Scope Management Flashcards
what 4 points define scope management
- concerned with all the tools and processes that ensure enough work, but no more, is carried out to produce the project deliverables
- controlling boundaries of project so work done is related to objectives
- any new work is subject to formal change control process
- clearly establish what is excluded from project scope
what are 6 main areas that work together to identify, define and control Scope Management
- requirements management - Gathering and assessing stakeholders wants and needs. They should be solution-free, i.e. ‘descriptive’ not ‘prescriptive’.
- solutions development - Using the stakeholders requirements the project team considers how to achieve them in the most effective and efficient way.
- benefits management - Taking requirements that have been expressed in terms of benefits and manages them through to eventual delivery. This runs in parallel with Requirements Management and Solutions Development, and utilises Change Management.
- change management - Deals with the transformation of BaU needed to utilise outputs and realise benefits.
- change control - The mechanism for capturing and assessing potential changes to scope, ensuring only beneficial changes are made.
- configuration management - Monitoring and documenting the development or products. It makes sure that approved changes are recorded and superseded versions are archived.
what are 5 benefits of a formal requirements analysis process
- clear definition and agreement of project requirements will reduce future change requests. getting it right 1st time will minimise deviations from the plan
- facilitates change control by providing a baseline of signed-off and agreed requirements reducing likelihood of major changes. clear baseline aids assessment of proposed changes
- having all the requirements identified up front enables them to be prioritised so focus can be put on most important
- a clear handover and acceptance process can be defined based on complete and agreed requirements. this provides unambiguous acceptance criteria to test and verify
- provides a clear view of what the project needs to deliver facilitating robust plans which reduce risk to schedule and budget, and also increase stakeholder confidence
what are the 4 steps to the requirements process
- capture - mainly by interviewing stakeholders. necessary to gain a wide spectrum of opinions so all possible requirements are captured.
- analysis - gathered requirements must be tested for feasibility, validity, compatibility, acceptability, applicability and consistency. different stakeholders may have opposing or difficult requirements. issues must be red before finalising requirements, sponsor may have to referee
- prioritise - it may not be possible to include all requirements into time/budget constraints. it’s usual to prioritise and then exclude from scope, sponsor may have to referee
- acceptance tests - once requirements are confirmed acceptance tests must be devised and agreed. best done early to clarify understanding of requirements. best devised by end users under guidance of project team
what is documented in the functional specification
this captures all agreed user requirements in an unambiguous manner. it defines what is required but not how the requirement will be met
once a function is defined what 2 actions are required
- appropriate acceptance test will be agreed
2. the functional specification will specify appropriate quality parameters
what are the points that describe the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
- it is an activity based decomposition of the work to be carried out
- project is broken down level by level
- lowest levels are work packages (or tasks)
- each WP has a defined end product and acceptance test
- WBS contains all the work required to produce the project deliverables
- it totally defines the project scope
what are 7 defining attributes of a work package/task
- specification
- acceptance criteria
- responsibility
- budget
- duration
- resource requirements
- dependencies
why is the size of WP important
they must be small enough to allow realistic estimates to be made, but not so small the volume overwhelms the planning and control process
what are 7 benefits of the WBS
- its production facilitates team building
- it focuses attention on project objectives
- it forces detailed planning
- it facilitates the allocation of responsibility for WP’s
- it graphically illustrates project scope
- it facilitates rolling wave planning
- it’s the starting point for:
- budgeting
- estimating
- scheduling
- controlling
- change control
- configuration management
what is the difference between the WBS and PBS
WBS is activity related, PBS is product related. it breaks the project down into its constituent products and sub-products
what are the 3 main objectives of the PBS
- to identify customer products
- to identify additional products which will facilitate building and supporting these products
- to gain consensus on sensible product groupings
what are product characteristics within the PBS
- topmost product is the ‘final’ product or project outcome
- PBS includes as lower level items products supplied by external sources
- each higher level product is completed defined by the levels below
- the PBS will generally include ‘intermediate’ or ‘enabling’ products or ‘sub-assemblies’
what is the relationship between the WBS and PBS
WBS breaks down the work into individual tasks and each task delivers a ‘product’
PBS breaks down the product into individual components and each component requires ‘work’
it is common to have hybrid solutions where a product is broken down into the work needed to produce it
what is a Cost Breakdown Structure CBS
CBS shows all the different cost categories that make up the total project costs
the costs are applied to every WP/task on the WBS or end items on the PBS enabling costs to be rolled up to any required level