Overview
Project management is the application of knowledge, skills,
tools, and techniques to project activities to meet project requirements.
Project management is accomplished through processes, using project management
knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques that receive inputs and generate
outputs.
In order for a project to be successful, the project team must:
-
Select appropriate processes within the Project Management
Process Groups (also known as Process Groups) that are required to meet the
project objectives
-
Use a defined approach to adapt the product specifications
and plans to meet project and product requirements
-
Comply with requirements to meet stakeholder needs, wants
and expectations
-
Balance the competing demands of scope, time, cost, quality,
resources, and risk to produce a quality product.
This standard documents information needed to initiate, plan,
execute, monitor and control, and close a single project, and identifies those
project management processes that have been recognized as good practice on most
projects most of the time. These processes apply globally and across industry
groups. Good practice means there is general agreement that the application of
those project management processes has been shown to enhance the chances of
success over a wide range of projects.
This does not mean that the knowledge, skills and
processes described should always be applied uniformly on all projects. The
project manager, in collaboration with the project team, is always responsible
for determining what processes are appropriate, and the appropriate degree of
rigor for each process, for any given project.
In fact, project managers and their teams are advised to carefully
consider addressing each process and its constituent inputs and outputs. Project
managers and their teams should use this chapter as a high-level guide for those
processes that they must consider in managing their project. This effort is
known as tailoring.
A process is a set of interrelated actions and activities that are
performed to achieve a pre-specified set of products, results, or services. The
project processes are performed by the project team, and generally fall into one
of two major categories:
-
The project management processes common to most projects
most of the time are associated with each other by their performance for an
integrated purpose. The purpose is to initiate, plan, execute, monitor and
control, and close a project. These processes interact with each other in
complex ways that cannot be completely explained in a document or with graphics.
However, an example of the interactions among the Process Groups is shown in Figure 3-4. The
processes may also interact in relation to project scope, cost, schedule, etc.,
which are called Knowledge Areas, and are described in Chapters 4 through 12.
-
Product-oriented processes specify and create the project's
product. Product- oriented processes are typically defined by the project life
cycle (discussed in Section 2.1) and vary by application area. Project management
processes and product-oriented processes overlap and interact throughout the
project. For example, the scope of the project cannot be defined in the absence
of some basic understanding of how to create the specified
product.
Project management is an integrative undertaking. Project
management integration requires each project and product process to be
appropriately aligned and connected with the other processes to facilitate their
coordination. These process interactions often require tradeoffs among project
requirements and objectives. A large and complex project may have some processes
that will have to be iterated several times to define and meet stakeholder
requirements and reach agreement on the processes outcome. Failure to take
action during one process will usually affect that process and other related
processes. For example, a scope change will almost always affect project cost,
but the scope change may or may not affect team morale or product quality. The
specific performance tradeoffs will vary from project to project and
organization to organization. Successful project management includes actively
managing these interactions to successfully meet sponsor, customer and other
stakeholder requirements.
This standard describes the nature of project management processes
in terms of the integration between the processes, the interactions within them,
and the purposes they serve. These processes are aggregated into five groups,
defined as the Project Management Process Groups: