extended leadership teams, functional heads whose areas intersect with the engagement, and communication or change management leaders. Tier 2 alignment is typically achieved through briefings, communications, and occasional inclusion in engagement events.
Tier 3: Awareness required. These stakeholders need to know the engagement exists and understand its general purpose. They include the broader workforce in affected areas, external partners, and supporting functions. Tier 3 alignment is achieved through organizational communications — newsletters, town halls, or intranet announcements.
The Alignment Process
For Tier 1 stakeholders, alignment is a deliberate process, not a single event. The EATP should structure alignment activities as follows.
Individual briefings. Before any group discussion, the EATP should meet individually with each Tier 1 stakeholder. These one-on-one sessions serve multiple purposes: they allow the EATP to understand each stakeholder's specific concerns and priorities, they give the stakeholder a private forum to raise sensitive issues, and they prevent the dynamics of group settings from suppressing honest input.
During individual briefings, the EATP should cover the engagement's objectives, scope, and approach; the specific stakeholder's role and expected commitments; how the engagement will affect the stakeholder's area of responsibility; how findings and recommendations will be communicated; and any concerns the stakeholder has about the engagement.
Alignment workshop. After individual briefings, the EATP may convene a group alignment session that brings Tier 1 stakeholders together to establish shared understanding and commitment. The workshop should address the collective rationale for the engagement, the governance structure and decision-making process, expectations for participation and transparency, and ground rules for how findings — including uncomfortable ones — will be handled.
The alignment workshop is not a presentation. It is a facilitated dialogue that surfaces disagreements, addresses concerns, and builds the shared commitment that the engagement requires. The facilitation principles from Module 1.6, Article 7: Stakeholder Engagement and Communication apply directly here.
Managing Stakeholder Dynamics
Stakeholder alignment is not a one-time achievement — it is an ongoing management responsibility throughout the engagement. Several recurring dynamics require the EATP's attention.
The Disengaged Sponsor
The executive sponsor who enthusiastically approved the engagement but gradually becomes unavailable — canceling steering committee meetings, delegating their role to a subordinate, or becoming unresponsive to the EATP's communications — represents one of the most common and most dangerous engagement risks.
The EATP must address sponsor disengagement directly and early. A private conversation with the sponsor that acknowledges the demands on their time while clearly articulating the consequences of reduced sponsorship is essential. The conversation should be factual ("without your participation in the steering committee, we cannot get approval for the Phase 2 scope") rather than accusatory ("you're not living up to your commitments").
If the sponsor cannot maintain the required level of involvement, the EATP should explore alternatives: delegating specific governance functions to another senior leader while the sponsor retains strategic oversight, restructuring the governance cadence to reduce the time burden, or — in the worst case — escalating to the sponsor's superior with the sponsor's knowledge and agreement.
The Hostile Stakeholder
Some stakeholders will oppose the engagement — either because they perceive it as threatening to their position, because they have philosophical objections to AI, or because they are invested in a competing initiative. The EATP must distinguish between legitimate skepticism (which can be addressed through evidence and dialogue) and political opposition (which requires a different approach).
Legitimate skeptics often become the engagement's strongest supporters once they see rigorous methodology applied to their concerns. The EATP should engage them directly, listen to their objections, and demonstrate how the COMPEL framework addresses those objections systematically.
Political opponents require a more strategic approach. The EATP should understand their motivations (through the stakeholder mapping developed during discovery — see Module 2.1, Article 2: Client Discovery and Needs Assessment), assess their influence, and work with the executive sponsor to manage the political dynamics. The goal is not to convert every opponent but to ensure that opposition does not derail the engagement.
The Scope Expander
Some stakeholders will consistently push for the engagement to do more — assess additional areas, produce additional deliverables, address issues beyond the agreed scope. While this often reflects genuine organizational need, unchecked scope expansion is a primary engagement risk addressed in Module 2.1, Article 9: Risk Management in COMPEL Engagements.
The EATP manages this dynamic through the governance structure. Scope change requests are documented, assessed for impact (timeline, cost, resource requirements), and presented to the steering committee for decision. The EATP should be empathetic ("I understand why that area is important to you") while being disciplined about process ("let me prepare a change request that the steering committee can evaluate").
The Information Gatekeeper
Some stakeholders control access to data, systems, or people that the engagement requires. When such stakeholders are uncooperative — whether due to legitimate confidentiality concerns, time constraints, or political motivations — the engagement's progress stalls.
The EATP should address information access issues through the governance structure, escalating to the steering committee when direct requests are not fulfilled. The SOW should include data access commitments (Module 2.1, Article 5) that provide contractual backing for access requests. When access issues persist despite governance intervention, the EATP must transparently document the impact on engagement quality and timeline.
Reporting and Communication Cadences
Effective engagement governance requires structured communication that keeps stakeholders informed without consuming disproportionate time.
Status Reporting
The EATP should establish a regular status report — weekly for the working group, monthly or bi-weekly for the steering committee. Status reports should follow a consistent format that stakeholders learn to read quickly: progress against plan, key accomplishments since the last report, upcoming activities, risks and issues requiring attention, and decisions required.
Status reports should be honest. If the engagement is behind schedule, the report should say so — along with the reason and the proposed recovery plan. If a risk is materializing, the report should flag it before it becomes a crisis. The EATP's credibility depends on the transparency of their communication.
Escalation Protocols
The governance structure should include explicit escalation paths for different types of issues. Operational issues (scheduling conflicts, minor scope questions) are resolved within the working group. Strategic issues (significant scope changes, budget impacts, organizational resistance) escalate to the steering committee. Critical issues (sponsor disengagement, fundamental scope disagreement, engagement-threatening risks) escalate to the executive sponsor directly.
The EATP should define these escalation paths during mobilization and ensure all team members understand when and how to use them. An engagement without clear escalation paths either suppresses problems (leading to late-stage crises) or escalates everything (overwhelming senior stakeholders and undermining working-level accountability).
Governance as Engagement Enabler
When designed and managed well, engagement governance is not overhead — it is an enabler. It creates the decision-making velocity that transformation work requires. It provides a forum for addressing the cross-functional tensions that AI transformation inevitably surfaces. It gives the EATP a structured mechanism for managing the organizational dynamics that are the primary determinant of engagement success.
The EATP who invests in governance design and stakeholder alignment during the engagement's early weeks creates the infrastructure for efficient delivery in the months that follow. The EATP who skips this investment to "get to the real work faster" invariably spends more time managing crises than they saved by cutting corners.
Looking Ahead
Governance and stakeholder structures require people to operate them — the right people, in the right roles, with the right capabilities. The next article, Module 2.1, Article 7: Team Design and Resource Planning, addresses how the EATP builds the engagement team — blending external practitioners with client-side team members to create a delivery capability that is both effective and sustainable.
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