Role Purpose & Context
Role Summary
The Lead Chief Projects Officer is responsible for getting our most significant capital projects or development programmes across the finish line. This means you'll be the one building the strategy, assembling the teams, and making sure everything from ground-breaking to practical completion runs smoothly. You're essentially the conductor of a complex orchestra, making sure all the different players – from architects to contractors to internal business units – are playing the same tune.
This role sits right at the heart of our investment strategy, turning big ideas into tangible assets. You'll be working at the intersection of long-term vision and day-to-day execution, translating strategic goals into detailed project plans that our teams can actually deliver.
When you do this well, we see our new facilities open on schedule, under budget (ideally!), and delighting our end-users. When it doesn't go to plan, well, let's just say delays and cost overruns can quickly wipe out profit margins and damage our reputation. The challenge here is balancing ambitious targets with the messy reality of construction and development. The reward? Seeing a significant building or facility come to life, knowing you were the one who made it happen.
Reporting Structure
- Reports to: Director of Projects
- Direct reports: Typically 3-8 Project Managers or Assistant Project Managers
- Matrix relationships:
Senior Programme Manager, Capital Projects, Head of Major Developments, Lead Project Delivery Manager,
Key Stakeholders
Internal:
- VP, Capital Projects
- Head of Development
- Finance leadership (CFO, Head of FP&A)
- Legal & Risk teams
- Business Unit Heads (e.g., Retail Operations, Office Space Management)
External:
- General Contractors & Subcontractors
- Architects & Engineers
- Municipal Planning & Building Control
- Key Suppliers & Vendors
- Local Community Groups
Organisational Impact
Scope: You'll directly shape the physical footprint and operational efficiency of our entire portfolio. Your decisions on project scope, budget, and schedule directly impact our financial performance, brand reputation, and ability to meet future business needs. Get it right, and you're a hero; get it wrong, and it's a very public (and expensive) problem.
Performance Metrics
Quantitative Metrics
- Metric: Programme Budget Variance
- Desc: How closely your projects or programmes stick to their approved capital expenditure budgets.
- Target: Deliver within +/- 3% of the approved budget for the overall programme.
- Freq: Monthly reporting, quarterly review with Finance.
- Example: A £75M programme with an actual spend of £76.5M would be a 2% variance, hitting target. Anything over £77.25M would be a miss.
- Metric: Overall Programme Schedule Adherence
- Desc: The percentage of key milestones (like practical completion or operational handover) met on or before the planned date across your projects.
- Target: Achieve Practical Completion within 2% of the original project duration for 90% of projects within your programme.
- Freq: Weekly project updates, monthly programme-level review.
- Example: A 100-week project should finish within 2 weeks of its planned completion. If you're consistently slipping by 4-5 weeks, that's a problem.
- Metric: Safety Performance (LTIFR)
- Desc: The Lost Time Injury Frequency Rate (LTIFR) for all projects under your leadership. This is a critical measure of our commitment to safety.
- Target: Maintain an LTIFR below the industry average (e.g., 0.2 per 100,000 hours worked) across all projects.
- Freq: Monthly safety reports, quarterly audit.
- Example: If your programme records 2 lost-time injuries over 1 million hours worked, your LTIFR is 0.2, which is good. Anything higher means we need to dig into the 'why'.
- Metric: Value Engineering Savings Realised
- Desc: The actual cost savings achieved through value engineering initiatives on your projects, without compromising quality or functionality.
- Target: Identify and implement value engineering savings equivalent to at least 2-5% of the initial project budget.
- Freq: Tracked per project, reported quarterly.
- Example: On a £50M project, you'd aim to find £1M-£2.5M in savings through smart material choices or process changes.
Qualitative Metrics
- Metric: Stakeholder Confidence & Engagement
- Desc: How effectively you manage expectations and build trust with internal business units, external partners, and local authorities.
- Evidence: You're proactively consulted on strategic decisions, not just informed. Business unit leaders champion your projects. External partners consistently give positive feedback on your team's collaboration. You'll see fewer escalations to the Director, which is always a good sign.
- Metric: Team Development & Mentorship
- Desc: The growth and capability of the Project Managers and Assistant Project Managers who report to you.
- Evidence: Your direct reports are taking on more complex tasks, showing increased autonomy, and successfully delivering their own projects. They're asking fewer basic questions and more strategic ones. You'll see them leading meetings effectively and proactively identifying risks, rather than just reacting. We'll also look at their personal development plans and how you're helping them achieve their goals.
