Data, Trust and Decision-Making – Reflections from the BIG Book Club
May 15, 2026Prioritisation – the trojan horse for better strategy delivery?
May 29, 2026Accountability Is Not What Most Organisations Think It Is
Introduction
Accountability is one of the most discussed concepts in organisational life, yet one of the least well understood.
Most organisations talk about accountability constantly:
- leaders ask for more of it
- governance frameworks depend upon it
- strategies assume it
- performance reviews attempt to measure it.
Yet many organisations simultaneously create the very conditions that make accountability difficult to sustain.
Why?
Because accountability is often misunderstood as:
- blame
- hierarchy
- reporting
- performance management
- or simply “who owns what”.
Most people are not unwilling to be accountable. They are unwilling to be personally exposed in environments where accountability is ambiguous, leadership reactions are unpredictable, & raising concerns carries more risk than reward.
BIG Book Club – Accountability Session – 9th June 7.30 PM UK
You should consider attending this session because it will help you move beyond the usual, narrow view of accountability as blame, reporting or ownership and explore it instead as a practical organisational capability that enables strategy to be delivered coherently. The discussion will connect accountability to governance, prioritisation, information, leadership, support and assurance, showing why so many organisations struggle to make it real and what needs to change to improve delivery, decision-making and strategic control. It should be particularly valuable if you are interested in how integrated governance can create clearer authority, better prioritisation, stronger decision support and more sustainable outcomes in complex organisations.
Intrigued? Read on….
The BIG View: Accountability as a Strategic Capability
The BIG Framework takes a fundamentally different view.

From a BIG perspective, accountability is not simply a personal attribute or management mechanism.
It is a structural and operational capability that must be deliberately enabled, supported and sustained across the organisation.
Without that capability, strategy delivery becomes fragmented, political, reactive and far harder to steer.
Why Traditional Accountability Breaks Down
One of the biggest misconceptions about accountability is that it is primarily a private matter between an individual and their boss.
That view may work for isolated tasks; it does not work in complex organisations.
Modern organisations operate through interconnected objectives, shared resources, competing priorities, cross-functional dependencies, products, projects, services and governance forums. Outcomes rarely depend upon one person acting alone.
In practice, accountability is deeply connected to:
- governance
- prioritisation
- authority
- resource allocation
- information quality
- escalation mechanisms
- leadership behaviour
- and organisational structure.

This is why the BIG Principles position accountability as one of the foundational building blocks of integrated governance.
The BIG Body of Knowledge states:
“The organisation has clear points of accountability to enable an accountable culture and to provide the building blocks of integrated governance.”
That is a very important distinction.
Governance is not separate from accountability; it is one of the means by which accountability is made real.
Real Accountability Requires Empowerment and Prioritisation
Many organisations unintentionally create accountability environments that are impossible to sustain.
People are held accountable for outcomes while:
- priorities constantly change
- resources are insufficient
- authority is unclear
- dependencies are unmanaged
- information is unreliable
- or decisions are endlessly escalated.
In such environments, accountability simply becomes a poison chalice.
The BIG Framework challenges this directly through another of its core principles:
“Those accountable are empowered.”

This is a far more demanding proposition than traditional governance thinking.
BIG defines accountability as requiring:
- clarity of objective(s)
- authority
- leadership access
- prioritised funding and resources
- information
- and governance support.
In other words: if people are expected to deliver outcomes, the organisation must deliberately create the conditions that make accountable delivery realistically possible.
This is where modern strategy execution and portfolio platforms can add real value by exposing hidden dependencies, overloaded portfolios, conflicting objectives, fragmented priorities and gaps between strategic intent and operational execution. But technology is only an enabler: it is most effective when organisations are willing to address the underlying governance and accountability questions as well.
Prioritisation Makes Accountability Possible
One of the clearest practical realities of accountability is that organisations cannot successfully hold people accountable for everything simultaneously.
Where:
- everything is urgent
- all projects are priority one
- objectives conflict
- or leadership avoids trade-off decisions
accountability rapidly collapses.
This typically shows up as overloaded teams, endless escalation, political resource battles, delivery slippage and “loudest voice” decision making. The issue is rarely effort alone; it is more often a lack of integrated prioritisation and governance.
BIG therefore treats prioritisation not as a standalone portfolio exercise, but as a core governance responsibility required to enable accountability across:
- Business as Usual
- Value Generation
- and Change.
This is one reason why prioritisation technologies and decision-support approaches are gaining traction. They help organisations align initiatives to strategic objectives, compare competing demands consistently, visualise dependencies, improve resource balancing and raise the quality and speed of governance decisions.
Without prioritisation:
- resources cannot be balanced
- authority becomes unclear
- trade-offs remain hidden
- and accountability becomes unfair.
Governance Is an Operating Mechanism
Many organisations still treat governance as something applied on top of delivery:
- meetings
- reporting packs
- committees
- approvals
- compliance processes.
BIG challenges this assumption strongly.
Governance and accountability are not administrative overlays. They are operational mechanisms through which organisations:
- steer
- prioritise
- allocate
- escalate
- rebalance
- forecast
- decide
- and sustain strategy delivery.
This is one reason the BIG Framework evolved the concept of Accountability Nodes. An Accountability Node is not simply a box on an organisation chart.

