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If you find that your project is starting to trend over its budget and schedule, try to find the cause. In many cases you will find that you are simply taking on more work than you originally agreed to. If you do not have a good scope change process in place, it is never too late to start.
Now, let’s say you have done a good job
defining and planning the project. You’re home free, right? Not exactly. It is very common that once the project starts, the
sponsor
ends up asking for more (or different) work than what was originally agreed to.
This is the time you must invoke scope change management. If you don’t, you will
end up trying to complete more work than what was originally agreed to and
budgeted for. In other words, you are heading down the road to trouble.
Five Project
Management Mistakes
Mistake #2: Poor scope management practices
Managing scope is one of the most critical aspects of
managing a project.
However, if you have not done a good job of defining scope, managing scope will
be almost impossible. The purpose of defining scope is to clearly describe and gain agreement on the
logical boundaries and deliverables of your project. The business requirements
are gathered to provide more detail on the characteristics of the deliverables.
Defining scope means that you have defined the
project boundaries and deliverables, and the product requirements. These should
all be approved by your sponsor.
The project manager and project team must
realize that there is nothing wrong with changing scope - as long as the change
is managed. If you cannot accommodate change, the final
solution may be less valuable than it should be, or it may, in fact, be
unusable.
Every project should have a
process in place to manage change effectively. The process should include
identifying the change, determining the business value of the change,
determining the impact on the project and then taking the resulting information
to the project sponsor for their evaluation. The sponsor can determine if the
change should be included. If it is included, then the sponsor should also
understand the impact on the project, and allocate the additional budget and
time needed to include the change.
The most common problems with scope change
management are:
-
Not having the baseline scope approved, which makes it difficult to apply scope change management.
-
Not managing small scope changes leaving yourself open to "scope creep".
-
Not documenting all changes - even small ones.
-
Having the project manager make scope change decisions instead of the sponsor (or designee).
If you find that your project is starting to trend over its budget and schedule, try to find the cause. In many cases you will find that you are simply taking on more work than you originally agreed to. If you do not have a good scope change process in place, it is never too late to start.
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