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Implementing Microsoft Dynamics 365: Team Roles and Cadence

While methodology provides the framework, it's the people and their structured interactions that determine project success. For organizations implementing Dynamics 365, especially those scaling across regions or business units, a strong governance model isn't optional—it's essential. 
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This is the sixth in our series exploring key insights on implementation methodologies for Microsoft Dynamics 365. 

The Foundation of Project Success: People and Process 

While methodology provides the framework, it’s the people and their structured interactions that determine project success. “Leadership on these projects has to include leading cross-functional teams, coaching stakeholders, ensuring role clarity across project management, solution architects and consultants. And that’s a tall task, a tall order.” states Nash Simeunovic

For organizations implementing Dynamics 365 team roles and cadence matters, especially for those scaling across regions or business units, a strong governance model isn’t optional—it’s essential. 

Essential Delivery Roles 

There are five critical roles that form the backbone of successful Dynamics 365 implementations: 

Understanding the different Dynamics 365 team roles is crucial for effective collaboration and project success. The success of any implementation heavily relies on clearly defining these Dynamics 365 team roles and ensuring each individual understands their responsibilities. Additionally, recognizing the dynamics of these roles within the project contributes to a more efficient workflow.

1. Executive Sponsor 

Primary Responsibility: Owns the business case and ensures strategic alignment 

Organizations are typically getting onto the new ERP when they’re ready for growth or acquisition or when there’s a change coming. The executive sponsor must: 

  • Champion the initiative at the C-suite level 
  • Remove organizational obstacles 
  • Make critical business decisions quickly 
  • Ensure resource availability 
  • Maintain stakeholder alignment 

2. Project Manager 

rimary Responsibility: Owns delivery execution and reporting 

The PM and project management office are responsible for tracking, planning, and reporting. Key responsibilities include: 

  • Coordinating across workstreams 
  • Managing dependencies and risks 
  • Tracking budget and timeline 
  • Facilitating communication 
  • Escalating issues appropriately 

Many times, we see clients who outsource the PM role to a third party… That can work. However, it’s critical that we have a clear set of responsibilities and authority given to the PM. 

3. Solution Architect 

Primary Responsibility: Ensures cross-functional integrity 

Keeping solution architects engaged throughout the project is essential. “We tend to keep solution architects throughout the project, even if it’s just in the advisory role because they help us with the handoffs between the phases… no knowledge is then lost.” 

The solution architect: 

  • Designs the technical solution 
  • Ensures integration points work 
  • Validates architecture decisions 
  • Guides best practice adoption 
  • Manages technical debt 

4. Business SME (Subject Matter Expert) 

Primary Responsibility: Ensures solution meets operational needs 

The partnership between SMEs and consultants is critical: “Subject matter experts bring tons of internal business process knowledge. It’s key that these two sets of project team members actually start speaking the same language sooner than later.” 

Business SMEs must: 

  • Define business requirements 
  • Validate solution design 
  • Lead user acceptance testing 
  • Champion change management 
  • Train end users 

5. IT / Lead Developer 

Primary Responsibility: Manages system, code, and integrations 

The technical team ensures the solution is properly implemented, integrated, and maintained: 

  • Configure the system 
  • Develop custom code where necessary 
  • Manage integrations 
  • Ensure security compliance 
  • Support performance optimization 
Dynamics 365 Team Roles - Learn Why Cadence and Responsibilities Matters During Implementation

The Governance Cadence That Works 

There are three-tier governance rhythm that has proven successful across numerous implementations: 

Weekly: Workstream-Level Reviews 

Once a week there has to be a checkpoint. These operational meetings focus on: 

  • Progress against plan 
  • Immediate blockers 
  • Resource needs 
  • Risk identification 
  • Next week’s priorities 

Sometimes the stakeholder pops in to make sure they understand what’s going on, but these meetings primarily serve the implementation team. 

Biweekly: Cross-Functional PMO Alignment 

These sessions ensure different workstreams remain synchronized: 

  • Integration point validation 
  • Dependency management 
  • Resource reallocation 
  • Issue resolution 
  • Design consistency 

Monthly: Executive Steering Committee Updates 

These strategic sessions cover: 

  • Overall project health 
  • Budget and timeline status 
  • Major decision points 
  • Strategic alignment confirmation 
  • Business priority changes 

Critical Success Factors for Governance 

  • Clear Role Definition 
  • Authority Alignment 
  • Financial Transparency 
  • Dedicated Time Commitment 

Scaling for Complexity 

Governance needs vary by project type: 

Rapid Projects 

  • Simplified roles (possibly combined) 
  • Lighter touch governance 
  • Fewer formal checkpoints 

Standard Projects 

  • Full role separation 
  • Regular cadence adherence 
  • Structured reporting 

Enterprise Projects 

These require: 

  • Multiple sub-teams 
  • Regional governance structures 
  • Escalation hierarchies 
  • Executive oversight committees 

Early Indicators of Governance Success 

Strong governance shows: 

  • Consistent meeting attendance 
  • Clear decision ownership 
  • Timely issue resolution 
  • Transparent communication 
  • Engaged stakeholders 

The Ownership Transition 

One of our clients had a team in place and they devoted 50% of their time to the project and showed how responsibilities shifted over time. 

Key transition indicators: 

  • Clients can demo the solution 
  • Internal teams lead meetings 
  • Business owns decision-making 
  • Technical knowledge transfers complete 
  • Support processes established 

Making It Real 

Implementing governance should include: 

  1. Document Everything: “Use this slide to guide the conversation between a partner and a customer to see who’s responsible for what.” 
  2. Start Early: “Have the cadence set up from the beginning” 
  3. Measure Effectiveness: “If the team, client’s team is able to demo the solution, you know you’re on the right path” 
  4. Adjust as Needed: “Many times this is actually a single group, which is fine” 

The Executive Imperative 

These endeavors often make or break the year for the organization, also this success creates great opportunities for these individuals to accomplish major milestones in their careers. 

The Bottom Line 

Strong governance isn’t about bureaucracy—it’s about clarity, accountability, and sustainable success. Without documented roles and regular cadence, even the best methodology will fail. 

Have the cadence set up from the beginning, and let’s make sure, regardless of the methodology, that our approach includes solid communication upstream and downstream. 

A written, socialized governance model isn’t just best practice—it’s your insurance policy against joining the 65-80% of failed ERP implementations. 

In Part 7 of our series, we’ll explore common pitfalls in Dynamics 365 implementations and how to avoid them based on our extensive rescue project experience. 

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