can any one send me one complete sample of Project management plan for reference. I am asking this as i haven't seen or i am involved in making these kind of plans earlier. please send to [email protected]. Saving Changes...
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Drew CraigSr. Agile & Product Coach| VanguardPhiladelphia, Pa, United States
I would recommend seeing what you can find or put together from web searches. We also have a template section in the community here. Below is a link to the project plan section. May not give you exactly what you are looking for, but usually, we are hard-pressed to be handed exactly what is needed, however, there are many resources out there to help you get what is needed to create your own that best suits your needs. Good luck!
I'm sure you can locate lots of templates online, but please take the time to tailor and scale the template to fit the needs of the projects you are working on. While most PMBOK knowledge areas will be applied to all projects, the specific practices and level of effort involved needs to vary based on the context and complexity of those projects.
Thomas WalentaGlobal Project Economy ExpertHackenheim, Germany
The way to create such a sample plan is to tailor it from the PMBoK considering the concrete organization or project. The resulting plan may not include - as you ask for - all knowledge areas (or better: all subsidiary plans) but it may include other standards relevant to that organization (e.g. for quality, governance, procurement).
Sometimes the plan is created by a PMO and called PM handbook for that organization. Saving Changes...
Praveen,
There is not a one size fit all solution for project management documents. You can inspire yourself from templates. In the end, you need to see what is relevant for your organization or project.
Agree with points from Andrew, Kiron and Thomas, many places to gather some templates, you can pick and choose from them but customize and adapt to your context.
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1 reply by Karl Twort
Oct 15, 2019 7:22 AM
Karl Twort
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I agree with this. Although I have templates for my project plans, there can be danger in relying on these to give a head start - leftover or unsuitable data can cause you problems from the start.
Having a Plan framework is a good base, but you should tailor every plan to the project it relates to ensure the best start is achieved - even if the project "feels" the same as something implemented before
Saving Changes...
Karl TwortSenior Project Manager| Fresh EggUnited Kingdom
Oct 12, 2019 8:13 AM
Replying to Vincent Guerard
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Praveen,
There is not a one size fit all solution for project management documents. You can inspire yourself from templates. In the end, you need to see what is relevant for your organization or project.
Agree with points from Andrew, Kiron and Thomas, many places to gather some templates, you can pick and choose from them but customize and adapt to your context.
I agree with this. Although I have templates for my project plans, there can be danger in relying on these to give a head start - leftover or unsuitable data can cause you problems from the start.
Having a Plan framework is a good base, but you should tailor every plan to the project it relates to ensure the best start is achieved - even if the project "feels" the same as something implemented before Saving Changes...
I agree with the comments that everyone else has provided. Depending on the size and complexity of the project, the Project Management plan and any subsidiary plans would have to be tailored to fit your project. With that said, this site has a lot of good templates as a starting point. Saving Changes...