- Metric: Risk Anticipation & Mitigation
- Desc: Your ability to foresee potential project risks (e.g., supply chain issues, regulatory changes, site conditions) and put credible plans in place to deal with them before they become major problems.
- Evidence: You're regularly updating the risk register with new, identified risks, not just existing ones. When a major issue does arise, you've usually got a contingency plan ready or at least a clear path to resolution. Fewer 'surprises' for the Director means you're doing this well. We'll also look at how you communicate these risks – no sugar-coating, just facts and solutions.
Primary Traits
- Trait: Decisive
- Manifestation: You're the person who makes the final call on a multi-million pound change order within 24 hours, even when the information isn't 100% perfect. You can choose between two qualified General Contractors (GCs) based on a nuanced risk assessment, not just the lowest bid. Crucially, you're comfortable saying 'no' to stakeholder requests that jeopardise the project's core objectives, even if it's an uncomfortable conversation.
- Benefit: Honestly, indecision on a construction site is incredibly expensive. A one-day delay waiting for a decision on foundation rebar can easily cost six figures in crew and equipment standby fees. We need someone who can weigh the options, consider the risks, and make a call, because sitting on the fence is simply not an option in this game.
- Trait: Influential
- Manifestation: You're able to persuade a sceptical city planning board to grant a zoning variance for our new development. You can convince the CFO to release contingency funds by framing the expenditure as critical risk mitigation, not just another cost. You're also adept at negotiating contentious disputes between an architect and a GC, finding a solution both parties can actually live with.
- Benefit: This role comes with immense responsibility, but the truth is, you often rely on influencing people you don't directly control – think municipal authorities, external contractors, and even internal clients. Your success truly depends on building strong coalitions and securing buy-in, rather than just issuing commands. It's about getting people to want to work with you.
- Trait: Accountable
- Manifestation: When things go wrong, you're the one who stands before the executive committee and takes ownership of a 10% budget overrun, presenting a clear, credible recovery plan. You don't blame contractors or external factors; you own the problem. On the flip side, you publicly credit your team for successes, making sure everyone gets their due recognition.
- Benefit: In a domain defined by risk and uncertainty, things *will* go wrong sometimes. A leader who genuinely owns the failures builds a culture of trust and problem-solving, rather than one of finger-pointing. That's absolutely essential for navigating complex, long-term projects and maintaining team morale. We need someone who can take the hits and learn from them.
Supporting Traits
- Trait: Politically Astute
- Desc: You expertly navigate the competing interests of internal departments, external partners, and local community groups. You understand the unspoken rules and can read a room, knowing when to push and when to hold back.
- Trait: Financially Literate
- Desc: You intuitively grasp project finance concepts like Net Present Value (NPV) and Internal Rate of Return (IRR), and you understand the detailed mechanics of a construction draw schedule. You can talk numbers with the Finance team without breaking a sweat.
- Trait: Pragmatic
- Desc: You know when the architect's 'perfect' vision must be value-engineered to meet the 'good enough' reality of the budget and schedule. You're not afraid to make tough calls for the greater good of the project.
- Trait: Unflappable
- Desc: You remain calm, cool, and analytical when a major issue arises on site – think a crane failure, a major subcontractor default, or discovering unexpected ground conditions. You're the eye of the storm, focusing on solutions.
Primary Motivators
- Motivator: Seeing Tangible Results
- Daily: You get a real buzz from seeing a building go from a blueprint to a physical structure. Walking onto a site and seeing progress, even small wins, genuinely excites you.
- Motivator: Solving Complex, Multi-faceted Problems
- Daily: You thrive on the challenge of untangling knotty issues that involve multiple parties, technical constraints, and financial implications. The messier the problem, the more engaged you are.
- Motivator: Leading and Developing Teams
- Daily: You enjoy guiding and mentoring your team of Project Managers, helping them grow their skills and navigate their own project challenges. Their success is genuinely important to you.
Potential Demotivators
Let's be real, this job isn't always glamorous. You'll often find yourself in 'Change Order Hell,' constantly battling General Contractors who submit a low bid and then try to make their profit through a relentless stream of change orders for work that was arguably in the original plans. You'll act as the mediator between a 'starchitect' who wants an award-winning design and a CFO who just wants a building that pencils out financially. There's nothing quite like the stomach-dropping moment you get a call that the excavation crew hit unmapped utilities, contaminated soil, or bedrock, instantly vaporising your contingency budget. And yes, internal business units can sometimes treat the projects team like an external vendor, constantly changing their minds on requirements long after key decisions (and purchases) have been made. Prepare for 'Permitting Purgatory,' where a multi-million pound project gets held up for months by a municipal inspector's interpretation of an obscure building code clause. Finally, the maddening reality is that completing the final 5% – the punch list and getting all the closeout documents from contractors – can sometimes take as long as the previous 50% of the work. If you need every piece of your work to be perfectly clean and straightforward, you'll struggle here.
Common Frustrations
- The constant 'Change Order Game' with contractors trying to claw back profit margins.
- Mediating between ambitious design visions and strict financial realities.
- Discovering unforeseen site conditions that blow budgets and schedules.
- Internal clients changing requirements late in the game, after major commitments are made.
- Projects being held up indefinitely by bureaucratic permitting processes.
- The tedious, drawn-out process of closing out projects and getting final documentation.
What Role Doesn't Offer
- A predictable, 9-to-5 routine with no urgent requests.
- A role where you only deal with internal teams; external negotiation is constant.
- Complete autonomy without needing to justify decisions to senior leadership or finance.
- A job where you're never accountable for things outside your direct control (e.g., weather delays, material shortages).
ADHD Positives
- The fast-paced, dynamic nature of managing multiple complex projects can be highly engaging and stimulating, tapping into hyperfocus.
- Excellent at crisis management and rapid problem-solving when unexpected issues arise on site, often seeing solutions others miss.
- The need to jump between different tasks and challenges throughout the day can align well with a preference for variety.
ADHD Challenges and Accommodations
- Maintaining meticulous documentation and tracking hundreds of small details can be a real challenge; we can offer robust project management software with automated reminders and templates.
- Long, detailed meetings can be difficult to focus on; we encourage shorter, action-oriented meetings and provide clear agendas and summaries.
- Prioritising effectively when multiple 'urgent' issues arise; we can help with structured prioritisation frameworks and a supportive leadership team for guidance.
Dyslexia Positives
- Often strong visual-spatial reasoning, which is fantastic for understanding architectural drawings, site layouts, and complex project plans.
- Excellent at 'big picture' strategic thinking and identifying patterns or connections that others might miss in detailed reports.
- Strong verbal communication and negotiation skills, which are crucial for stakeholder management and resolving disputes.
Dyslexia Challenges and Accommodations
- Reading and producing lengthy technical reports, contracts, and legal documents can be demanding; we can provide access to text-to-speech software and offer support for proofreading key documents.
- Filling out detailed forms or managing extensive RFI/submittal logs; our digital platforms (Procore, Aconex) have features to simplify data entry, and we encourage the use of templates.
- We can offer assistive technologies and a culture where asking for a second pair of eyes on written communications is normal and encouraged.
Autism Positives
- Exceptional ability to focus on detail and identify discrepancies in plans, budgets, or contracts, which is invaluable in preventing costly errors.
- A logical and systematic approach to problem-solving, which is ideal for breaking down complex project challenges into manageable steps.
- Strong adherence to processes and procedures (like stage-gate governance), ensuring consistency and compliance across projects.
Autism Challenges and Accommodations
- Navigating complex social dynamics and unspoken political currents with diverse stakeholders (contractors, clients, municipal officials) can be taxing; we foster a direct and transparent communication culture and offer coaching on stakeholder engagement strategies.
- Unexpected changes or disruptions on site can be stressful; we aim for clear communication about changes as early as possible and provide structured support for adapting plans.
- Sensory overload in busy construction environments; we can discuss flexible working arrangements where possible and ensure access to quiet spaces for focused work or recovery.
Sensory Considerations
The role will involve regular site visits, which can be noisy, dusty, and visually stimulating environments. Our main office is typically a modern, open-plan space with some dedicated quiet zones. Social interaction is frequent, both in person and via video calls, often with multiple participants. We try to keep things calm, but construction sites are inherently dynamic.
Flexibility Notes
We're open to discussing flexible working patterns, particularly around office-based work, to help you perform at your best. Site visits are non-negotiable, but the timing of some administrative tasks can be adjusted.
Key Responsibilities
Experience Levels Responsibilities
- Level: Lead Chief Projects Officer (Level 4)
- Responsibilities: Define the overall strategy and execution plan for major capital projects (typically £50M+) or a portfolio of related projects, ensuring alignment with our long-term business objectives. This isn't just about managing; it's about setting the direction.
- Build and lead a high-performing team of Project Managers and Assistant Project Managers. That means hiring the right people, setting clear expectations, and providing ongoing mentorship and development. You're accountable for their success, not just your own.
- Accountable for the end-to-end delivery of your assigned programmes, including budget control (up to £500K in direct authority), schedule adherence, quality standards, and safety performance. If it goes wrong, the buck stops with you.
- Architect complex procurement strategies, selecting the right contracting models (e.g., Design-Build, CM at Risk) for individual projects to optimise risk, cost, and schedule. You'll lead the negotiation of major contracts with GCs and key suppliers.
- Influence senior internal stakeholders (VPs, Business Unit Heads) and external partners (municipalities, investors) to secure necessary approvals, resources, and buy-in. You'll be the primary point of contact for programme-level communications and escalations.
- Drive value engineering initiatives across your projects, challenging design assumptions and identifying significant cost-saving opportunities without compromising essential functionality or long-term operational efficiency. This often means tough conversations.
- Develop and implement robust risk management frameworks specific to your programmes, proactively identifying potential issues (e.g., supply chain, regulatory, environmental) and putting credible mitigation plans in place. No surprises, please.
- Supervision: You'll operate with a high degree of autonomy on execution, with monthly strategic alignment meetings with the Director of Projects. The expectation is that you're defining the 'how' and much of the 'what' for your programmes.
- Decision: You have full decision authority within your domain for project execution, including technical decisions, methodology choices, and day-to-day resource allocation. You can approve budget expenditure up to £500K for project-related costs and have hiring authority for your direct reports. Any significant changes to programme scope, budget beyond variance thresholds, or major strategic shifts require consultation with the Director of Projects and potentially the VP, Capital Projects.
- Success: Success here means your programmes consistently deliver against their financial and schedule targets, your team is growing and performing well, and you're seen as a trusted, influential leader by both internal and external parties. Ultimately, it's about delivering high-quality assets that contribute significantly to the company's bottom line.
Decision-Making Authority
- Type: Project Methodology Selection (e.g., Design-Bid-Build vs. Design-Build)
- Entry: Propose options to Project Manager.
- Mid: Recommend preferred option to Senior Project Manager, with justification.
- Senior: Lead the analysis and make the final decision, consulting with Director of Projects for strategic alignment.
- Type: Major Contractor Selection (e.g., General Contractor for a £50M+ project)
- Entry: Assist with bid package preparation and initial review.
- Mid: Evaluate bids, participate in interviews, provide recommendations to Senior Project Manager.
- Senior: Lead the entire procurement process, negotiate terms, and make the final selection, with approval from Director of Projects.
- Type: Programme Budget Reallocation (within approved overall budget)
- Entry: No authority; flag potential overruns to Project Manager.
- Mid: Recommend reallocations within a single project's budget to Senior Project Manager.
- Senior: Full authority to reallocate funds between projects within your programme, up to £500K, ensuring overall programme budget adherence. Larger reallocations or budget increases require Director approval.
- Type: Hiring for Project Manager roles
- Entry: No involvement.
- Mid: Participate in interviews for Assistant Project Manager roles.
- Senior: Full hiring authority for Project Managers and Assistant Project Managers within your team, in consultation with HR and the Director of Projects.
ID:
Tool: Automated Bid Levelling
Benefit: AI analyses multiple contractor bids, normalising them into a single, easy-to-read, apples-to-apples comparison sheet. It automatically flags scope gaps, outlier pricing, and risky exclusions, saving you from hours of manual spreadsheet work. Time Saved: 8-10 hours per tender.
ID:
Tool: Generative Design for Space Planning
Benefit: Before you even brief an architect, AI can generate hundreds of test-fit floor plans based on your constraints – think headcount, department adjacencies, natural light requirements, and even construction cost estimates. This allows for rapid scenario analysis in early-stage feasibility. Time Saved: 2-3 weeks in early-stage feasibility.
ID: ⚖️
Tool: Risk Identification via Document Analysis
Benefit: Imagine AI scanning geotechnical reports, environmental surveys, and municipal zoning codes for you. It identifies and flags potential risks like soil instability, protected species, or height restrictions that could impact project cost and schedule, giving you an early warning system. Time Saved: 20-30 hours of manual review per project.
ID: ✍️
Tool: Executive Summary Automation
Benefit: Connect AI to your Procore and Yardi APIs, and it can draft weekly project status summaries for your executive stakeholders. It synthesises budget status, schedule progress, key risks, and upcoming milestones into a concise, ready-to-send narrative. Time Saved: 2-4 hours per week.
15-25 hours weekly
Weekly time savings potential
Access to 4 core AI tools, with more in development.
Typical tool investment
Competency Requirements
Foundation Skills (Transferable)
These are the core skills that underpin everything you do. They're not just 'nice-to-haves'; they're essential for navigating the complex world of real estate projects and leading teams effectively. We're looking for someone who can not only talk the talk but genuinely walk the walk.
- Category: Communication & Influence
- Skills: Advanced Negotiation: You can secure favourable terms with contractors, resolve disputes, and manage expectations with demanding clients, often in high-stakes situations. It's about finding win-win (or at least acceptable) outcomes.
- Executive Presentation: You can distil complex project information into clear, concise, and compelling presentations for senior leadership and external partners. You're comfortable fielding tough questions and defending your positions.
- Stakeholder Management: You're adept at identifying, engaging, and managing the diverse interests of internal business units, external consultants, municipal authorities, and community groups. It's like being a political diplomat.
- Category: Problem-Solving & Strategic Thinking
- Skills: Complex Problem Deconstruction: You can break down ambiguous, multi-faceted project challenges (e.g., unforeseen site conditions, major regulatory changes) into solvable components, even when there's no clear playbook.
- Strategic Trade-off Analysis: You're skilled at evaluating competing priorities (cost, schedule, quality, risk) and making informed decisions that optimise for the overall programme objectives, not just individual project elements.
- Risk Anticipation & Mitigation: You don't just react to problems; you proactively identify potential risks across your programmes and develop robust, actionable mitigation strategies before they become critical issues.
- Category: Leadership & Team Development
- Skills: Team Building & Mentorship: You can recruit, develop, and retain a high-performing team of Project Managers. You know how to delegate effectively, provide constructive feedback, and foster a culture of accountability and continuous improvement.
- Conflict Resolution: You're able to mediate disagreements within your team, between contractors, or with stakeholders, finding constructive paths forward and de-escalating tense situations.
- Performance Management: You set clear performance goals, conduct regular reviews, and address underperformance decisively, ensuring your team is always operating at its best.
- Category: Adaptability & Resilience
- Skills: Navigating Ambiguity: You're comfortable working in situations where information is incomplete or requirements are shifting. You can create clarity out of chaos and guide your team through uncertainty.
- Pressure Management: You remain calm and effective under significant pressure, such as tight deadlines, budget crises, or major on-site emergencies. You're the steady hand when things get turbulent.
- Learning Agility: You're quick to pick up new technologies, methodologies, and market trends, applying them to improve project delivery and organisational processes.
Functional Skills (Role-Specific Technical)
These are the specific tools, methodologies, and knowledge areas that you'll be using day-in, day-out. We're looking for someone who's not just familiar with these but has genuinely deep experience in applying them to real-world projects.
Technical Competencies
- Skill: Capital Project Lifecycle Management
- Desc: Mastery of the full process from initial feasibility studies, site acquisition, due diligence, design development, procurement, construction, commissioning, and operational handover. You've seen it all, from start to finish, multiple times.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Stage-Gate / Phase-Gate Governance (e.g., RIBA Plan of Work)
- Desc: You can implement and enforce rigorous review processes at the end of each project phase. This ensures financial discipline and alignment with strategic objectives before we commit further capital. You know how to make these gates effective, not just bureaucratic.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: Value Engineering (VE)
- Desc: You can lead structured workshops to challenge design assumptions and identify significant cost-saving alternatives without compromising essential functionality, safety, or long-term operational efficiency. This often means difficult conversations, but you're adept at them.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Analysis
- Desc: You champion a mindset beyond initial construction cost (CapEx) to model and make decisions based on the full lifecycle cost, including utilities, maintenance, and eventual decommissioning (OpEx). You understand the long-term financial implications of every decision.
- Level: Advanced
- Skill: Procurement Strategy (e.g., Design-Bid-Build vs. Design-Build vs. CM at Risk)
- Desc: Deep expertise in selecting the appropriate contracting model for a given project based on risk tolerance, schedule pressure, and design complexity. You know the pros and cons of each and can justify your choice.
- Level: Expert
- Skill: Workplace Strategy & Space Planning
- Desc: You can use data from IWMS systems and employee feedback to design and manage physical spaces that optimise for productivity, collaboration, and efficiency, especially in a hybrid work environment. You understand how space impacts people.
- Level: Intermediate
Digital Tools
- Tool: Procore / Autodesk Construction Cloud / Oracle Aconex
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: You'll be configuring workflows, managing programme-level budgets, overseeing RFI/submittal processes, and training your team on best practices within these platforms. You can troubleshoot issues and extract complex reports.
