PMP Zertifizierung - Definitionen

PMP Zertifizierung - Definitionen

PMP Zertifizierung - Definitionen


Set of flashcards Details

Flashcards 292
Students 14
Language English
Category Micro-Economics
Level Other
Created / Updated 09.05.2013 / 21.12.2023
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Plan Communications [Process]

The process of determining project stakeholder information needs and defining a communication approach.. . . . .

Validation

The assurance that a product, service, or system meets the needs of the customer and other identified stakeholders. It often involves acceptance and suitability with external customers. Contrast with verification.. . .

Project Human Resource Management [Knowledge Area]

Project Human Resource Management includes the processes that organize and manage the project team.. . . . .

Control Schedule [Process]

The process of monitoring the status of the project to update project progress and managing changes to the schedule baseline.. . . . .

Planning Package

A work breakdown structure component below the control account with known work content but without detailed schedule activities. See also control account.. . . .

Administer Procurements [Process]

The process of managing procurement relationships, monitoring contract performance, and making changes and corrections as needed.. . . . .

Resource

Skilled human resources (specific disciplines either individually or in crews or teams), equipment, services, supplies, commodities, material, budgets, or funds.. . . . .

Analogous Estimating [Technique]

An estimating technique that uses the values of parameters, such as scope, cost, budget, and duration or measures of scale such as size, weight, and complexity from a previous, similar activity as the basis for estimating the same parameter or measure for a future activity.. . . . .

Three-Point Estimate [Technique]

An analytical technique that uses three cost or duration estimates to represent the optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic scenarios. This technique is applied to improve the accuracy of the estimates of cost or duration when the underlying activity or cost component is uncertain.. . . .

Grade

A category or rank used to distinguish items that have the same functional use (e.g., ÒhammerÓ), but do not share the same requirements for quality (e.g., different hammers may need to withstand different amounts of force).. . . . .

Historical Information

Documents and data on prior projects including project files, records, correspondence, closed contracts, and closed projects.. . . . .

Project Management Team

The members of the project team who are directly involved in project management activities. On some smaller projects, the project management team may include virtually all of the project team members.. . . .

Develop Human Resource Plan [Process]

The process of identifying and documenting project roles, responsibilities, and required skills, reporting relationships, and creating a staffing management plan.. . . . .

Activity Code

One or more numerical or text values that identify characteristics of the work or in some way categorize the schedule activity that allows filtering and ordering of activities within reports.. . . . .

Estimate [Output/Input]

A quantitative assessment of the likely amount or outcome. Usually applied to project costs, resources, effort, and durations and is usually preceded by a modifier (i.e., preliminary, conceptual, feasibility, order-of-magnitude, definitive). It should always include some indication of accuracy (e.g., ± x percent). See also budget and cost.. .

Change Control System [Tool]

A collection of formal documented procedures that define how project deliverables and documentation will be controlled, changed, and approved. In most application areas, the change control system is a subset of the configuration management system.. . . .

Portfolio

A collection of projects or programs and other work that are grouped together to facilitate effective management of that work to meet strategic business objectives. The projects or programs of the portfolio may not necessarily be interdependent or directly related.. . . .

Program

A group of related projects managed in a coordinated way to obtain benefits and control not available from managing them individually. Programs may include elements of related work outside of the scope of the discrete projects in the program.. . . .

Co-location [Technique]

An organizational placement strategy where the project team members are physically located close to one another in order to improve communication, working relationships, and productivity.. . . . .

Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) [Output/Input]

A deliverable-oriented hierarchical decomposition of the work to be executed by the project team to accomplish the project objectives and create the required deliverables. It organizes and defines the total scope of the project.. . . .

Near-Critical Activity

A schedule activity that has low total ß oat. The concept of near-critical is equally applicable to a schedule activity or schedule network path. The limit below which total float is considered near critical is subject to expert judgment and varies from project to project.. . .

Variance

A quantifiable deviation, departure, or divergence away from a known baseline or expected value.. . . . .

Project Schedule [Output/Input]

The planned dates for performing schedule activities and the planned dates for meeting schedule milestones.. . . . .

Material

The aggregate of things used by an organization in any undertaking, such as equipment, apparatus, tools, machinery, gear, material, and supplies.. . . . .

Critical Path

Generally, but not always, the sequence of schedule activities that determines the duration of the project. It is the longest path through the project. See also critical path methodology.. . .

Collect Requirements [Process]

Collect Requirements is the process of defining and documenting stakeholdersÕ needs to meet the project objectives.. . . . .

Control Costs [Process]

The process of monitoring the status of the project to update the project budget and managing changes to the cost baseline.. . . . .

Identify Stakeholders [Process]

The process of identifying all people or organizations impacted by the project, and documenting relevant information regarding their interests, involvement, and impact on project success.. . . . .

Planning Processes [Process Group]

Those processes performed to establish the total scope of the effort, define and refine the objectives, and develop the course of action required to attain those objectives.. . . . .

Standard

A document that provides, for common and repeated use, rules, guidelines, or characteristics for activities or their results, aimed at the achievement of the optimum degree of order in a given context.. . . . .

Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis [Process]

The process of numerically analyzing the effect of identified risks on overall project objectives.. . . . .

Precedence Diagramming Method (PDM) [Technique]

A schedule network diagramming technique in which schedule activities are represented by boxes (or nodes). Schedule activities are graphically linked by one or more logical relationships to show the sequence in which the activities are to be performed.. . . .

Responsibility Assignment Matrix (RAM) [Tool]

A structure that relates the project organizational breakdown structure to the work breakdown structure to help ensure that each component of the projectÕs scope of work is assigned to a person or team.. . . . .

Template

A partially complete document in a predefined format that provides a defined structure for collecting, organizing, and presenting information and data.. . . . .

Summary Activity

A group of related schedule activities aggregated at some summary level, and displayed/reported as a single activity at that summary level. See also subproject and subnetwork.. . . .

Triggers

Indications that a risk has occurred or is about to occur. Triggers may be discovered in the risk identification process and watched in the risk monitoring and control process. Triggers are sometimes called risk symptoms or warning signs.. . .

Regulation

Requirements imposed by a governmental body. These requirements can establish product, process, or service characteristics, including applicable administrative provisions that have government-mandated compliance.. . . .

Influence Diagram [Tool]

A graphical representation of situations showing causal influences, time ordering of events, and other relationships among variables and outcomes.. . . . .

Actual Duration

The time in calendar units between the actual start date of the schedule activity and either the data date of the project schedule if the schedule activity is in progress or the actual finish date if the schedule activity is complete.. . . . .

Develop Project Charter [Process]

The process of developing a document that formally authorizes a project or a phase and documenting initial requirements that satisfy the stakeholderÕs needs and expectations.. . . . .