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About this lesson
A best practice for any project is to create a project charter at the time of project initiation. The Lean Six Sigma project charter will focus on the scope of the project, the timing for the project milestones, and the key team members. This provides a basis for project planning.
Exercise files
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Project Charter Exercise - 2023.docx332.5 KB Project Charter Exercise Solution - 2023.docx
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Quick reference
Project Charter
The Lean Six Sigma methodology encourages the use of a project Charter to set boundaries on the project and to manage stakeholder expectations.
When to use
These tools are used at the beginning of a project as part of project initiation and approval which normally occur during the Define phase.
Instructions
Many elements of project management apply to Lean Six Sigma projects. The Lean Six Sigma project has five phases, Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control. At the end of each phase, a “toll gate” meeting is conducted to close out that phase and start the next phase. The normal project management process of initiating applies to Lean Six Sigma projects and the tollgate of the Define phase will include a review of the approved project charter.
The project charter is the document that acts as a contract between the stakeholders and the Lean Six Sigma project team. It captures the overall project goal and sets the project boundaries. A difference between a charter on a Lean Six Sigma project and most other projects is that cost and schedule are not as important. The charter includes overall cost and schedule estimates, but the primary point is the business need or issue that the project is focused upon.
Many organizations have templates that are used for completing the project charter on a Lean Six Sigma project. The presentation includes the template that I have used with several organizations. The specific format is not critical, rather it is that the charter contains the attributes of the overall business goal, the key customer requirements or CTQs, a statement of the business case, and project boundaries around scope, schedule, and team resources.
Hints & tips
- Charters are very handy if either the team or stakeholders “forget” the purpose of the project and try to get the Lean Six Sigma analysis to dig into side issues that are not part of the goal. Pull out the charter and remind everyone of the project’s purpose.
- The charter should be reviewed at each tollgate to align stakeholders and team members who may be drifting from the original purpose.
- Charters are high-level documents, not detailed plans. The detailed planning for each phase should be done at the beginning of that phase,
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