Trust building with customers is a journey. Particularly when a customer has had unpleasant experiences in the past or their business priorities are fast changing, they are reluctant to adopt an all-in approach when evaluating and contracting with a new agency. Such times require an adaptive and outcome-oriented approach to bringing the customer onboard. It tends to create challenges in team planning and meeting service level agreements on the agency’s side, too.
Some projects demand a flexible approach. Customers with evolving priorities often bring open-ended requirements, a reluctance to commit to contracts, and a need for measurable outcomes. These challenges are compounded when technical debt, left behind by previous vendors, slows even the simplest updates and creates inefficiencies.
One of our clients consistently required urgent help on high-priority issues, but there was no formal agreement to address such unplanned tasks. This pattern of recurring urgent requests creates challenges in maintaining a balanced workload, as the team had to repeatedly divert resources from planned deliverables to handle last-minute priorities.
- Ulka Neil, Associate Project Manager, Axelerant
A structured engagement model like Continuous Development and Maintenance (CDM) could resolve these issues. Yet when ROI and a value-based approach are used as yardsticks to determine procurement, agencies need to come up with a flexible approach - one that balances flexibility with operational discipline to deliver results effectively.
This blog explores how a Flexible Delivery Model combines CDM principles with tailored solutions to address open-ended needs, resolve technical inefficiencies, and align with outcome-driven expectations.
Unplanned client requests are not uncommon in project delivery. According to a survey by the Project Management Institute (PMI), over 35% of projects face scope creep due to poorly defined agreements or sudden changes in client priorities.
These unplanned tasks often result in:
We were operating without a formal support contract, which meant any unplanned priority issues had the potential to derail ongoing work. It was critical to address this head-on, not just operationally but strategically.
- - Ulka Neil, Associate Project Manager, Axelerant
While Axelerant’s CDM (Continuous Development and Maintenance) model provides ongoing support, the client needed more flexibility with outcome-based pricing—defined tasks rather than pre-purchased hours—and a task-specific focus with clear deliverables and defined timelines.
To meet these requirements, the team created a Flexible Delivery Model that retained CDM’s core principles while adapting to deliverable-driven execution and predictable results.
To address these challenges, the team developed a custom and flexible delivery model that preserved the responsiveness the client valued while ensuring sustainability and alignment with delivery objectives. This approach borrowed key principles from CDM but tailored them to suit the client’s specific needs.
Here’s how the team crafted a flexible delivery model to navigate unplanned requests while ensuring long-term alignment.
The primary goal of the custom model was to address the client’s concerns while maintaining delivery integrity. This required:
The focus was on designing a model that met their expectations for flexibility without compromising our ability to deliver efficiently,
- Ulka explained.
Recognizing the need for flexibility, the team proposed a tailored delivery model that balanced responsiveness with scalability, built on the foundation of CDM principles:
| Strategic Resource Allocation and Forecasting at Axelerant Additionally, incorporating Workforce Management practices helped streamline processes to accommodate urgent tasks while ensuring planned deliverables stayed on track. These practices emphasized balancing current capacity with new demands through dynamic team restructuring |
To address the client’s concerns around rigidity, the team established a collaborative governance framework:
We wanted to assure the client that flexibility and transparency were at the core of the custom model, even if it followed structured principles,
- Ulka noted
Leveraging Axelerant’s Workforce Management and Capacity Planning frameworks, the team ensured resources were dynamically allocated to meet recurring urgent needs without straining bandwidth. This addressed the client’s cost concerns by showing how resources were efficiently utilized.
The custom delivery model successfully resolved the client’s concerns while achieving key delivery outcomes:
By addressing the reasons for the client’s reluctance, the team demonstrated how flexibility and structure could coexist, strengthening trust and collaboration.
I just know that if something comes up I can immediately connect with Marilyn and she will make sure that our needs are met and Doctor Without Borders needs are met as quickly as possible so it's been a pleasure.”
- Rachel Sevcik, Project Manager, Blue State
While Axelerant’s CDM engagement model is the gold standard for addressing recurring unplanned requests, this experience demonstrates that flexibility is key when clients are hesitant to adopt formal frameworks. By adapting CDM principles into a custom delivery model, the team was able to balance agility with sustainability, meeting immediate needs while paving the way for long-term collaboration.
Flexibility isn’t just about reacting to change, it’s about designing thoughtful solutions that align with both client expectations and delivery goals.