Programme Leadership · Enterprise Scale
Enterprise Software · Programme Governance & Transformation · Most Recently Global Specialty Insurance
Most programme leads are still tracking velocity and formatting status updates. I’d rather know whether we’re building the right thing, catch the dependency that’s about to cascade across three product streams, and automate the mechanical work so I can focus on the decisions that actually matter. Most recently, I did exactly that across an 8-product portfolio, 2,000+ initiatives, and ~250 people — helping navigate a £50M acquisition in the process.
The Challenge
The board asks where programme X stands relative to the product strategy. You check three tools, email two PMs, and still aren’t sure.
A 2-week slip in one team cascades through three product streams. Nobody saw it coming because nobody was mapping cross-product dependencies.
Five product managers, five roadmaps, one shared platform team. No framework to arbitrate, so the loudest voice wins.
Beautifully presented plans that fall apart by sprint 3 because they were built on assumptions, not validated dependencies.
Steering committees that rubber-stamp updates. Risk registers nobody reads. Processes designed for auditors, not for delivery.
By the time it hits your desk, the options are damage control or delay. The early warning system doesn’t exist.
These aren’t failures of competence. They’re what happens when complex portfolios outgrow the informal coordination that got them this far.
The Approach
Every organisation I walk into has some version of these problems. The tooling is different, the politics are different, the maturity is different — but the root cause is usually the same: no single point of coordination with the authority and visibility to connect the dots.
I build that function. I assess what exists, identify the structural gaps, and put governance in place that people actually follow — because it helps them, not because a process document says they should.
What governance exists, what’s informal, what’s missing. Where the real dependencies live versus where people think they are.
Build the coordination framework — steering cadence, dependency mapping, prioritisation mechanisms, executive reporting that drives decisions.
Automate the mechanical work. Measure what matters. Continuously improve the system based on what the data is telling us, not what the last audit said.
What This Delivers
2,000+ initiatives mapped with full upstream and downstream traceability across an 8-product portfolio. The kind of visibility that catches a cascade before it starts.
Health scoring, schedule delta, and focus areas — not traffic-light dashboards that tell leadership what they want to hear. Built to surface what matters, not what looks good.
Commitments grounded in validated dependencies and realistic capacity. But more than that — every initiative tied to a measurable benefit, so when priorities shift or scope creeps, there’s a clear basis to ask: are we still building the right thing? Keeping delivery aligned to the mission, not just the plan.
Who’s working on what, when, and why — across ~250 resources and multiple product streams. Single points of failure identified before they matter, not after someone hands in their notice.
Built a Global Steering Committee from scratch — still running, still relied on. Not a box-ticking exercise but the decision-making backbone of an 8-product portfolio. Robust enough to pass £50M acquisition due diligence, practical enough that people actually show up prepared.
90% of risks mitigated before escalation. Issue resolution time reduced from 2 months to 1 week. Early warnings, not fire drills.
Career Progression
2024 — 2026
Sapiens AdvantageGo · Global Specialty & P&C Insurance Software
Took ownership of programme governance across an 8-product portfolio for a global insurance software vendor — building the coordination function from scratch during a period that included a £50M acquisition and transformation from unrated to Everest Group Leader status.
2020 — 2024
Ingersoll Rand · Global Industrial Manufacturing
Led comprehensive enterprise CRM transformation and operational excellence programme across multi-site service operation following acquisition integration.
2017 — 2020
Harrier Pneumatics Ltd
Recruited to drive comprehensive digital transformation of a traditional paper-based operation. Full technology adoption, process re-engineering, and commercial growth strategy.
2013 — 2017
Atlas Copco (Multibrands) · Global Industrial Manufacturing
Progressive career advancement through technical and operational roles, culminating in leadership of nationwide ERP transformation programme.
Testimonials
Daniel is not merely competent — he is the calibre of individual around whom you can build an entire operational function.
Chief Product Officer, Sapiens AdvantageGo
Dan makes the difficult look easy. He is reliable, insightful, and deeply committed to delivering quality.
Global Head of Design
He translated complex project data into clear insights. Reliable, patient, and very skilled, he made a big difference in how we tracked and improved project outcomes.
Senior Data Scientist, Aays
Beyond Programme Management
After years of coordinating complex portfolios with tools that were never designed for the job, I stopped waiting for the right platform to exist and started building it. PRAXIS is a programme intelligence platform — it encodes my methodology into a knowledge graph, ingests live project data, and surfaces the dependencies, bottlenecks, and risks that traditional PM tools fundamentally can’t see.
62 specialised tools that interrogate real project data. Not a chatbot with your plan pasted in — structured analysis that traces dependency chains, simulates delays, and explains findings in plain English.
Programme data isn’t spreadsheet data — it’s connected. PRAXIS uses a graph database to model relationships between initiatives, resources, dependencies, and risks the way they actually exist.
Connect
Open to senior programme leadership opportunities in enterprise software — particularly where complexity has outgrown the current coordination model. If that sounds familiar, I’d welcome the conversation.
dan.elliot.taylor@gmail.com