Introduction To Project Management
Introduction To Project Management
Introduction To Project Management
Q1 Is it a project?
PROGRESSIVE ELABORATION.
This means the characteristics of the product, service, or result of the project are
determined incrementally and are continually refined and worked out in detail as the
project progresses.
More information and better estimates become available the further you progress in the
project. Progressive elaboration improves the project team’s ability to manage greater
levels of detail and allows for the inevitable change that occurs throughout a project’s
life cycle.
This concept goes along with the temporary and unique aspects of a project because
when you first start the project, you don’t know all the minute details of the end
product.
Product characteristics typically start out broad-based at the beginning of the project
and are progressively elaborated into more and more detail over time until they are
complete and finalized.
Progressive elaboration is most often used when creating the project or product scope,
developing requirements, determining human resources, scheduling, and defining risks
and their mitigation plans.
Progressive elaboration continues throughout the project life cycle, including defining
the requirements and scope, delivering the end product or result, and obtaining
acceptance from the stakeholders.
STAKEHOLDERS
A project is successful when it achieves its objectives and meets or exceeds the
expectations of the stakeholders.
Stakeholders are those folks (or organizations) with a vested interest in your project.
They may be active or passive as far as participation on the project goes, but the one
thing they all have in common is that each of them has something to either gain or lose
as a result of the project.
Stakeholder identification is not a onetime process.
Continue asking fellow team members and stakeholders if there are other stakeholders
who should be a part of the project.
Who are the stakeholders of this project?
Key stakeholders can make or break the success of a project.
Even if all the deliverables are met and the objectives are satisfied, if your key
stakeholders aren’t happy, nobody is happy.
The project sponsor, generally an executive in the organization with the authority to
assign resources and enforce decisions regarding the project. He/she serves as the tie-
breaker decision maker and is one of the people on your escalation path.
Others are the customer, contractors and suppliers.
The project manager, the project team members, and the managers from other
departments, including the operations areas, are stakeholders as well.
Leaving out an important stakeholder or their department’s function and not
discovering the error until well into the project can be a project killer.