Project management plan
Project charter
Infrastructure of the performing organization
Lessons learned from past projects
Inputs to the Plan Scope Management process include the project charter, which outlines the project's objectives and high-level requirements; the project management plan, which provides overall guidance; and stakeholder requirements documentation, detailing stakeholder needs and expectations. Additionally, organizational process assets, such as templates and historical information, can also serve as valuable inputs to ensure comprehensive scope planning.
Project scope statement Requirements documentation Enterprise environmental factors Scope management plan Organizational process assets
approved change request; project scope and statement; company structure and culture; project management plan; files from previous projects
The inputs to the Create Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) process include the project scope statement, project management plan, enterprise environmental factors, and organizational process assets. The project scope statement outlines the project's deliverables and constraints, while the project management plan provides guidance on how the project will be executed. Enterprise environmental factors may include organizational culture and standards, and organizational process assets encompass templates and historical information that aid in the WBS development. Together, these inputs help in effectively breaking down the project into manageable components.
-Organizational process assets -The project management plan -Accepted deliverables
Organizational process assets Scope management plan The project charter Requirements documentation
The Project Charter, Req Documents, Scope management Plan, Organizatioanl Process assets
Inputs to the Plan Scope Management process include the project charter, which outlines the project's objectives and high-level requirements; the project management plan, which provides overall guidance; and stakeholder requirements documentation, detailing stakeholder needs and expectations. Additionally, organizational process assets, such as templates and historical information, can also serve as valuable inputs to ensure comprehensive scope planning.
The control scope process inputs typically include the project management plan, specifically the scope management plan and the project scope statement. Additionally, work performance data, which provides information on the project's current status, and organizational process assets, such as historical information and lessons learned, are also key inputs. These elements help project managers monitor and control project scope effectively to ensure alignment with project objectives.
Project scope statement Requirements documentation Enterprise environmental factors Scope management plan Organizational process assets
The inputs that feed into the validate scope process include the project management plan, specifically the scope management plan, the project deliverables, and the requirements documentation. Additionally, stakeholder feedback and the work performance data are crucial, as they provide insights into whether the project deliverables meet the established requirements and expectations. These inputs help ensure that the project aligns with stakeholder needs and that the deliverables are validated before final acceptance.
approved change request; project scope and statement; company structure and culture; project management plan; files from previous projects
Yes, a project management plan can be used to verify the scope process. The project management plan outlines how the project will be executed, monitored, and controlled, including how scope verification will be conducted. By following the plan, project managers can ensure that the scope verification process is carried out effectively and in alignment with project objectives. This helps to confirm that all deliverables have been completed satisfactorily and meet the agreed-upon requirements.
-Organizational process assets -The project management plan -Accepted deliverables
Change control procedures Project management information systems Time management plan Project charter
Org process assets Accepted deliverables The project management plan
The Project Management Plan tells you how to manage all of the different knowledge areas, and it has baselines for the scope, schedule and budget. The Scope Management Plan is one of the subsidiary plans inside the project management plan. It has really specific procedures for managing scope. For example, it tells us which stakeholders we need to talk to when gathering requirements. It lists what tools and techniques we are planning to use when we use the Scope Definition to define the scope. And when there's an inevitable change because even the best project manager can't prevent every change, it gives him procedures for doing Scope Management. So even though the Scope Management Plan is created in the Develop Project Management Plan process, it's used throughout all of the Scope Management processes.