The process of finalizing all activities and formally completing the project.
Lessons Learned Register
A document capturing knowledge gained during the project (click to see exemple).
Operational Readiness
The degree to which operations can support and sustain the delivered product.
Handover to Operations
The formal transfer of ownership, responsibility, and risk from the project to operations.
Integrated Change Control
The process of reviewing and approving changes across the project.
Change Request
A formal proposal to modify project baselines or plans.
Issue
A current condition that is already affecting the project.
Work Performance Report
A document summarizing performance information for stakeholders (click to see exemple).
Work Performance Information
Performance data analyzed and integrated to provide context (click to see exemple).
Work Performance Data
Raw observations and measurements collected during project execution (click to see exemple).
Control Procurements
the process of managing procurement relationships and contract performance.
Claim
A formal request for compensation or time adjustment under a contract.
Liquidated Damages
Pre-agreed penalties for failure to meet contractual obligations.
Compensable Delay
A delay that entitles the seller to additional time and/or money.
Excusable Delay
A delay allowed without penalty under the contract.
Force Majeure
A contract clause excusing performance due to unforeseeable events beyond control.
Procurement Management Plan
A document describing how goods and services will be acquired (click to see exemple).
Workaround
An unplanned response to a risk that occurs when no planned response exists.
Expected Monetary Value
A risk analysis technique calculating average outcomes (click to see exemple)
Quantitative Risk Analysis
Numerical analysis of the combined effect of risks on project objectives (click to see exemple).
Residual Risk
Risk remaining after responses have been implemented.
Risk Register
A document listing identified risks, responses, and owners (click to see exemple).
Risk
An uncertain event or condition that may affect project objectives.
Quality Expectations
Stakeholder perceptions of acceptable performance beyond formal standards.
Quality Standards
Mandatory specifications that must be complied with.
Quality Management Plan
A document describing how quality policies, standards, and requirements will be met (click to see exemple).
Benefit–Cost Ratio
The ratio of expected benefits to expected costs.
Payback Period
The time required to recover the initial investment.
Internal Rate of Return
The discount rate at which NPV equals zero.
Net Present Value
The value of future cash flows discounted to today.
Return on Investment
A financial measure comparing the net benefit of an investment to its cost.
Management Reserve
Time or cost set aside by management for unforeseen work, not included in the baseline.
Contingency Reserve
Time or cost set aside for identified risks.
Cost Baseline
The approved version of the project budget used for monitoring and control.
Critical Path
The longest sequence of dependent activities that determines the shortest project duration.
Lag
The amount of time an activity is delayed relative to its predecessor.
Lead
The amount of time an activity can be advanced relative to its predecessor.
Rolling Wave Planning
A planning approach where near-term work is planned in detail and future work at a higher level.
Schedule Management Plan
A document that establishes how the schedule will be developed, monitored, and controlled (click to see exemple).
Activity-on-Node Network
A schedule network diagram where activities are represented by nodes and dependencies by arrows (click to see exemple).
Define Activities
The process of identifying and documenting specific actions needed to produce deliverables.
Decomposition
The technique of subdividing deliverables and work into smaller, more manageable components.
WBS Dictionary
A document providing detailed information about each WBS component (click to see exemple).
Work Breakdown Structure
A hierarchical decomposition of the total scope of work into manageable components (click to see exemple).
Project Scope Statement
A detailed description of the project deliverables, boundaries, and acceptance criteria (click to see exemple).
Requirement Traceability Matrix
A table that links requirements to their origins and corresponding deliverables (click to see exemple).
Requirements Documentation
A detailed description of individual stakeholder requirements (click to see exemple).
Requirements Management Plan
A document that defines how requirements will be collected, analyzed, tracked, and reported (click to see exemple).
Scope Management Plan
A component of the project management plan describing how scope will be defined, validated, and controlled (click to see exemple).
Phase Gate
A review point at the end of a phase where continuation is approved, modified, or terminated.
Project Phase
A collection of logically related project activities that culminates in the completion of one or more deliverables.
Project Life Cycle
The series of phases a project passes through from initiation to closure.
Tailoring
the deliberate adaptation of project management processes to fit the project’s context, size, and complexity.
Organizational Process Assets
Plans, processes, policies, procedures, and knowledge bases specific to the organization.
Enterprise Environmental Factors
Conditions not under the control of the project team that influence or constrain the project.
Psychological Safety
A shared belief that the team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking.
Servant Leadership
A leadership approach focused on serving the team by removing obstacles and enabling performance.
Leadership
The ability to guide, motivate, and enable others to contribute toward project success
Salience Model
A stakeholder classification model based on power, legitimacy, and urgency (click to see exemple).
Stakeholder Engagement Assessment Matrix
A tool that compares current and desired stakeholder engagement levels (click to see exemple).
Power Interest Grid
A stakeholder analysis tool that categorizes stakeholders based on their level of authority and interest (click to see exemple).
Stakeholder
An individual, group, or organization that may affect, be affected by, or perceive itself to be affected by a project.
Assumption Log
A document used to record assumptions and constraints throughout the project lifecycle (click to see exemple).
Benefits Management Plan
A document that defines how benefits will be delivered, measured, and sustained (click to see exemple).
Business Case
A documented economic justification for the project that explains the expected benefits, costs, and risks (Click to see exemple).
Project Charter
A document issued by the sponsor that formally authorizes the project and grants the project manager authority to apply organizational resources.
Directive PMO
A PMO that directly manages projects and assigns project managers
Controlling PMO
A PMO that requires compliance with standards and frameworks
Supportive PMO
A PMO that provides guidance and templates with low control.
Project Management Office
An organizational structure that standardizes project-related governance processes and facilitates the sharing of resources, methodologies, and tools.
Strong Matrix Organization
An organizational structure where project managers have high authority and full-time project staff, while functional managers retain limited control.
Legitimacy
The recognized and accepted right of an individual or group to exercise authority.
Accountability
The obligation to answer for outcomes and consequences, regardless of who performed the work.
Authority
The right to make decisions and commit organizational resources within defined boundaries
Governance Path
The defined escalation and decision-approval route through which issues, risks, and changes move within the organization.
Project Governance
The framework of rules, roles, decision-making authority, and oversight used to align the project with organizational strategy and ensure accountability.
Portfolio
A collection of projects, programs, and operations managed as a group to achieve strategic objectives
Program
A group of related projects managed in a coordinated way to obtain benefits not available from managing them individually.
Project Manager
The person assigned by the performing organization to lead the team responsible for achieving project objectives.
Project
a temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique product, service, or result