Project Scope Flashcards

1
Q

A planning heuristic for creating the WBS.

This rule states that the work package in a WBS must take no more than 80 hours of labor to create and no fewer than 8 hours of labor to create.

A

8/80 Rule

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2
Q

The observer interacts with the work to ask questions and understand each step of the work being completed.

In some instances, the observer could serve as an assistant in doing the work.

A

Active Observation

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3
Q

When stakeholders create a large number of ideas, you can use an affinity diagram to cluster similar ideas together for further analysis.

A

Affinity Diagrams

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4
Q

A scope definition process of finding alternative solutions for the project customer while considering the customer’s satisfaction, the cost of the solution, and how the customer may use the product in operations.

A

Alternatives Generation

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5
Q

A decision method where only one individual makes the decision for the group.

A

Autocratic

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6
Q

This approach encourages participants to generate as many ideas as possible about the project requirements.

No idea is judged or dismissed during the brainstorming session.

A

Brainstorming

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7
Q

Documented in the scope management plan, this system defines how changes to the project scope are managed and controlled.

A

Change Control System (CCS)

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8
Q

This subsidiary plan defines how changes to features and functions of the project deliverables will be monitored and controlled within the project.

A

Change Management Plan

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9
Q

These diagrams show the relationship between elements of an environment.

For example, a context diagram would illustrate the networks, servers, workstations, and people that interact with the elements of the environment.

A

Context Diagram

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10
Q

A moderator led requirements collection method to elicit requirements from stakeholders.

A

Focus Group

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11
Q

This is the study of the functions within a system, project, or what’s more likely in the project scope statement, the product the project will be creating.

Functional analysis studies the goals of the product, how the product will be used, and all the expectations the customer has of the product once it leaves the project and moves into operations.

Functional analysis may also consider the cost of the product in operations, which is known as life-cycle costing.

A

Functional Analysis

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12
Q

Most projects have a determined budget in relation to the project scope.

There may be a qualifier on this budget, such as plus or minus 10 percent based on the type of cost estimate created.

A

Funding Limit

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13
Q

A requirements collection method used to elicit requirements from stakeholders in a one-on-one conversation.

A

Interviews

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14
Q

A group decision method where more than 50% of the group must be in agreement.

A

Majority

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15
Q

This approach maps ideas to show the relationship among requirements and the differences between requirements.

The map can be reviewed to identify new solutions or to rank the identified requirements.

A

Mind Mapping

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16
Q

As with brainstorming, participants are encouraged to generate as many ideas as possible, but the suggested ideas are ranked by a voting process.

A

Nominal Group Technique

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17
Q

The observer records information about the work being completed without interrupting the process; sometimes called the invisible observer.

A

Passive Observation

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18
Q

A group-decision method where the largest part of the group makes the decision when its less than 50% of the total.

(Consider three of four factions within the stakeholders)

A

Plurality

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19
Q

This project scope statement component works with the project requirements, but focuses specifically on the product and what the conditions and processes are for formal acceptance of the product.

A

Product Acceptance Criteria

20
Q

A scope definition technique that breaks down a product into a hierarchical structure, much like a WBS breaks down a project scope.

A

Product Breakdown

21
Q

This is a narrative description of what the project is creating as a deliverable for the project customer.

A

Product Scope Description

22
Q

Defines the product or service that will come about as a result of completing the project.

It defines the features and functions that characterize the product.

A

Product Scope

23
Q

A project assumption is a factor in the planning process that is held to be true but not proven to be true.

A

Project Assumptions

24
Q

A project boundary clearly states what is included with the project and what is excluded from the project.

This helps to eliminate assumptions between the project management team and the project customer.

A

Project Boundaries

25
Q

A constraint is anything that limits the project manager’s options.

Consider a predetermined budget, deadline, resources, or materials the project manager must use within the project; these are all examples of project constraints.

A

Project Constraints

26
Q

These are the measurable goals that determine a project’s acceptability to the project customer and the overall success of the project.

Objectives often include the cost, schedule, technical requirements, and quality demands.

A

Project Objectives

27
Q

These are the demands set by the customer, regulations, or the performing organization that must exist for the project deliverables to be acceptable.

Requirements are often prioritized in a number of ways, from “must have” to “should have” to “would like to have”.

A

Project Requirements

28
Q

This defines all of the work, and only the required work, to complete the project objectives.

A

Project Scope

29
Q

This project management subsidiary plan controls how the scope will be defined, how the project scope statement will be created, how the WBS will be created, how scope validation will proceed, and how the project scope will be controlled throughout the project.

A

Project Scope Management Plan

30
Q

This documentation of what the stakeholders expected in the project defines all the requirements that must be present for the work to be accepted by the stakeholders.

A

Requirements Documentation

31
Q

This subsidiary plan defines how changes to the project requirements will be permitted, how requirements will be tracked, and how change to the requirements will be approved.

A

Requirements Management Plan

32
Q

This is a table that maps the requirements throughout the project all the way to their completion.

A

Requirements Traceability Matrix (RTM)

33
Q

The project customer may have specific dates when phases of the project should be completed.

These milestones are often treated as project constraints.

A

Schedule Milestones

34
Q

Undocumented, unapproved changes to the project scope.

A

Scope Creep

35
Q

The formal inspection of the project deliverables, which leads to project acceptance.

A

Scope Validation

36
Q

A scope definition process where the project management team interviews the stakeholders and categorizes, prioritizes, and documents what the project customer wants and needs.

The analysis is to determine, quantify, and prioritize the interests of the stakeholders.

Stakeholder analysis demands quantification of stakeholder objectives: goals such as “good”, “satisfaction”, and “speed” are not quantifiable.

A

Stakeholder Analysis

37
Q

A scope definition approach that studies and analyzes a system, it’s components, and the relationship of the components within the system.

A

System Analysis

38
Q

This project scope statement creation process studies how a system should work, designs and creates a system model, and then enacts the working system based on the project’s goals and the customer’s expectations.

Systems engineering aims to balance the time and cost of the project in relation to the scope of the project.

A

Systems Engineering

39
Q

A group decision method where everyone must be in agreement.

A

Unanimity

40
Q

As with value engineering, this approach examines the functions of the project’s product in relation to the cost of the features and functions.

This is where, to some extent, the grade of the product is in relationship to the cost of the product.

A

Value Analysis

41
Q

This approach to project scope statement creation attempts to find the correct level of quality in relation to a reasonable budget for the project deliverable while still achieving an acceptable level of performance of the project.

A

Value Engineering

42
Q

A WBS companion document that defines all of the characteristics of each element within the WBS.

A

WBS Dictionary

43
Q

A repopulated WBS for repetitive projects.

Previous projects’ WBSs are often used as templates for current similar projects.

A

WBS Template

44
Q

A deliverables-oriented breakdown of the project scope.

A

Work Breakdown Structure

45
Q

The smallest item in the WBS.

A

Work Package

46
Q

Status of the deliverables: The work that’s been started, finished, or has yet to begin.

A

Work Performance Information