It represents:
- a governance operating point
- with defined authority
- agenda
- information needs
- cadence
- decision responsibilities
- escalation paths
- support requirements
- and assurance touchpoints.
This creates a much richer and more practical model for governance operation.
Information, Support and Assurance Enable Accountability
Another major misconception is that accountability is primarily a people issue. In reality, it is also an information issue.
People cannot effectively steer delivery, prioritise work or make informed decisions if:
- data is fragmented
- forecasts are unreliable
- dependencies are hidden
- resource allocations are unclear
- or benefit progress cannot be measured.
This is why the BIG Principles establish a connected chain:
- Data underpins information
- Information underpins governance, accountability and assurance
This is far more significant than simply “reporting”.

BIG argues for integrated, reliable, navigable management information capable of supporting:
- governance forums
- decision making
- prioritisation
- forecasting
- escalation
- assurance
- and strategic steering.
This is another area where governance and strategy delivery technologies are evolving rapidly, moving beyond static dashboards toward connected operational intelligence, relationship mapping, integrated governance visibility, AI-assisted analysis and more dynamic strategy execution models. Some technologies increasingly support aspects of this operational governance model:
- strategy management platforms connecting objectives to initiatives and measures
- prioritisation engines helping govern investment choices
- graph and relationship technologies exposing dependencies and obligations
- integrated portfolio and operational management environments
- and executive insight tools capable of traversing relationships between strategy, delivery, risk and outcomes.
These technologies become most powerful when they support an integrated governance operating model rather than isolated reporting functions.
Further information on strategy delivery and governance-related solution providers explored through BIG CIC is available here:
Orchestration and Support Sustain Accountability
However, even the best technologies still depend upon:
- governance clarity
- accountability clarity
- disciplined operating cadence
- and trusted data foundations.
Another distinctive BIG perspective is that governance does not happen by itself.
- Someone must orchestrate governance cycles
- support decision making
- coordinate information flows
- maintain data integrity
- support prioritisation processes
- operate governance forums
- and sustain governance capability over time.
This is why Business Support becomes such an important component within the BIG Framework.
Business Support is not viewed simply as administration. It is part of the operational machinery that enables governance and accountability to function coherently.
Likewise, Assurance is not merely retrospective audit activity. Independent assurance provides:
- confidence
- challenge
- validation
- learning
- and checks and balances across governance operations.
As governance technologies mature, organisations will increasingly need:
- governance orchestration capability
- integrated support functions
- data stewardship
- assurance integration
- and operational governance leadership
to make effective use of those technologies. (These topics will be explored in more detail in future BIG sessions.)
Leadership Creates the Conditions for Accountability
Ultimately, accountability is cultural as well as structural. Leaders determine whether accountability becomes:
- empowering or punitive
- transparent or political
- coordinated or fragmented
- adaptive or defensive.
The BIG Principles therefore include: “Lifetime executive sponsorship.”
This is not simply sponsorship of a project or governance initiative. It reflects the need for leadership across the organisation to:
- sustain governance capability
- reinforce organisational clarity
- support prioritisation
- provision integrated support functions
- enable information integration
- and create the emotional commitment necessary for integrated governance to survive operational pressure.
Technology cannot compensate for leadership avoidance of difficult trade-offs or fragmented governance behaviour.
Without leadership commitment, accountability often deteriorates into:
- fragmented reporting
- local optimisation
- political escalation
- and reactive decision making.
Conclusion: Accountability as a Strategic Capability
Perhaps the most important BIG insight is this: Accountability (i.e. Accountability Nodes)is not merely a management technique. It is a strategic organisational capability.
It exists to enable the organisation to:
- translate purpose into strategy
- strategy into objectives
- objectives into prioritised action
- and action into sustainable outcomes.
When governance, prioritisation, information, support, assurance, leadership and enabling technologies operate coherently together, accountability becomes far more than blame or supervision.
It becomes one of the core capabilities through which organisations translate intent into action and continue to steer themselves towards strategic goals in conditions of uncertainty, complexity and change.
If you would like to explore these ideas further, join us on 9 June 7.30 UK time for a BIG CIC discussion on accountability. As useful pre-reading, you may want to explore:
- how accountability is often perceived – and where the misconceptions begin – the misconceptions
- the concepts, principles and components in the BIG Body of Knowledge
- the wider ecosystem needed to make governance and accountability work reliably.
What Else?
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