The client's role should be to define the scope of the project - the project is intended to deliver a solution to a requirement the client has. However, clients are rarely capable of fully defining their needs and require assistance from the SMEs in the delivery team.
The way this is done depends on the project’s relationship to the client and the way the project is being managed. Agile projects evolve, other ‘hard’ projects need the scope defined up front. But this can be difficult, on mega-projects it is not uncommon to see up to 20% of the scope missed from the initial contract documents. There’s a series of reports on this, see the ‘Scope for Improvement’ series at: https://mosaicprojects.com.au/PMKI-ITC-010.php#Overview
Member for
20 years 5 months
Member for20 years5 months
Submitted by Peter Holroyd on Fri, 2022-05-06 14:29
This is the area of Requirements Engineering. ALL the contract documents are deconstructed into a deliverables list which are tracked throughout the project. When you've handed over all requirements job finished
Peter
Member for
16 years 3 months
Member for16 years4 months
Submitted by Zoltan Palffy on Mon, 2022-04-18 21:30
you should re-take off the documents and do ANOTHER estimate to make sure that you did not miss anything because a lot of the times the person taking of the inital bid estimate are not the same people excuting the work.
Member for
24 years 9 monthsThe client's role should be
The client's role should be to define the scope of the project - the project is intended to deliver a solution to a requirement the client has. However, clients are rarely capable of fully defining their needs and require assistance from the SMEs in the delivery team.
Requirements gathering is basically a structured investigation: https://mosaicprojects.com.au/PMKI-PBK-015.php#Process1
The way this is done depends on the project’s relationship to the client and the way the project is being managed. Agile projects evolve, other ‘hard’ projects need the scope defined up front. But this can be difficult, on mega-projects it is not uncommon to see up to 20% of the scope missed from the initial contract documents. There’s a series of reports on this, see the ‘Scope for Improvement’ series at: https://mosaicprojects.com.au/PMKI-ITC-010.php#Overview
Member for
20 years 5 monthsThis is the area of
This is the area of Requirements Engineering. ALL the contract documents are deconstructed into a deliverables list which are tracked throughout the project. When you've handed over all requirements job finished
Peter
Member for
16 years 3 monthsyou should re-take off the
you should re-take off the documents and do ANOTHER estimate to make sure that you did not miss anything because a lot of the times the person taking of the inital bid estimate are not the same people excuting the work.