What Is Project Scope-Coloured
What Is Project Scope-Coloured
1
project. This can lead to project delays, overwork, or low
quality deliverables.
2
8 steps to define your project’s
scope
1. Start with your project objectives
Before you can define your project scope, you first need to
outline your project objectives. Project objectives are the
assets you plan to deliver by the end of your project. Your
project scope, ultimately, will help you get there—but you
first need to know where “there” is.
Read: How to write an effective project objective, with examples
3
plan outlines which resources you have available for this
project—and how they’ll be used.
4
Depending on the complexity of your project, your project
scope statement could be a bullet-pointed list, a longer
paragraph, or a full blown SOW. No matter how long it is,
your project scope statement should outline what your
project objectives are and indicate what your project will
and will not cover.
If you need help defining scope, start by answering these
questions:
Why are we working on this project? What are our ultimate goals and deliverables?
What restrictions do we have? How much budget, headcount, and resources are
available? Which team members will be working on this?
When are our deliverables due? What timeline do we have to hit?
What is out of scope?
5
May 17th–June 3rd: Web team transfer
May 31st: Content writers’ training
June 4th: CMS is live
Out of scope:
New DAM system
Customizable web pages on new CMS
6
also don’t want anyone to be able to make a change willy
nilly, because that can lead to scope creep.
A change process is an established set of processes that
stakeholders have to go through before their change is
approved. To create a change control process:
1. Establish a way for your project team and stakeholders
to submit change requests—for example, through a
centralized intake Form.
7
process, refer them to the project scope
statement and encourage them to submit their
idea as a request or fast-follow.