Independent project monitoring, so every stakeholder sees the same truth.
Stelic reports from outside the delivery team. We verify what the schedule claims, validate where the money is going, and track the risks, giving owners, lenders, and boards a forward-looking read they can act on with confidence.
Project monitoring is independent oversight of cost, schedule, and risk, reported from outside the team running the work, so the status everyone relies on is verified rather than self-declared.
On a complex capital project, the people executing the work also produce the report on how it's going. That's not dishonesty, it's structural: optimism, pressure, and incomplete data all bend the picture. Project monitoring exists to keep that picture honest, by testing reported progress against what's actually built, reconciling spend to physical completion, and surfacing risk while there's still room to act.
Stelic performs this role independently. We don't run the project and we have no stake in the build, which is exactly what makes the read credible to the owners, lenders, and boards who depend on it. Engage us to monitor an entire program, or a single project where the reporting has stopped matching reality, the discipline is the same.
The team running the project shouldn't be the only one grading it.
An independent monitor and the project's own reporting both describe the same job, but they answer to different people. That difference is the whole value of monitoring.
A verified read, for the people accountable.
An outside team that tests reported progress against reality, validates the cost, and reports straight to the owner, lender, or board, with no stake in the build.
- Reports to
- The owner, lender, or board.
- Incentive
- An accurate, forward-looking picture.
- Success looks like
- No surprises, because issues surface early.
Status, from inside the work.
Produced by the people executing the project, against the schedule and budget they're being held to, with every reason to read it generously.
- Reports to
- Their own contract and milestones.
- Incentive
- Showing progress against the plan.
- Success looks like
- The status that keeps the job moving.
Monitoring isn't a vote of no confidence in the team, it's protection for everyone. A good delivery team welcomes an independent check, because when the monitor's read and the team's report agree, the owner and lender have real confidence, and when they diverge, the gap gets resolved on the record while it's still small.
A disciplined cycle that repeats every reporting period.
Monitoring isn't a one-time audit, it's a rhythm. Each cycle compares the project against an agreed baseline, verifies it, and closes the loop on what was flagged last time.
Baseline & KPIs
We agree what "on track" means, the KPIs that prove it, and the cadence the report runs on.
- KPI & metric framework
- Baseline review
- Reporting cadence
Instrument the data
We wire into the project's cost, schedule, and risk sources so the read is built on primary data.
- Cost & schedule data feeds
- Risk register link
- Document & draw access
Test against reality
We check reported progress against what's actually in place, on site and in the record.
- Progress verification
- Draw reconciliation
- Field & document review
Forecast & trend
We run variance, earned value, and predictive analytics to show where the project is headed.
- Variance & earned value
- Trend & forecast
- Risk assessment
Dashboard & flag
We publish the independent dashboard and monitoring report, and flag what needs attention now.
- Real-time dashboard
- Independent report
- Early-warning flags
Track to closure
We log recommended actions and follow each one until it's resolved, then the cycle begins again.
- Action & escalation log
- Follow-up to closure
- Next-period baseline
Three monitoring tracks, one integrated read.
Engage all three as full independent monitoring, or the single track your stakeholders most need verified.
Schedule Monitoring
Verifying that reported progress matches the work in place, and that the schedule still holds.
- Activity & milestone tracking and trending
- Resource utilization monitoring
- Productivity analysis
- Progress reporting
- Variance analysis
- KPI development & tracking
Risk Monitoring
Keeping the risk picture current, so threats are managed before they become events.
- Risk identification
- Assessment & scoring
- Mitigation planning
- Risk register
- Response development
- Contingency management
Cost Control
Tying spend to physical progress, so the money released matches the work delivered.
- Budget tracking
- Variance analysis
- Earned value management
- Cash flow monitoring
- Financial forecasting
- Contract compliance monitoring
Reporting an owner or lender can act on.
Monitoring produces a tight, recurring set of artifacts, the framework that defines success, the dashboard that shows it live, and the independent report that puts it on the record.
KPI & monitoring framework
The agreed definition of "on track", the metrics that prove it, and the cadence they're reported on.
Real-time dashboard
A live view of schedule, cost, and risk every stakeholder reads the same way, at a glance.
Independent monitoring report
The periodic written read, schedule, cost, and risk, issued from outside the delivery team.
Risk register
A maintained log of risks, owners, scores, and responses, updated every reporting cycle.
Variance & earned value
Cost and schedule performance against baseline, with objective indices and a read on the trend.
Forecast to completion
A forward read on where cost and schedule land, so decisions are made before outcomes are locked in.
Draw & cash flow verification
Each draw reconciled to work in place, so funds release against verified progress, not estimates.
