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A project plan is a structured roadmap that defines how a project will be executed, monitored, and completed successfully. It translates objectives into actionable steps, timelines, resources, and controls.
Project planning begins with estimating the key parameters that determine feasibility and success.
1. Project Size: Defines the scale and complexity of the project. It helps estimate the technical difficulty and development workload.
2. Project Cost: Determines the total financial investment required. Includes resources, tools, infrastructure, and operational expenses.
3. Project Duration: Estimates the total time required to complete the project. Helps set realistic schedules and delivery timelines.
4. Project Effort: Measures the total work required (often in person-hours or person-months). Helps determine staffing and workload distribution.
The accuracy of all planning activities depends heavily on the reliability of these estimations.
Once estimates are defined, detailed planning begins.
Identifying and allocating required resources:
Additional structured plans ensure operational control:
Project planning follows a logical sequence because each step depends on earlier estimates.
Typical Planning Order:
Size estimation is the foundation, all other planning elements depend on it.
Project planning requires precision. Unrealistic timelines or resource commitments often lead to:
However, creating perfectly accurate plans at the start is difficult, especially for large and complex projects.
At project initiation:
Sliding Window Planning (also called Rolling Wave Planning) is a phased planning approach. Instead of planning everything in full detail upfront:
As the project progresses, planning becomes more accurate and reliable.