The seven performance domains listed in PMBOK 8th edition are:
*Governance
*Scope
*Schedule
*Finance
*Stakeholders
*Resources
*Risk
-Quality isn't in the list, but it is now part of the 6 follow principles. What do you think about this change?
-What are your thoughts about acquisitions and communications not included?
-Integration isn't also present, but there is a performance domain called "governance". Would having more alignment with organizational objectives be helpful?
I like the new list compared with the Seventh Edition one as it is better aligned with the principles and with the process framework as a whole.
Quality for me has always been closely tied with scope and finance when you think of the product/service and the process to produce it so I'm okay with it not being a separate domain.
Procurement is covered in the appendix and I think that acknowledges the reality that in many contexts, the PM is just a player in the procurement process and not the main role.
Communications is integrally tied to Stakeholders and much earlier versions of the PMBOK Guide had those two combined into a single knowledge area.
Integration always felt like a bit of a "bolt on" knowledge area for me. When you think of the processes which were part of Integration Management, they were a lot about decision making and the creation and approval of key project management artifacts. As such, they are better covered under the umbrella of governance.
PMBOK 8th edition focuses more on value and principles. Quality is now part of principles, so it’s considered in every area. Acquisitions and communications are included in other domains like stakeholders and resources. Governance replaces integration to show projects should align with organizational goals and deliver real value.
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1 reply by Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
Nov 25, 2025 9:24 AM
Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
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Yes, Syed, Quality is now part of principles, to ensure it's considered in every aspect; another interesting principle is sustainability, nowadays a significant consideration in every project area.
PMBOK 8th edition focuses more on value and principles. Quality is now part of principles, so it’s considered in every area. Acquisitions and communications are included in other domains like stakeholders and resources. Governance replaces integration to show projects should align with organizational goals and deliver real value.
Yes, Syed, Quality is now part of principles, to ensure it's considered in every aspect; another interesting principle is sustainability, nowadays a significant consideration in every project area. Saving Changes...
The shift in PMBOK 8 shows PMI’s move toward outcomes over documents. Quality becoming a principle makes sense—it’s now embedded in all work, not a stand-alone box. Acquisitions and communications sit across every domain, so they flow naturally instead of being isolated. Governance replacing integration also works; it forces stronger alignment with strategy, not just coordination.
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1 reply by Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
Feb 05, 2026 9:51 AM
Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
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Excellent and concise summary of PMBOK 8th particularities, Pavan.
I'm just starting to go through it. I'm looking at the characteristics of a project (it says page 6, but when I click on the link in the TOC it takes me somewhere else). It's longer than I expected, but does the job. A little over halfway down page 7 it references organizational change. I think they might be overstating the level of change in some projects. All projects could be said to introduce change into an organization, but not all projects are an organizational change.
It looks like they're treating communications as more of a theme that exists across multiple focus areas and in the ITTOs, especially in the Stakeholders performance domain. I'll have to go through it more in depth later.
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1 reply by Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
Nov 26, 2025 9:40 AM
Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
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Thanks, Aaron, for your comments about how organizational change is referenced in PMBOK 8th Edition. This gives us more insights and criteria.
I'm just starting to go through it. I'm looking at the characteristics of a project (it says page 6, but when I click on the link in the TOC it takes me somewhere else). It's longer than I expected, but does the job. A little over halfway down page 7 it references organizational change. I think they might be overstating the level of change in some projects. All projects could be said to introduce change into an organization, but not all projects are an organizational change.
It looks like they're treating communications as more of a theme that exists across multiple focus areas and in the ITTOs, especially in the Stakeholders performance domain. I'll have to go through it more in depth later.
Thanks, Aaron, for your comments about how organizational change is referenced in PMBOK 8th Edition. This gives us more insights and criteria. Saving Changes...
Principles: PMBOK 7 had 12 principles; PMBOK 8 streamlines these into 6 clearer, consolidated principles.
Processes: PMBOK 7 moved away from rigid processes; PMBOK 8 reintroduces about 40 non-prescriptive processes with ITTOs (Inputs, Tools & Techniques, Outputs) for practical application.
Performance Domains: PMBOK 7 had 8 outcome-based domains; PMBOK 8 reorganizes them into 7 more actionable domains aligned with core functions (Governance, Scope, Schedule, Finance, Stakeholders, Resources, Risk).