Action & escalation log
Every flagged issue tracked with an owner and a date, followed until it's resolved on the record.
One page that tells every stakeholder the truth.
A representative slice of a monthly independent monitoring report, schedule, cost, risk, and draws, verified against the work in place. Illustrative figures.
Flagged this period: the switchgear slip threatens the energization milestone in Period 17. Recommended action logged and assigned, with mitigation due before next draw. Schedule recovery plan requested from the delivery team.
Built for projects where capital and accountability are on the line.
The discipline is the same; the stakes differ. We tailor the KPIs, verification, and reporting to what each sector's owners and funders actually need to see.
High capital, fast draws, lenders watching every milestone. Life Science
Regulated builds where schedule slip carries real cost. Federal / Government
Public funds, audit-ready reporting, hard accountability. Roads & Bridges
Grant milestones, public stakeholders, fixed deadlines.
What changes when the read is independent.
We don't lead with numbers we can't tie to your project. We lead with the operational difference an independent, verified view makes.
Everyone sees the truth
Owner, lender, and board work off one verified picture, instead of competing versions of status.
Risks surface early
Issues show up in the monitoring report while there's still room to act, not after the milestone slips.
Decisions get sharper
Actionable insights, not raw data, so the people accountable can move with confidence.
Accountability holds
The project is measured against agreed KPIs, so performance and alignment stay visible cycle to cycle.
What it looks like in practice.
An anonymized, composite example of how Stelic steps in as the independent monitor and changes what stakeholders can see.
A lender was financing a large data center build and approving monthly draws against the developer's self-reported progress. There was no independent read on whether the work in place matched what was being billed, or whether the schedule was real.
Act as the independent project monitor: verify physical progress, reconcile each draw to work actually in place, track risk, and give the lender and owner a forward-looking read they could both trust.
We set a baseline and KPIs, verified progress against the schedule each period, reconciled draw requests to installed work, maintained a live risk register, and issued a monthly independent report and dashboard to both parties.
Draws were released against verified progress, a long-lead equipment slip was flagged two months before it would have hit a funding milestone, and the lender and owner ran the project off one shared, defensible picture.
Monitoring is only worth as much as it is independent and verified.
Plenty of reports describe a project. The ones worth acting on are produced from outside the work and checked against reality, that's the standard we hold.
We don't run the project, so the only thing we report is what's true.
Independent by design
We sit outside the delivery team and report to the owner, lender, or board, which is what makes the read credible to the people relying on it.
Verified, not desk-reported
We test reported progress against the work actually in place and reconcile spend to physical completion, rather than passing through someone else's status.
One picture for every stakeholder
Dashboards and reports the owner, lender, and board all read the same way, so conversations start from shared facts.
Predictive, not just historical
Advanced analytics and forecasting turn raw project data into a forward read, so issues are seen before they're baked in.
Project monitoring, answered.
Project monitoring is independent oversight and reporting on a project's cost, schedule, and risk. A monitor sits outside the delivery team, verifies that reported progress matches what's actually built, and gives owners, lenders, and boards a forward-looking read they can trust, rather than relying on the status the people executing the work produce about their own work.
Project controls are the owner's internal data engine, run by or for the delivery team to plan, measure, and forecast the work. Project monitoring is the independent assurance layer on top of it: we monitor from outside the team running the project, so the report goes to the parties funding or overseeing it, not to the people being measured. Stelic delivers both and keeps them distinct on purpose.
Anyone with capital or accountability tied to a project they don't run day to day: owners overseeing a program, lenders financing construction, equity investors, boards, and public agencies. Each needs an independent, verified read on whether the project is on track before money is released or a milestone is reported as met.
Yes. Draw and cash flow verification is core monitoring work. We reconcile each draw request to the work actually in place and to the schedule, so funds release against verified progress rather than self-reported percentages. The result is a defensible record the lender, owner, and contractor all work from.
Yes. Owners and lenders frequently bring us in when reporting has stopped matching reality or a project is showing strain. We reconstruct a credible baseline, agree the KPIs, reconcile cost and schedule to actual progress, and stand up an independent monitoring report and dashboard from that point on, whether for a single project or an entire program.
A KPI and reporting framework, a real-time dashboard, and a periodic independent monitoring report covering schedule, cost, and risk, with variance and earned value analysis, a maintained risk register, a forecast to completion, and an action log that tracks flagged issues to closure. The cadence is set to the project, typically monthly or milestone based.
Bring us the project you need an honest read on.
Full independent monitoring, or a single track your stakeholders need verified. The engagement scales to fit, and the independence doesn't move.