PM Maturity · 6 min read

How to Benchmark Your PM Maturity in 10 Minutes

John O'Mahony 13 March 2026 6 min read
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Most manufacturing organisations believe their project management practices are more mature than they actually are. The team has templates, there’s a shared folder structure, someone runs a weekly status meeting. It feels like governance. But when you probe deeper — Who owns the risk register? When was it last updated? What triggers a phase gate review? — the answers often reveal significant gaps.

PM maturity benchmarking is the process of objectively assessing where your organisation sits on a defined capability scale — and identifying the specific gaps that are costing you time, budget, and delivery confidence.

The 5 Levels of PM Maturity

Most maturity models (including those aligned to PMBOK® and ISO 21502) use a five-level scale. Here’s what each level looks like in a manufacturing context:

LevelNameWhat It Looks Like in Manufacturing
1Ad-hocNo formal PM processes. Success depends on heroic individuals. Project outcomes are unpredictable. No portfolio visibility.
2DevelopingTemplates exist but aren’t consistently used. Excel is the primary PM tool. Some projects follow process, others don’t. Status reports are reactive.
3DefinedStandardised processes are documented and broadly followed. Change control exists. Portfolio-level visibility is emerging. Some KPIs are tracked.
4ManagedProcesses are measured and actively monitored. Data drives decisions. Proactive risk management is standard. Portfolio KPIs are reported to leadership.
5OptimisingContinuous improvement is embedded. Lessons learned are systematically applied. PM innovation is encouraged. Predictive analytics inform decisions.

The Level 2 trap: Many teams mistake documentation for maturity. Having a risk template is Level 2. Having a risk register that’s updated weekly, reviewed at phase gates, and actively used to prioritise decisions is Level 4.

The 12 Dimensions You Need to Assess

A rigorous PM maturity assessment evaluates capability across all PMBOK® knowledge domains:

  1. Integration Management — How well are project components coordinated?
  2. Scope Management — How rigorously is scope defined, documented, and controlled?
  3. Schedule Management — Are project timelines realistic, tracked, and maintained?
  4. Cost Management — Is budget planned at granular level and tracked against actuals?
  5. Quality Management — Are quality gates and inspections systematically applied?
  6. Resource Management — Is resource allocation planned, not reactive?
  7. Communications Management — Are stakeholder comms structured and tracked?
  8. Risk Management — Is risk identification proactive and mitigation actions assigned?
  9. Procurement Management — Are supplier/contractor relationships formally governed?
  10. Stakeholder Management — Are key stakeholders mapped and their engagement tracked?
  11. Governance — Are phase gates, decision authorities, and escalation paths defined?
  12. Lessons Learned — Are retrospectives held and insights systematically captured?
67%
of PMOs self-assess at Level 3 or above
38%
actually demonstrate Level 3 practices on audit
2.5x
more projects on time at Level 4 vs Level 2

How to Run a Quick Diagnostic

For each of the 12 dimensions above, ask four yes/no questions:

Total possible: 48 points. Score of 0–12 = Level 1–2, 13–24 = Level 2–3, 25–36 = Level 3–4, 37–48 = Level 4–5. Most teams score lower than they expect.

Take the free 10-minute PM Maturity Assessment

Benchmark your team across 12 PMBOK® domains. Get an instant score, visual radar chart, and personalised improvement plan — no email required to see your results.

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