Initiating
Planning
Executing
Monitoring & Controlling
Closing
100

This document formally authorizes a project and outlines its objectives and scope.

Project charter

100

This planning process defines what is and isn’t included in a project setting clear boundaries through critical and nice-to-have deliverables.

Scope Planning

100

This phase involves managing performance, tracking progress, and keeping stakeholders informed through regular updates and meetings.

Executing and Controlling

100

This tool records and tracks problems that may hinder project progress until they are resolved.

Issue Log

100

This process involves reviewing what went well, what didn’t, and identifying improvements for future projects.

Lessons Learned

200

These are individuals or groups who have an interest in the project and can influence its outcome.

Project Stakeholders

200

This hierarchical framework breaks down the total project scope into smaller, manageable components to organize and define all work needed.

Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)

200

These interpersonal abilities enable project managers to guide teams effectively through conflict resolution, decision making, and collaboration.

Leadership Skills

200

A document used to propose, justify, and approve modifications to project plans, budgets, or deliverables.

Change Request Form

200

This document provides a summary of project results, lessons learned, and recommendations for future initiatives.

Closure Report

300

This group is formed to achieve project goals and often works in a dynamic, cross-functional, and high pressure environment.

Project Team

300

In developing a project’s WBS, this represents the smallest, fully defined unit of work manageable, assignable, and producing a tangible deliverable that forms part of the scope baseline

Work Package

300

This ensures that management, stakeholders, and team members stay aligned through updates on scope, objectives, risks, and project variances.

Communication

300

A regular meeting designed to review progress, identify issues, and make team decisions to maintain alignment with objectives.

Status Meeting

300

The final approval step where the client or sponsor formally accepts all project deliverables.

Project Sign-off

400

These define what a project must specifically achieve to support broader organizational ambitions but unlike goals, they are measurable and time-bound

Project Objectives

400

This process turns the project scope into a time-based plan, connecting activities, durations, and resources to create the schedule baseline.

Schedule Planning

400

This principle empowers the project manager to act within an assigned sphere of influence, while higher leadership steps in only for decisions that exceed it.

Power of Delegation

400

During a weekly status meeting, the project manager ensures tasks are on track, clarifies next steps, addresses obstacles, and finalizes actions. Which four key activities summarize the purpose of this meeting?

Monitor progress, Confirm/clarify direction, Identify issues, Make decisions

400

This process ensures that all project documents are completed, deliverables are handed over, and the project is formally concluded.

Project Closure

500

Often confused with project objectives, these quantifiable benchmarks determine if the project’s outcomes are considered successful once completed.

Critical Success Criteria

500

This process defines how external resources will be acquired by analyzing make-or-buy options, setting selection criteria, and creating an acquisition plan.

Plan Procurements

500

This practice involves critically examining issues by asking “So what?”, documenting and communicating their impacts, and using innovative approaches to drive accountability and timely resolution.

Insights

500

Enumerate the change control process:

  • Proposing a Change

  • Summary of Impact

  • Decision

  • Implementing a Change

  • Closing a Change

500

Enumerate the key sections or contents that must be included in a Closure Report.

  • Summary paragraph,

  • Background,

  • Conclusions and recommendations, 

  • Next steps, Attachments (Scope & Quality results, Plan results, Key learnings, Metrics analysis results if applicable)