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About this lesson
A formal documented modification to the project baseline, boundaries, or an artifact.
Exercise files
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Project Change Exercise.docx60.1 KB Project Change Exercise Solution.docx
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Quick reference
Project Change
A formal documented modification to the project baseline, boundaries, or an artifact.
When to use
The change process should be implemented in the following conditions:
- Whenever external forces request a change to the project goals, milestones, objectives, or deliverables
- Whenever the project team recommends a change to incorporate a best practice, take advantage of an opportunity, or respond to a risk trigger.
- Whenever the project team or stakeholders recommend a change in order to recover from an unplanned difficulty.
Instructions
For project change control to have any meaning; there must first be a project baseline. Baselines apply to three aspects of projects:
- There can be a baseline of the project initiation boundary conditions. This baseline is normally embodied in the Project Charter.
- There can be a baseline for the project plan. This baseline should include planning elements for all three sides of the project management triangle – scope, schedule, and resources. This baseline can be a high-level plan or a very detailed plan.
- There can be a baseline for project deliverables that are subject to change during the lifecycle of the project. These are usually documents such as drawings and specifications, contracts, and procedures.
The original baseline is approved by those with the authority to do so. This could be senior management, other stakeholders, project team members, or organizations whose responsibility is to manage baselines. This is usually dictated by organizational procedures or project requirements.
When a change to a project baseline or baseline document is requested, normally the project team assesses the impact of the change on the project plan and project benefits. The change is presented to the appropriate approval authorities. If the change is approved, the project documents are revised and the revised documents are distributed. If the change is rejected, the requestor should be notified.
A major challenge with change management on projects is to keep everyone informed of the change and to update all appropriate documentation and communication. On large complex projects, this is a major integration challenge and I have seen projects assign a full-time team member role to managing the coordination and implementation of change. A configuration management system is often used to communicate the status of project changes.
Definitions
Change Control: “A process whereby modifications to documents, deliverables, or baselines associated with the project are identified, documented, approved, or rejected.” PMBOK® Guide
Change: “A modification to any formally controlled deliverable, project management plan component, or project document.” PMBOK® Guide
Configuration Management System: “A collection of procedures used to track project artifacts and monitor and control changes to these artifacts.” PMBOK® Guide
These definitions are taken from the Glossary of the Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, (PMBOK® Guide) – Seventh Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2021.
Hints & tips
- If your change control system is slow, controlled documents should be at a very high level with no detail. Otherwise, detailed changes will clog the change management system and you will lose control of the baselines.
- Leverage existing systems to as great a degree as possible to minimize duplication of overhead.
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