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4. ➢ The extent of the area or subject matter that something deals with or to
which it is relevant. (Oxford)
➢ The work that needs to be accomplished to deliver a product, service, or
result with the specified features and functions that characterize a
product, service, or result. (PMI)
➢ Defining what is needed is the first step toward establishing a project
timeline, setting of project goals and allocating project resources. These
steps will help you to define the work that needs to be done - or in other
words, define the scope of the project. Once this is defined, you'll be able
to allocate tasks and give your team the direction they need to deliver the
project on time and on budget. (CIO)
➢ The main purpose of the scope definition is to clearly describe the
boundaries of your project. Clearly describing the boundaries is not
enough when it comes to project. You need to get the client's agreement
as well. (Prince2)
8. Business Mandate & Targets
Requirements
Allocation and Management of Competent Resources
for the various Processes of Planning, Execution,
Controlling and Closing
Constructability
Deliverables
Functional Fitness
SOW
WBS
O&M
QC
QA
14. Milestones &
Delivery
Budget &
Cash Flow
Aggregates &
Functionality
Balance of Resources & Deliverables
Only 28% of the projects run by PMPs had met Deadlines, Cost
or Fitness Satisfaction (PMI 2014)
15. Scope StatementProject Basic Data
Schedule & Milestones
Cost & Budget
Configuration Plan
Constraints & Assumptions
SWOT Analysis
Procurement Plan
Quality Plan
Management of Risk
The more planning aggregates are analyzed, structured and
reported; the more control over the project and deliverables
16. The Project Plan Document
Integrated Management Applications
Directory
Stakeholders
Scope Program
Budget
Assumptions
Risk Contracts
Quality
Knowledge Communications Documentation
Updates & Approvals
Project Management is not only about decision-making and workaround
constraints, but mainly about documentation as a basic platform