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Project Scope
is the sum of all of the things a project is supposed to produce (along with
what it is NOT supposed to produce). With Business Continuity, the final result
is a Business Continuity Plan that matches actual Business Needs. As indicated
in previous tips, the scope of a project can change quickly.
Many projects use a Scope Change Control Board that reviews proposed changes and
determines if a change should be approved or rejected. The members of this board
are usually the Project Sponsor, the Project Manager, members of the Project
Team, and possibly other interested departments (like Internal Audit).
Usually, the Scope Change Control Board requires a standardized form be filled
out completely for each proposed change. This enables them to determine possible
impacts to the project in terms of time (schedule), quality, cost, and risk (for
Business Continuity Projects).
Scope change control procedures can make the difference in a project that comes
in late, over budget, and with poor quality and a project that comes in on time,
within budget, and meets customer expectations. The real difference comes in how
changes in scope are documented, approved, and budgeted.
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