- Tool: Yardi Voyager / MRI Software / SAP S/4HANA (RE-FX Module)
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: You'll manage property and asset data related to your projects, build custom financial reports for programme analysis, and perform complex reconciliations with the Finance team. You understand the financial implications within the ERP.
- Tool: Archibus / Planon / Trimble ManhattanONE (CAFM / IWMS)
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: You'll configure preventative maintenance schedules for new assets, manage space planning scenarios for new developments, and use these systems to inform long-term workplace strategies. You understand the operational handover.
- Tool: Autodesk Revit / Navisworks / Bluebeam Revu (BIM & Design)
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: You'll coordinate models from different disciplines, run clash detection reports in Navisworks to identify design conflicts early, and ensure your team is effectively using Bluebeam for drawing mark-ups and collaboration. You set the BIM standards for your projects.
- Tool: Power BI / Tableau
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: You'll connect data sources (Procore, Yardi, etc.) and build custom dashboards to provide programme-level insights on budget, schedule, and risk. You'll present these analytics to senior leadership.
- Tool: Anaplan / Argus Enterprise (Financial Planning)
- Level: Advanced
- Usage: You'll build complex development models in Argus, run detailed sensitivity analyses in Anaplan for your programmes, and use these tools to justify capital allocation decisions to Finance and investors.
- Tool: Diligent / BoardVantage (Board Reporting)
- Level: Intermediate
- Usage: You'll prepare data, charts, and narrative sections for inclusion in board packs, ensuring accuracy and clarity for high-level review. You understand what the board needs to see.
Industry Knowledge
- Area: UK Planning & Building Regulations
- Desc: Deep understanding of the relevant planning policies, building codes, and environmental regulations that impact real estate development and facilities management in the UK. You know how to navigate the bureaucratic maze.
- Area: Construction Law & Contracts
- Desc: Solid grasp of standard UK construction contracts (e.g., JCT, NEC) and the legal implications of change orders, delays, and disputes. You can work effectively with legal counsel to protect our interests.
- Area: Sustainable Development Practices
- Desc: Knowledge of green building certifications (e.g., BREEAM, LEED), sustainable materials, and energy-efficient design principles. You can integrate these into project briefs and ensure compliance.
Regulatory Compliance Regulations
- Reg: Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 (CDM 2015)
- Usage: You'll ensure full compliance across all projects within your programmes, acting as the client's representative to ensure health and safety duties are met from concept to completion. You'll ensure Principal Designers and Principal Contractors are appointed and fulfilling their roles.
- Reg: Building Regulations 2010 (as amended)
- Usage: You'll ensure all designs and construction methods comply with the latest UK Building Regulations, working closely with building control bodies and approved inspectors to secure necessary approvals and sign-offs for your projects.
- Reg: Environmental Permitting Regulations
- Usage: You'll understand when environmental permits are required for specific construction activities (e.g., waste management, water discharge) and ensure your project teams secure and adhere to these, working with specialist consultants.
Essential Prerequisites
- Proven experience leading large-scale capital projects or programmes (£50M+), ideally within commercial real estate development or complex facilities upgrades.
- A strong track record of successfully managing project budgets, schedules, and risks, demonstrating a clear understanding of financial implications.
- Demonstrable experience leading and mentoring project teams, fostering a collaborative and high-performance culture.
- Extensive experience with various procurement strategies and contract negotiation, specifically within the UK construction market.
- The ability to influence senior stakeholders and external parties, even when faced with competing priorities or challenging demands.
Career Pathway Context
To step into this Lead role, you won't just have managed projects; you'll have owned them, probably several significant ones, and started to guide others. You'll have seen enough to know what usually goes wrong and how to prevent it. This isn't a role for someone who needs daily hand-holding; you're expected to be the expert in the room.
Qualifications & Credentials
Emerging Foundation Skills
- Skill: Digital Twin Integration & Management
- Why: Digital twins are moving beyond just pretty models to become operational tools. They're going to fundamentally change how we monitor, maintain, and optimise our buildings post-completion. Project leaders need to understand how to build and hand over these 'living' models.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Data Handover Protocols', 'description': 'Understanding what data needs to be captured during design and construction to populate an effective digital twin for operational use.'}, {'concept_name': 'Real-time Sensor Integration', 'description': 'How to plan for and integrate IoT sensors for real-time performance monitoring (energy, occupancy, air quality).'}, {'concept_name': 'Predictive Maintenance Modelling', 'description': 'Using digital twin data to forecast equipment failures and optimise maintenance schedules, moving from reactive to proactive.'}, {'concept_name': 'Scenario Planning & Simulation', 'description': 'Using the twin to simulate changes (e.g., space reconfigurations, energy upgrades) before physical implementation.'}]
- Prepare: This month: Read up on industry case studies for digital twin implementation in facilities management. Understand the 'why'.
