
A project is a temporary endeavor that consumes resources and is undertaken to produce a unique deliverable (product, service or result).
There are three important elements in the above definition:
Organizations perform work to accomplish certain objectives. This work may be divided into two categories, projects and operations.
Projects provide a platform to organize activities that fall outside of normal operational limits. For this reason, projects are often utilized to further strategic objectives. Strategic considerations for which a project might be suitable include:
A project is usually divided into phases, cumulatively known as the project lifecycle, to better manage the project. Transition from one phase to the next consists of the completion of some deliverable (product, service or result). The deliverable(s) are reviewed and approved before the beginning of the next phase. This allows the project team and stakeholders the chance to review the direction and performance of the project before it can proceed.
RPM manages multiple types of projects from events to strategic planning. Because of the variety of projects within RPM, we use three separate lifecycles to manage events, process improvement and other standard projects. Events and process improvement projects have their own unique lifecycle; all other projects follow the standard project lifecycle.
View these RPM lifecycles: