The document outlines the key processes involved in project scope management: planning scope management, collecting requirements, defining scope, creating a work breakdown structure (WBS), validating scope, and controlling scope. It discusses each process in detail, explaining their purpose and important outputs. Project scope management is critical for project success by helping to ensure stakeholders have a shared understanding of what work is and isn't included in the project.
The document outlines the key processes involved in project scope management: planning scope management, collecting requirements, defining scope, creating a work breakdown structure (WBS), validating scope, and controlling scope. It discusses each process in detail, explaining their purpose and important outputs. Project scope management is critical for project success by helping to ensure stakeholders have a shared understanding of what work is and isn't included in the project.
The document outlines the key processes involved in project scope management: planning scope management, collecting requirements, defining scope, creating a work breakdown structure (WBS), validating scope, and controlling scope. It discusses each process in detail, explaining their purpose and important outputs. Project scope management is critical for project success by helping to ensure stakeholders have a shared understanding of what work is and isn't included in the project.
The document outlines the key processes involved in project scope management: planning scope management, collecting requirements, defining scope, creating a work breakdown structure (WBS), validating scope, and controlling scope. It discusses each process in detail, explaining their purpose and important outputs. Project scope management is critical for project success by helping to ensure stakeholders have a shared understanding of what work is and isn't included in the project.
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Chapter 5
Project Scope Management
Text book: Information Technology Project Management 8th edition
Dr. Deema ALShoaibi Outlines • What is project scope management? • Planning scope management • Collecting requirements • Defining scope • Creating the work breakdown structure • Validating scope • Controlling scope. 1. What is Project Scope Management • Project success associated with factors such as: user involvement, clear business objectives, and optimized scope. • Those factors are elements of project scope management. • Defining the scope is an important and difficult aspect. • Scope: refers to all the work involved in creating the products of the project and the processes used to create them. • Scope includes deliverables (product created as a part of a project) stakeholders must agree on the deliverables. 1. What is Project Scope Management • Project scope management includes the processes involved in defining and controlling what work is or is not included in a project. • It ensures that the project team and stakeholders have the same understanding of what products the project will produce and what processes the project team will use to produce them. • Project scope management includes 6 main processes. 1. What is Project Scope Management • Project scope management includes the processes involved in defining and controlling what work is or is not included in a project. • Six main processes are involved in project scope management: 1. Planning scope management involves determining how the project’s scope and requirements will be managed. The project team works with appropriate stakeholders to create a scope management plan and requirements management plan. 2. Collecting requirements involves defining and documenting the features and functions of the products as well as the processes used for creating them. The project team creates requirements documentation and a requirements traceability matrix as outputs of the requirements collection process. 3. Defining scope involves reviewing the scope management plan, project charter, requirements documents, and organizational process assets to create a scope statement, adding more information as requirements are developed and change requests are approved. Outputs of scope definition are the project scope statement and updates to project documents. 1. What is Project Scope Management • Six main processes are involved in project scope management: 4. Creating the WBS involves subdividing the major project deliverables into smaller, more manageable components. Outputs include a scope baseline (which includes a WBS and a WBS dictionary) and updates to project documents. 5. Validating scope involves formalizing acceptance of the project deliverables. Key project stakeholders, such as the customer and sponsor for the project, inspect and then formally accept the deliverables during this process. If the deliverables are not acceptable, the customer or sponsor usually requests changes. The outputs of this process are accepted deliverables, change requests, work performance information, and updates to project documents. 6. Controlling scope involves controlling changes to project scope throughout the life of the project—a challenge on many IT projects. Scope changes often influence the team’s ability to meet project time and cost goals, so project managers must carefully weigh the costs and benefits of scope changes. The outputs of this process are work performance information, change requests, and updates to the project management plan, project documents, and organizational process assets. 1. What is Project Scope Management • Six main processes are involved in project scope management • The figure summarizes these processes and outputs and shows when they occur in a typical project. 2. Planning Scope Management • The first step in project scope management is planning how the scope will be managed throughout the life of the project. • The scope management plan is a subsidiary part of the project management plan. • Scope management plan can be informal and broad or formal and detailed, based on the needs of the project. • Small projects may not need a written scope management plan, but large projects or highly technical projects often benefit from one. 2. Planning Scope Management • Scope management plan includes the following information: • How to prepare a detailed project scope statement For example, are there templates or guidelines to follow? How much detail is needed to describe each deliverable? • How to create a WBS It is often difficult to create a good WBS. This section of the scope management plan would provide suggestions, samples, and resources for creating a WBS. • How to maintain and approve the WBS The initial WBS often changes, and project team members disagree on what should be included. The scope management plan describes guidelines for maintaining the WBS and getting approval for it. 2. Planning Scope Management • Scope management plan includes the following information: • How to obtain formal acceptance of the completed project deliverables. It is extremely important to understand the process for obtaining formal acceptance of completed deliverables, especially for projects in which payments are based on formal acceptance. • How to control requests for changes to the project scope. Organizations often have guidelines for submitting, evaluating, and approving changes to scope, and this section of the scope management plan would specify how to handle change requests for the project. 2. Planning Scope Management Discussion: Incorporating changes into a project increases both the project's expenses and the time needed to complete it. In your opinion, during which phase of development do you believe these alterations incur the highest costs? 3. Collecting Requirements
• The second step in project scope
management is often the most difficult: collecting requirements. • A major consequence of not defining requirements well is rework, which can consume up to half of project costs, especially for software development projects. • it costs much more (up to 30 times more) to correct a software defect in later development phases than to fix it in the requirements phase. 3. Collecting Requirements • Ways to collect requirements: • Interviewing stakeholders One on one is often very effective, although it can be expensive and time-consuming. • Questionnaires and surveys faster, stakeholders should provide honest and thorough information. • Observation good for projects that involve improving work processes and procedures. • Prototyping and document analysis common techniques for collecting software development requirements. • Benchmarking generating ideas by comparing specific project practices or product characteristics to those of other projects or products inside or outside the performing organization 3. Collecting Requirements • Factors affecting effort spent in collecting requirements: • Size. • Complexity. • Importance. • It is important for a project team to decide how it will collect and manage requirements. • It is crucial to gather inputs from key stakeholders and align the scope with business strategy. • Requirements should be documents. • Documentations varies based on the project size and type. It could be a 1 page document or a includes videos and pictures along with a room full of notebooks. • Requirements are often broken down into different categories such as functional requirements, service requirements, performance requirements, quality requirements, and training requirements. 3. Collecting Requirements • Requirements traceability matrix (RTM) is a table that lists requirements, their various at- tributes, and the status of the requirements to ensure that all are addressed. 4. Defining Scope • The next step in project scope management is to provide a detailed definition of the work required for the project. • Good scope definition is very important to project success • Scope definition helps to improve the accuracy of time, cost, and resource estimates. • Scope definition defines a baseline for performance measurement and project control, and aids in communicating clear work responsibilities. • Tools and techniques used in defining scope: • Expert judgment. • Product analysis. • Input used to define scope: • Project charter. • Scope management plan. • Requirements documentation. • Project files. • Lessons learned from previous, similar projects. 4. Defining Scope • The next step in project scope management is to provide a detailed definition of the work required for the project. • Good scope definition is very important to project success • Scope definition helps to improve the accuracy of time, cost, and resource estimates. • Scope definition defines a baseline for performance measurement and project control, and aids in communicating clear work responsibilities. • Tools and techniques used in defining scope: • Expert judgment. • Product analysis. • Input used to define scope: • Project charter. • Scope management plan. • Requirements documentation. • Project files. • Lessons learned from previous, similar projects. 4. Defining Scope • Project charter used to define the scope. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • After collecting requirements and defining scope, the next step in project scope management is to create a work breakdown structure. • work breakdown structure (WBS) is a deliverable-oriented grouping of the work involved in a project that defines its total scope. • It is important to organize and divide the work into logical parts based on how the work will be performed because most projects involve many people and many different deliverables. • The WBS is a foundation document in project management because it provides the basis for planning and managing project schedules, costs, resources, and changes. • Decomposition is subdividing project deliverables into smaller pieces. The outputs of the process of creating the WBS are the scope baseline and project documents updates. • Scope baseline includes the approved project scope statement and its associated WBS and WBS dictionary. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • WBS is often depicted as a task- oriented tree of activities, similar to an organizational chart. • A project team often organizes the WBS around project products, project phases, or the project management process groups. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • WBS can be organized around project phases. • WBS can be in both chart and tabular form. • Notice that both of these formats show the same information. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • WBS is the basis for project schedules. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • Gantt chart organized based on the project management processes. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • Approaches to developing WBS: • The analogy approach using a similar project’s WBS as a starting point. • Top-down approach start with the largest items of the project and break them into subordinate items. This process involves refining the work into greater and greater levels of detail. • Bottom-up approach team members first identify as many specific tasks related to the project as possible. They then aggregate the specific tasks and organize them into summary activities, or higher levels in the WBS. • Mind mapping mind mapping is a technique that uses branches radiating from a core idea to structure thoughts and ideas. Instead of writing down tasks in a list or immediately trying to create a structure for tasks, mind mapping allows people to write and even draw pictures of ideas in a nonlinear format. 5. Creating The Work Breakdown Structure • WBS Dictionary: • A WBS dictionary is a document that provides detailed information about each WBS item. 6. Validating Scope • Scope validation involves formal acceptance of the completed project deliverables. • This acceptance is often achieved by a customer inspection and then sign-off on key deliverables. • To receive formal acceptance of the project scope, the project team must develop clear documentation of the project’s products and procedures to evaluate whether they were completed correctly and satisfactorily. 7. Controlling Scope • The goal of scope control is to influence the factors that cause scope changes, to ensure that changes are processed according to procedures developed as part of integrated change control, and to manage changes when they occur. • Lack of user input leads to problems with managing scope creep and controlling change. • Suggestions for project team to improve user input: • Develop a good project selection process for IT projects. • Have users on the project team. • Have regular meetings with defined agendas. • Deliver something to project users and sponsors on a regular basis. • Do not promise to deliver what the team cannot deliver in a particular time frame. • Locate users with the developers. End of chapter notes • This chapter helps students to understand the importance of scope management. • Planning and collecting requirements are an important steps to define scope. • WBS is a deliverable oriented method to define the total scope.
• During the tutorial class, we will work on creating the WBS for a small project. Questions?