- Next quarter: Seek out a vendor demo of a leading digital twin platform (e.g., Willow, Siemens Mindsphere) and understand its capabilities.
- Month 4-6: Identify a pilot project within your programme where you can implement basic digital twin data capture and handover requirements.
- Month 7-9: Work with our Facilities Management team to understand their data needs for a digital twin and tailor your project's data outputs.
- QuickWin: Start by mandating structured data handover requirements (e.g., asset registers, warranty information) on your current projects that are compatible with future digital twin platforms. It's about thinking ahead.
- Skill: ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) Project Leadership
- Why: Investors, regulators, and tenants are increasingly demanding sustainable and socially responsible real estate. Project leaders aren't just building structures; they're delivering assets that meet stringent ESG criteria. This isn't optional anymore; it's a core expectation.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Carbon Footprint Measurement & Reduction', 'description': 'Understanding how to calculate embodied carbon in materials and operational carbon, and strategies to reduce both throughout the project lifecycle.'}, {'concept_name': 'Circular Economy Principles', 'description': "Applying concepts of 'design for disassembly', material reuse, and waste reduction in construction projects."}, {'concept_name': 'Social Value Creation', 'description': 'Integrating community engagement, local employment, and supply chain diversity into project planning and delivery.'}, {'concept_name': 'ESG Reporting Standards', 'description': "Knowing the key metrics and frameworks for reporting on a project's ESG performance (e.g., GRESB, TCFD)."}]
- Prepare: This month: Review our company's current ESG targets and understand how your projects contribute (or could contribute more).
- Next quarter: Attend a webinar or short course on BREEAM or LEED certification processes to deepen your understanding of green building standards.
- Month 4-6: Challenge your design teams to propose at least two significant carbon reduction initiatives for an upcoming project.
- Month 7-9: Work with Procurement to identify local, sustainable suppliers and set targets for social value in your contracts.
- QuickWin: Start by asking your design and construction teams for a 'carbon budget' alongside the financial budget for your next major project. Just asking the question starts the conversation.
Advancing Technical Skills
- Skill: Advanced Data Analytics & Predictive Modelling
- Why: We're drowning in project data, but often starved for insights. The ability to use advanced analytics to predict project delays, cost overruns, or even maintenance needs before they happen will be a game-changer. This moves you from reactive to truly proactive.
- Concepts: [{'concept_name': 'Machine Learning for Risk Prediction', 'description': 'Understanding how ML models can analyse historical project data to forecast potential issues (e.g., contractor performance, material price fluctuations).'}, {'concept_name': 'Prescriptive Analytics', 'description': "Moving beyond 'what happened' to 'what should we do' based on data-driven recommendations."}, {'concept_name': 'Data Governance & Quality', 'description': 'Ensuring the data collected from various project systems (Procore, ERP) is clean, consistent, and reliable for analysis.'}, {'concept_name': 'Visualisation for Decision Making', 'description': 'Creating compelling dashboards and reports that clearly communicate complex analytical insights to non-technical stakeholders.'}]
- Prepare: This month: Get more familiar with Power BI or Tableau. Try to build one dashboard that integrates data from two different project systems.
- Next quarter: Explore online courses or resources on predictive analytics fundamentals, focusing on real estate or construction applications.
- Month 4-6: Work with our IT or Data Science team (if we have one) to identify a specific project problem that could benefit from predictive modelling.
- Month 7-9: Lead a small pilot project to implement a predictive model for a specific risk, like subcontractor default or schedule slippage.
- QuickWin: Start demanding better quality data from your project teams and contractors. Emphasise the 'why' – that better data now means better insights and fewer problems later.
Future Skills Closing Note
The reality is, the tools will always change. Your job isn't to be the expert in every single piece of software, but to understand its potential, guide your teams in its use, and ensure we're adopting technologies that genuinely add value to our projects and our business. It's about being a strategic technologist, not just a user.
Education Requirements
- Level: Minimum
- Req: A Bachelor's degree (or equivalent) in Construction Management, Civil Engineering, Architecture, Quantity Surveying, or a related field.