Structure: PMBOK 7 was a single guide; PMBOK 8 unifies the "Standard" and "Guide" into one book, reintroducing Process Groups as 5 Focus Areas (Initiating, Planning, Executing, Monitoring & Controlling, Closing).
Focus: PMBOK 7 emphasized flexibility, outcomes, and value; PMBOK 8 balances "why" with "how," adding focus on digital transformation, AI, data, sustainability, and strategic alignment.
The shift in PMBOK 8 shows PMI’s move toward outcomes over documents. Quality becoming a principle makes sense—it’s now embedded in all work, not a stand-alone box. Acquisitions and communications sit across every domain, so they flow naturally instead of being isolated. Governance replacing integration also works; it forces stronger alignment with strategy, not just coordination.
Excellent and concise summary of PMBOK 8th particularities, Pavan. Saving Changes...
Luis BrancoCEO| Business Insight, Consultores de Gestão, LdªCarcavelos, Lisboa, Portugal
The shift in the PMBOK 8th edition is deliberate and, in my view, largely coherent. The seven performance domains offer a clearer lens on how project success is evaluated in modern organizations, moving the focus from managing silos to achieving outcomes in context.
Moving from knowledge areas to performance domains reinforces an important message: success is no longer about controlling functions, but about enabling coherent decision-making across the system. In that sense, the domains reflect what organizations actually care about when they assess project performance.
On quality, I see the change as conceptual rather than a downgrade. Treating quality as a guiding principle instead of a standalone domain signals that quality is not something to be inspected at the end, but something that must be embedded across scope, governance, delivery, risk and stakeholder engagement. This, however, places a higher maturity burden on practitioners. Without systemic thinking, quality risks becoming implicit and therefore invisible.
Regarding acquisitions and communications, their absence makes sense if we accept the logic of integration by design. Procurement decisions sit naturally within governance, finance, risk and resource performance, while communication is inseparable from stakeholder performance. The risk here is not conceptual, but practical. Less experienced practitioners may struggle without explicit anchors unless guidance and examples are sufficiently clear.
The removal of integration is probably the most symbolic change. Integration has not disappeared. It has been elevated. Governance now plays the role of the integrative mechanism, aligning decisions with organizational objectives, value creation and accountability. In that sense, stronger alignment with strategy is indeed possible, but only if governance is treated as an active decision system rather than a compliance layer.
Overall, PMBOK 8 reinforces a core idea: projects succeed less because of perfect processes, and more because of coherent decisions across domains. The framework is sound. The real challenge is whether organizations are ready to operate at the level of maturity that this model clearly assumes.
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1 reply by Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
Feb 06, 2026 8:58 AM
Verónica Elizabeth Pozo Ruiz
...
Excellent analysis, Luis. I like the consideration of Integration being "elevated" to the concept of Governance.
The shift in the PMBOK 8th edition is deliberate and, in my view, largely coherent. The seven performance domains offer a clearer lens on how project success is evaluated in modern organizations, moving the focus from managing silos to achieving outcomes in context.
Moving from knowledge areas to performance domains reinforces an important message: success is no longer about controlling functions, but about enabling coherent decision-making across the system. In that sense, the domains reflect what organizations actually care about when they assess project performance.
On quality, I see the change as conceptual rather than a downgrade. Treating quality as a guiding principle instead of a standalone domain signals that quality is not something to be inspected at the end, but something that must be embedded across scope, governance, delivery, risk and stakeholder engagement. This, however, places a higher maturity burden on practitioners. Without systemic thinking, quality risks becoming implicit and therefore invisible.
Regarding acquisitions and communications, their absence makes sense if we accept the logic of integration by design. Procurement decisions sit naturally within governance, finance, risk and resource performance, while communication is inseparable from stakeholder performance. The risk here is not conceptual, but practical. Less experienced practitioners may struggle without explicit anchors unless guidance and examples are sufficiently clear.
The removal of integration is probably the most symbolic change. Integration has not disappeared. It has been elevated. Governance now plays the role of the integrative mechanism, aligning decisions with organizational objectives, value creation and accountability. In that sense, stronger alignment with strategy is indeed possible, but only if governance is treated as an active decision system rather than a compliance layer.
Overall, PMBOK 8 reinforces a core idea: projects succeed less because of perfect processes, and more because of coherent decisions across domains. The framework is sound. The real challenge is whether organizations are ready to operate at the level of maturity that this model clearly assumes.
Excellent analysis, Luis. I like the consideration of Integration being "elevated" to the concept of Governance. Saving Changes...