Meetings & Discussions Free · self-study ~60 min

Addressing Late Reports and Budget Discrepancies in Programme Coordination

A founder discusses programme reporting delays, budget discrepancies, and workload management with a field coordinator during an unscheduled video call. The conversation focuses on aligning expectations and addressing operational challenges.

Level

What you’ll be able to do

Dialogue

Beginner version

Marc
Mai, thank you for talking to me. I know it is late. I know we did not plan this call. I want to talk about the programme. I will be quick.
Mai
Okay... that sounds important. What is wrong?
Marc
Nothing is very bad. But some things are not right. I want to make sure we agree. Is now a good time?
Mai
Yes, it is fine. I am tired, but please talk. I am listening.
Marc
Good. I have three things to talk about. First, the report. Second, money for the schools. Third, your work. You have too much work.
Mai
Okay... I know the report was late. But we are very busy here.
Marc
I know you work very hard. I see that. But the report was three weeks late. And the auditor found some mistakes in the data.
Mai
Yes, but we sent the report. Things here are hard. I look after many sites and new schools. It is not easy work.
Marc
I hear you. I understand your work grew a lot. That is okay. But the problem is not just the late report. The data also has mistakes.
Mai
I checked the data. Maybe there are small mistakes. But they are not big. I worked two years on this, Marc. I am not careless.
Marc
I know you care. That is not the problem. I look at the results. And right now the results are a problem for us.
Mai
A problem? That is very strong.
Marc
Let me explain. The auditor found mistakes. This is bad for our partners and sponsors. It is not about you. It is about the organisation.
Mai
But we have good results too. More children come to school. The schools are happy. That is important too.
Marc
Yes, that is very important. But I need to look at two things. The work in the field. And the reports. Both must be good. One cannot fix the other.
Mai
I feel like you only talk about bad things.
Marc
I understand. But my job is to check the whole system. So I must talk about the problems. Especially when they hurt the organisation.
Mai
Okay...
Marc
Now the second thing. You gave some money to schools. You did not get approval first. Can you tell me about that?
Mai
Yes. Some schools needed help fast. They needed small things. If we wait a long time, we lose time. So I said yes to help them.
Marc
I understand. You wanted to help fast. But I need to ask, did you check the budget first?
Mai
Not exactly. But we can fix it later. It is not a lot of money.
Marc
I must be very clear here. We cannot say yes to spending money if the budget does not allow it. Even small amounts. This is a big rule.
Mai
But if we always say no, the schools will not trust us.
Marc
I do not say always no. I say yes, but we must follow the rules first. There is a difference.
Mai
But on the ground, things move fast. You must decide quickly.
Marc
I agree. We need to be fast sometimes. But we also need rules. Without rules, we make mistakes and take risks.
Mai
So what do you want? Do you want me to stop making decisions?
Marc
No. I want you to decide inside a clear system. For example, we can make a fast way to get approval. But we do not skip the system.
Mai
Okay, I understand that.
Marc
Good. Now the third thing. This is about you. How is your work right now? Are you okay?
Mai
I am fine. Just busy. It is normal.
Marc
I hear 'busy.' But I also see late reports, mistakes, and fast decisions. I think you have too much work. Tell me about your week.
Mai
It is a lot. I work in three areas now. I talk to schools and volunteers. I do the reports too. Sometimes I work very late at night.
Marc
Okay. That is a lot. Why did you not tell me before?
Mai
I did not want to stop the work. And I thought I could do it all.
Marc
I understand that. But I can see now that it is too much. The system is breaking a little.
Mai
So it is my fault now?
Marc
No. Let me say it again. The system is not good right now. You carry too much. That is the problem.
Mai
It is hard. I feel I must do everything.
Marc
I know. But that is the problem. You try to do everything. That is not possible.
Mai
But if I stop, things do not move.
Marc
That is true now. But later, this causes problems. We see that now. Late reports, mistakes, and stress.
Mai
What do you want to change?
Marc
Three things. First, we fix the reports. Good data is more important than fast data. Second, no more money without approval. Third, we give you less work.
Mai
Less work how?
Marc
We can give some jobs to other people. Maybe someone can help with reports or meetings. But I need you to tell me what is hardest.
Mai
Honestly, reports are the hardest. They take a long time. And I am already very tired.
Marc
I see that. So maybe you do the field work. And someone else helps with the data and reports.
Mai
Yes, that would help a lot.
Marc
Good. And I want to say one thing directly. The way things are now is not good for the organisation. Sorry, I want to say: it cannot continue like this.
Mai
Okay... I am glad you said that better.
Marc
I try to say things in a better way. I do not want to attack you. I want to fix the problem.
Mai
I understand.
Marc
Good. Because you are very important to this project. That is why I talk to you today.
Mai
It feels like a lot of pressure.
Marc
I know. I want to share one idea. In sport, if you train very hard and do not rest, you play worse. Not because you are bad. Because your body is too tired. I think that is you now.
Mai
Yes, I understand that.
Marc
So we do not push harder. We make a better plan.
Mai
Okay.
Marc
Tell me, what did you learn from our talk today?
Mai
I need better reports. I cannot give money without approval. And I must ask for help sooner.
Marc
Yes, good. And I must give you more help and clearer rules.
Mai
That is good to hear.
Marc
Good. So next steps. Next week we make a new plan for reports. We check all the money commitments. And we find ways to give you less work.
Mai
Okay, that is fair.
Mai
I needed to hear all this.
Marc
Good. You work hard. We just need to make a better system for you.
Mai
I understand.
Marc
Okay. We go step by step. Thank you for talking to me.
Mai
Thank you. You were clear. And you did not just blame me.
Marc
That was not my plan. We want to find a way that works.
Mai
Okay. Let's fix it.
Marc
Yes.