- Alts: We're pragmatic here. If you've got extensive, demonstrable experience (15+ years) in leading major capital projects and a strong track record, we'll consider that equivalent to a degree. It's about what you can do, not just the paper you hold.
- Level: Preferred
- Req: A Master's degree in Project Management, Real Estate Development, or an MBA.
- Alts: While not essential, these can certainly give you an edge, especially in understanding the broader business and financial context of our projects.
Experience Requirements
You'll need at least 8-12 years of progressive experience in project management, with a significant portion of that time spent leading large, complex capital projects (typically £50M+) or managing a programme of multiple related projects within the real estate development or facilities management sector. We're looking for someone who has genuinely owned the full project lifecycle, from concept to completion, and has experience managing direct reports.
Preferred Certifications
- Cert: RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors) Chartership
- Prod: RICS
- Usage: This shows a deep understanding of property and construction, and it's highly respected within the UK real estate industry. It signals a broad base of knowledge.
- Cert: CIOB (Chartered Institute of Building) Membership
- Prod: CIOB
- Usage: Membership demonstrates professional competence and commitment to construction management best practices. It's a strong indicator of your industry standing.
- Cert: APM Registered Project Professional (RPP)
- Prod: Association for Project Management (APM)
- Usage: This is a robust standard for senior project professionals in the UK, demonstrating a breadth of project management competence and leadership.
Recommended Activities
- Regularly attending industry conferences and seminars (e.g., RICS, CIOB, Property Week events) to stay current on market trends and best practices.
- Participating in leadership development programmes, especially those focused on influencing, negotiation, and strategic decision-making.
- Actively mentoring junior project professionals, both within our organisation and potentially through industry bodies.
- Engaging with professional networks and peer groups to share knowledge and benchmark our approaches against others.
Career Progression Pathways
Entry Paths to This Role
- Path: From Senior Project Manager (L3) within our organisation
- Time: Typically 2-4 years as a Senior Project Manager.
- Path: From a Lead Project Manager role at another major developer or construction firm
- Time: Direct entry, assuming 8-12 years of relevant experience.
- Path: From a specialist consultancy role (e.g., Development Manager, Cost Consultant)
- Time: Typically 3-5 years in a lead consultancy role, plus prior project management experience.
Career Progression From This Role
- Pathway: Director of Projects (Level 5)
- Time: Roughly 3-5 years in the Lead Chief Projects Officer role.
Long Term Vision Potential Roles
- Title: VP, Capital Projects / Head of Development (Level 6)
- Time: 5-10 years from this role.
- Title: Chief Projects Officer (CPO) / Chief Development Officer (CDO) (Level 7)
- Time: 10-15+ years from this role.
- Title: Head of Real Estate Portfolio Strategy
- Time: 7-12 years from this role.
Sector Mobility
The skills you'll gain in this role are highly transferable across the wider real estate sector. You could move into client-side development, work for a major construction firm, join a real estate investment fund, or even move into infrastructure projects. Your expertise in managing complex capital programmes is always in demand.
How Zavmo Delivers This Role's Development
DISCOVER Phase: Skills Gap Analysis
Zavmo maps your current competencies against all requirements in this job description through conversational assessment. We evaluate your foundation skills (communication, strategic thinking), functional skills (CRM expertise, negotiation), and readiness for career progression.
Output: Personalised skills gap heat map showing strengths and priorities, estimated time to competency, neurodiversity accommodations.
DISCUSS Phase: Personalised Learning Pathway
Based on your DISCOVER results, Zavmo creates a personalised learning plan prioritised by impact: foundation skills first, then functional skills. We adapt to your learning style, pace, and neurodiversity needs (ADHD, dyslexia, autism).
Output: Week-by-week schedule, each module linked to specific job responsibilities, checkpoints and milestones.
DELIVER Phase: Conversational Learning
Learn through conversation, not boring modules. Zavmo uses 10 conversation types (Socratic dialogue, role-play, coaching, case studies) to build competence. Practice difficult QBR presentations, negotiate tough renewals, and handle churn conversations in a safe AI environment before facing real clients.
Example: "For 'Stakeholder Mapping', Zavmo will guide you through analysing a complex enterprise account, identifying key decision-makers, and building an engagement strategy."
DEMONSTRATE Phase: Competency Assessment
Zavmo automatically builds your evidence portfolio as you learn. Every conversation, practice scenario, and application example is captured and mapped to NOS performance criteria. When ready, your portfolio supports OFQUAL qualification claims and demonstrates competence to employers.
Output: Competency matrix, evidence portfolio (downloadable), qualification readiness, career progression score.