Goal Hierarchy
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− | It can be difficult to navigate the many tools and concepts that have been made for project management. However, the place to start is defining the purpose of your project. The purpose is what keeps the project alive. If there is no purpose, there is no reason to do the project. How do you approach it then? You start looking at the scope of the project. The scope should only include the processes that will help you to ensure that the project will be a success. It requires a structed managing of the project, which involves defining and controlling what should be and what should not be part of the project. <ref> Project Management Institute, Inc.. (2017). Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) (6th Edition) - 5. Project Scope Management, page 129. Project Management Institute, Inc. (PMI). Retrieved from https://app.knovel.com/hotlink/pdf/id:kt011DX4T1/guide-project-management/project-scope-management </ref> One way to help you defining the scope of your project is to apply the Goal Hierarchy method. | + | It can be difficult to navigate the many tools and concepts that have been made for project management. However, the place to start is defining the purpose of your project. The purpose is what keeps the project alive. If there is no purpose, there is no reason to do the project. How do you approach it then? You start looking at the scope of the project. The scope should only include the processes that will help you to ensure that the project will be a success. It requires a structed managing of the project, which involves defining and controlling what should be and what should not be part of the project. <ref> Project Management Institute, Inc.. (2017). Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) (6th Edition) - 5. Project Scope Management, page 129. Project Management Institute, Inc. (PMI). Retrieved from https://app.knovel.com/hotlink/pdf/id:kt011DX4T1/guide-project-management/project-scope-management </ref> One way to help you defining the scope of your project is to apply the ''Goal Hierarchy'' method. |
− | The Goal Hierarchy is a dynamic method that can be used to set a common goal at the beginning of the project that will be updated throughout the project as knowledge expands. <ref> Attrup, M. L. and Olsson, J.R. , Power i projekter og portefølje, page 100, DJØF Publishing (2008), ISBN: 978-87-574-1665-7. </ref> | + | The ''Goal Hierarchy'' is a dynamic method that can be used to set a common goal at the beginning of the project that will be updated throughout the project as knowledge expands. <ref> Attrup, M. L. and Olsson, J.R. , Power i projekter og portefølje, page 100, DJØF Publishing (2008), ISBN: 978-87-574-1665-7. </ref> |
Revision as of 17:13, 9 February 2021
It can be difficult to navigate the many tools and concepts that have been made for project management. However, the place to start is defining the purpose of your project. The purpose is what keeps the project alive. If there is no purpose, there is no reason to do the project. How do you approach it then? You start looking at the scope of the project. The scope should only include the processes that will help you to ensure that the project will be a success. It requires a structed managing of the project, which involves defining and controlling what should be and what should not be part of the project. [1] One way to help you defining the scope of your project is to apply the Goal Hierarchy method.
The Goal Hierarchy is a dynamic method that can be used to set a common goal at the beginning of the project that will be updated throughout the project as knowledge expands. [2]
Contents |
Context
When managing projects one can use tools and concepts within four different perspectives: Purpose, People, Complexity and Uncertainty. This article focusses on the purpose, specifically on how to define the scope by using the method Goal Hierarchy.
Description and Purpose
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Application
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Limitations
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Annotated Bibliography
Project Management Institute, Inc.. (2017). Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) (6th Edition). Project Management Institute, Inc. (PMI). Retrieved from https://app.knovel.com/hotlink/toc/id:kpGPMBKP02/guide-project-management/guide-project-management
References
- ↑ Project Management Institute, Inc.. (2017). Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) (6th Edition) - 5. Project Scope Management, page 129. Project Management Institute, Inc. (PMI). Retrieved from https://app.knovel.com/hotlink/pdf/id:kt011DX4T1/guide-project-management/project-scope-management
- ↑ Attrup, M. L. and Olsson, J.R. , Power i projekter og portefølje, page 100, DJØF Publishing (2008), ISBN: 978-87-574-1665-7.