Intermediate version

Marc
Mai, thanks for taking this call at short notice, especially so late. I'll try to keep it brief. There are a few things about the programme I want to talk through with you.
Mai
Okay... that sounds quite serious. What's going on?
Marc
It's not a crisis, but it does matter. I want to make sure we're on the same page. Is now okay for you?
Mai
Yes, it's fine. I'm pretty tired, but go ahead. I'm here.
Marc
Okay, I have three things to cover. First, the recent impact report. Second, the money commitments you made to local schools. And third, how you're managing your workload.
Mai
Right... I know the report came in late, but we've been really stretched on the ground.
Marc
I understand that, and I want to recognise the hard work you've put in. But I have to be honest about the impact of the delay. The report was three weeks late, and the auditor found some problems with the data.
Mai
Yes, but we did get it in. Things here have been very complicated. I'm managing several sites, new schools, and the expansion. It's not just office work.
Marc
I get that. It sounds like your workload has grown a lot, especially with the expansion. That makes sense. But the problem isn't just the delay, it's also about whether the data is accurate.
Mai
I went through the data. There might be small errors, but nothing major. I've given two years to this project, Marc. I'm not being sloppy.
Marc
I'm not questioning your commitment, that's not the issue. What I'm focused on is the results. And right now, some of the results are creating risk for the organisation.
Mai
Risk? That feels like a strong word.
Marc
Let me explain. When an external auditor flags problems, it damages our credibility with partners and funders. That's an organisational issue, not a personal one.
Mai
Okay, but we've also had real success. School attendance is up, engagement is good, and the schools are happy. That should count for something.
Marc
It absolutely counts. And it matters a lot. But I need to look at two things separately, what's happening in the field, and how we report it. Both have to work. We can't use one to make up for the other.
Mai
I feel like you're only focusing on the negatives.
Marc
I can see why it feels that way. But my job is to make sure the whole system works well. So I have to look at what's not working, especially when it affects the organisation.
Mai
Okay...
Marc
Let me move to the second point. I've heard that you made some informal financial commitments to local schools. Can you tell me more about that?
Mai
Yes. Some schools needed help quickly, equipment, small improvements. Waiting for full approval every time means we lose momentum. I made some calls to keep things moving.
Marc
I understand the thinking. You wanted to respond quickly. But can you help me understand, were those commitments within the approved budgets?
Mai
Not exactly, but we can sort it out later. It's not a big amount of money.
Marc
This is where I have to be very clear. We can't make financial commitments outside the approved budgets, even small ones. It creates real problems for us.
Mai
But if we always say no, we lose the trust of the schools.
Marc
I'm not saying always say no. I'm saying say yes, but within a proper process. There's an important difference.
Mai
It's just... in the field, things don't work that way. You have to react fast.
Marc
I agree that being flexible is important. But without any boundaries, flexibility becomes a risk. And we're at that point now.
Mai
So what do you want me to do, stop making decisions?
Marc
No, I want you to make decisions within a clear framework. For example, we could set up a fast-track approval process for urgent things. But we don't skip the system completely.
Mai
Okay, I can see that.
Marc
Good. Now the third point, and this one is about you personally. I want to ask honestly: how are you coping with your workload right now?
Mai
I'm fine. Just busy. It's normal.
Marc
You say 'busy,' but I'm also seeing late reports, data errors, and quick decisions made under pressure. That usually means overload. What does a typical week look like for you?
Mai
It's just a lot. I'm covering three regions, working with schools, managing volunteers, and doing the reporting. And sometimes I work late into the night to catch up.
Marc
Okay, that's a lot. Why didn't you let me know before it got to this point?
Mai
Because I didn't want to slow things down. And honestly, I thought I could handle it.
Marc
That's understandable. But what I'm seeing is that the system is starting to struggle under that pressure.
Mai
So now it's my fault?
Marc
No, that's not what I mean. Let me put it differently. The current set-up isn't working, and you're taking on too much of it alone.
Mai
It's hard. I feel like I'm responsible for everything there.
Marc
And that's part of the problem. Taking on everything isn't realistic, even when it feels necessary.
Mai
But if I don't, things stop moving.
Marc
That might feel true right now. But over time, it leads to exactly what we're seeing, late reports, errors, and burnout.
Mai
What changes are you suggesting?
Marc
Three things. First, we need to fix the reporting, accuracy has to come before speed. Second, no more financial commitments outside the budget. Third, we need to reduce the pressure on you.
Mai
Reduce it how?
Marc
We could share out some of the responsibilities, maybe bring in support for coordination or reporting. But I need you to tell me where things are hardest.
Mai
Honestly, reporting is the worst part. It takes so much time, and I'm already exhausted.
Marc
That's clear. So one option is to split the roles, you stay focused on the field work, and someone else handles the data and reporting.
Mai
That would really help.
Marc
Good. And I want to say something directly, I might say it too bluntly, so tell me if I do. The way things are running right now isn't okay for the organisation, sorry, what I mean is it's not sustainable.
Mai
Okay... I'm glad you adjusted that.
Marc
I'm trying to find a better way to say it. I'm not here to criticise you, I want to deal with the situation.
Mai
I understand.
Marc
Good. Because you're a key person in this project. That's exactly why we're having this conversation.
Mai
It just feels like a lot of pressure.
Marc
I know. Here's one way to think about it. In sport, if you train hard without any recovery time, your performance gets worse, not because you're weak, but because the body can't keep up. I think that's where you are right now.
Mai
That actually makes a lot of sense.
Marc
So the answer isn't to push harder. It's to set up a better structure.
Mai
Okay.
Marc
Let me check in, what are you taking away from this conversation?
Mai
That I need to improve the reporting, stop making financial promises without approval, and ask for help sooner.
Marc
Exactly. And on my side, I need to give you clearer processes and more support.
Mai
That's helpful to hear.
Marc
Good. So here are the next steps. We'll work on a reporting process together next week. We'll check all the current commitments against the budgets. And we'll figure out how to take some pressure off you.
Mai
Okay, that sounds fair.
Mai
I needed to hear all of this.
Marc
Good. Your commitment isn't the problem. We just need to channel it into something that's sustainable.
Mai
Understood.
Marc
Alright. We'll take it step by step. Thanks for being open to this conversation.
Mai
Thank you for being direct... and for not just putting all the blame on me.
Marc
That wasn't my intention. We're here to find something that works long-term.
Mai
Okay. Let's fix it.
Marc
Exactly.

Advanced version

Marc
Mai, thank you for making time for this call despite the late hour. I realize it’s not pre-scheduled, so I’ll aim to keep our discussion concise. I’d like to address a few matters I’ve observed regarding the programme.
Mai
Alright... that sounds quite serious. What’s the situation?
Marc
Nothing overly alarming, but certainly significant. I want to highlight a few key points to ensure we remain aligned. Is this a convenient time for you?
Mai
Yes, absolutely. I’m rather fatigued, but it’s perfectly fine. Please proceed.
Marc
Very well. There are three primary topics I’d like us to cover. First, the recent impact report. Second, the financial commitments made to local schools. And third, your current workload management.
Mai
Okay... I’m aware the report was submitted late, but we’ve been incredibly occupied on the ground.
Marc
I fully appreciate that, and I want to acknowledge the considerable effort you’ve invested. However, I must be transparent about the consequences of that delay. The report was three weeks overdue, and the auditor identified several discrepancies in the data.
Mai
Yes, but we did deliver it. The situation here has been quite intricate. I’ve been overseeing multiple sites, new schools, and the expansion phase. It’s far from mere administrative work.
Marc
I hear you. And what I’m gathering is that your workload has escalated considerably, particularly with the expansion. That’s entirely understandable. However, the issue extends beyond the delay-it’s also about data integrity.
Mai
I reviewed the data. Perhaps there were minor errors, but nothing substantial. Honestly, I’ve dedicated two years of my life to this project, Marc. I’m certainly not being careless.
Marc
I’m not questioning your dedication. That’s not the crux of the matter. My focus is on the output. And at present, the output is generating risk for the organization.
Mai
Risk? That seems rather severe.
Marc
Allow me to clarify. When an external auditor highlights inconsistencies, it undermines our credibility with partners and sponsors. That’s a structural concern, not a personal critique.
Mai
Okay, but we’ve also achieved strong results. Attendance is up, engagement is robust, and the schools are satisfied. That should carry weight too.
Marc
It certainly does. And it’s important. But I need to distinguish between two aspects: field impact and reporting reliability. Both are crucial. We cannot offset one with the other.
Mai
I feel like you’re only concentrating on what’s going wrong.
Marc
I understand it may come across that way. That’s not my intent. My role is to ensure the entire system is robust. Therefore, I must address what’s faltering, especially when it impacts our structure.
Mai
Okay...
Marc
Let me proceed to the second point. I’ve been informed that you made several informal funding commitments to local schools. Could you walk me through that?
Mai
Yes. Some schools required immediate support-equipment, minor upgrades. If we wait for full validation each time, we lose momentum. I made decisions to keep things moving.
Marc
I grasp the intention. You aimed to be responsive. But help me understand-were those commitments aligned with the ringfenced budgets?
Mai
Not precisely, but we can adjust later. It’s not substantial amounts.
Marc
This is where I need to be unequivocal. We cannot make financial commitments outside of validated budgets. Even minor ones. That creates exposure.
Mai
But if we constantly say no, we lose trust with the schools.
Marc
I’m not suggesting we say no. I’m saying we say yes within a framework. There’s a distinction.
Mai
It’s just... on the ground, things don’t operate within a framework. You have to react swiftly.
Marc
I agree that flexibility is important. But flexibility without boundaries becomes risk. And right now, we are crossing that line.
Mai
So what do you want me to do? Stop making decisions?
Marc
No. I want you to make decisions within a clear structure. For instance, if something is urgent, we define a fast-track validation process. But we don’t circumvent the system.
Mai
Okay, I see that.
Marc
Good. Now, the third point. And this one is more about you. I want to ask-how are you actually managing your workload right now?
Mai
I’m fine. Just busy. It’s normal.
Marc
I hear “busy,” but I also see delays, inconsistencies, and reactive decisions. That usually signals overload. Help me understand what your weeks look like.
Mai
It’s just... a lot. I’m managing three provinces now, coordinating with schools, dealing with volunteers, and also reporting. And sometimes I work late nights to catch up.
Marc
Okay. That’s significant. Why didn’t you flag this earlier?
Mai
Because I didn’t want to slow things down. And honestly, I thought I could handle it.
Marc
That’s understandable. But what I’m observing is that the system is now starting to buckle under that pressure.
Mai
So now it’s my fault?
Marc
No. Let me rephrase that. What I’m seeing is that the current setup is not sustainable. And you’re carrying too much of it.
Mai
It’s just hard. I feel responsible for everything there.
Marc
And that’s part of the issue. You’re taking responsibility for everything, which is not realistic.
Mai
But if I don’t, things don’t move.
Marc
That may be true in the short term. But in the long term, it creates exactly what we are seeing now-delays, inconsistencies, and pressure.
Mai
What specific adjustments are you proposing?
Marc
There are three things. First, we need to stabilise reporting. That means prioritising accuracy over speed. Second, we need to stop any informal financial commitments immediately. Third, we need to rebalance your workload.
Mai
Rebalance how?
Marc
We can redistribute some responsibilities. Possibly bring in additional support on coordination or reporting. But I need your input on where the pressure is highest.
Mai
Honestly, reporting is the hardest part. It takes time, and I’m already exhausted.
Marc
That’s clear. So one option is to separate field coordination and reporting. You focus on operations, and we support you on data consolidation.
Mai
That would help.
Marc
Good. Now, I also want to say something directly-and I may say it too directly, so stop me if needed. Right now, the way things are handled is not acceptable... sorry, that sounds too strong-what I mean is, the current situation is not sustainable for the organisation.
Mai
Okay... I appreciate you correcting that.
Marc
I’m working on saying things in a better way. The intention is not to attack you, but to address the situation.
Mai
I understand.
Marc
Good. Because you are a key part of this project. That’s why we’re having this conversation.
Mai
It just feels like a lot of pressure.
Marc
I know. And let me share one perspective. In rugby, when you train at high intensity without recovery, performance drops. Not because you are weak, but because the system is overloaded. That’s where I think you are right now.
Mai
That actually makes sense.
Marc
So the goal is not to push harder. It’s to structure better.
Mai
Okay.
Marc
Let me check-what are you taking from this conversation so far?
Mai
That I need to improve reporting quality, stop making financial promises without approval, and also ask for help earlier.
Marc
Exactly. And from my side, I need to provide clearer structure and more support.
Mai
That helps.
Marc
Good. So next steps. We define a reporting process together next week. We review all current commitments to ensure they align with budgets. And we identify where we can reduce your workload.
Mai
Okay, that sounds fair.
Mai
I needed to hear that.
Marc
Good. Because your commitment is not the issue. We just need to channel it in a way that works long-term.
Mai
Understood.
Marc
Alright. Let’s take this step by step. Thanks for being open on this.
Mai
Thank you for saying it clearly... and also for not just blaming me.
Marc
That wasn’t my intention. We’re focused on finding a sustainable solution.
Mai
Okay. Let’s fix it.
Marc
Exactly.

Check your understanding

1. What three primary topics does Marc state he wants to cover in the discussion with Mai?

Show answer
The recent impact report, the financial commitments made to local schools, and Mai's current workload management.

2. What is Marc's stance on making financial commitments outside of validated budgets?

Show answer
Marc states unequivocally that the organization cannot make financial commitments outside of validated budgets, even minor ones, because it creates exposure.

3. How does Marc suggest handling urgent situations that require swift action instead of circumventing the system?

Show answer
Marc suggests defining a fast-track validation process for urgent items so decisions can be made within a clear structure rather than bypassing the system.

4. What reasons does Mai give for not flagging her workload issues earlier?

Show answer
Mai states she didn't want to slow things down and she thought she could handle the workload on her own.

Grammar practice (mixed)

Tenses

Marc ___ the issues with Mai during the feedback conversation.

Show answer & why
addressed · 💡 The conversation has already taken place, so the simple past tense is required to describe a completed action.
Grammar in contextself-check

Marc had ___ difficult conversation with Mai about the delayed impact report.

Show answer & why
a · 💡 The indefinite article 'a' is used because 'conversation' is a singular countable noun being mentioned for the first time in a general sense.
Adjectives and Adverbs

Marc spoke ___ during the feedback conversation with Mai.

Show answer & why
directly · 💡 An adverb is needed to modify the verb 'spoke', describing how the action was performed.
Prepositionsself-check

I fully appreciate that, and I want to acknowledge the considerable effort you’ve invested ______ the project.

Show answer & why
in · 💡 The verb 'invest' typically takes the preposition 'in' when referring to the object or area where resources (time, money, effort) are applied.
Grammar in contextself-check

It’s far from mere administrative work; ______ situation here has been quite intricate.

Show answer & why
the · 💡 The definite article 'the' is used because the situation is specific and previously mentioned or understood in the context of the conversation.
Conditionalsself-check

If the report ______ submitted on time, the discrepancies would not have been flagged by the auditor.

Show answer & why
had been · 💡 This is a third conditional sentence referring to a hypothetical past situation. The if-clause requires the past perfect passive ('had been') to match the result clause ('would not have been flagged').

Discussion (practise speaking)

How can an organization balance the need for quick action on the ground with the requirement for strict financial compliance?

🤔 Think about a time you had to choose between speed and following rules at work.

Show sample answer
  • Implement a fast-track validation process for urgent needs.
  • Train staff on budget rules to prevent informal commitments.
  • Set clear boundaries for what decisions can be made without approval.

Ask Phil: Practise explaining how to balance speed and compliance in a business meeting.

What are the risks of allowing one person to carry too much responsibility in a project?

🤔 Consider how workload distribution affects team stability in your experience.

Show sample answer
  • It leads to burnout and fatigue for the individual.
  • Errors in reporting or data may increase due to overload.
  • The project becomes vulnerable if that person is unavailable.

Ask Phil: Practise discussing the importance of workload rebalancing with a manager.

How should a manager address performance issues while maintaining a supportive relationship with an employee?

🤔 Think about how you would give feedback to a colleague who is struggling.

Show sample answer
  • Focus on the system and process rather than personal criticism.
  • Acknowledge the employee's effort before discussing the problems.
  • Propose concrete steps to improve the situation together.

Ask Phil: Practise delivering constructive feedback in a one-on-one conversation.

Why is it important to distinguish between field impact and reporting reliability?

🤔 Think about how you ensure accuracy in your own reporting tasks.

Show sample answer
  • Good results on the ground do not excuse poor data quality.
  • Inaccurate reports can damage credibility with partners and sponsors.
  • Both aspects are crucial for long-term organizational success.

Ask Phil: Practise explaining why data integrity matters in a business context.

Vocabulary

impact report
reveal definition A document that shows the results and effects of a project. “First, the recent impact report.”
financial commitments
reveal definition Promises or agreements to spend money. “Second, the financial commitments made to local schools.”
workload management
reveal definition The way a person organizes and controls their amount of work. “And third, your current workload management.”
data integrity
reveal definition The accuracy and consistency of information in a system. “However, the issue extends beyond the delay-it’s also about data integrity.”
ringfenced budgets
reveal definition Money set aside for a specific purpose that cannot be used for anything else. “But help me understand-were those commitments aligned with the ringfenced budgets?”
fast-track validation
reveal definition A quick process to check and approve something urgently. “For instance, if something is urgent, we define a fast-track validation process.”
data consolidation
reveal definition Combining information from different sources into one place. “You focus on operations, and we support you on data consolidation.”
informal funding
reveal definition Money given without official approval or formal agreements. “I’ve been informed that you made several informal funding commitments to local schools.”

Key phrases (useful expressions from the dialogue)

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