464 Final Exam

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free slack

(AKA free float)The amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the early start of any immediately following activities

causes of scope creep

--fuzzy requirements or not clearly defining the scope early --lack of formal guidelines or procedures for identifying, validating or managing changes --allowing stakeholders or customers to add features without penalty

tools for managing scope

--integrated change control --variance analysis - compare actual with predicted --scope validation with customer, sponsor or user to inspect product and determine if it meets requirements --collect better requirements --involve users throughout the project

6 sigma philosophy

-formal system for improving quality, decreasing costs, and better meeting customer needs, based on facts, data, and statistical analysis -DMAIC: Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control -"belt" system: yellow, green, black, master black -primary principle: no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities

expected monetary value (EMV)

-helps determine contingency reserves -quantifies risk to budget -helps decide between different choices -evaluate risk based on historical data -provides average outcome of all identified risks -as reliable as the historical data used for calculations -used to select a project based on its potential risk; uses a decision tree analysis

cultural dimensions

-individual/ collective -power distance -masculine/ feminine -uncertainty avoidance -long term/short term orientation -indulgence/ restraint

process groups

-initiating -planning -executing -monitoring and controlling -closing

quality control tools

-ishikawa diagrams -control chart -checksheet, tally sheet, checklist -scatter diagram -histogram -pareto chart -flowcharts -statistical sampling -

costs of quality

-prevention cost -appraisal cost -internal failure cost -external failure cost -measurement and test equipment cost

ISO 9000

-quality system standard -3 part continuous cycle of planning, controlling and documenting quality in an organization -requires outside auditing to confirm compliance

Factors Constraining Project Success

-scope -quality -stakeholders -schedule -budget -resources -risk -customer satisfaction

project attributes

-unique purpose -temporary -developed using progressive elaboration -requires resources from various areas -has a customer or sponsor -involves uncertainty and risk

procurement pros

1. access skills and technologies 2. reduce fixed and recurring costs 3. focus on core business 4. flexibility 5. accountability

negative risk responses

1. avoid 2. accept 3. transfer 4. mitigate 5. escalate

trends affecting projects

1. diversity in projects, people, and technology 2. globalization 3. outsourcing 4. virtual teams

positive risk responses

1. exploit 2. share 3. enhance 4. accept 5. escalate

10 characteristics of org culture

1. member identity 2. group emphasis 3. people focus 4. unit integration 5. control 6. risk tolerance 7. reward criteria 8. conflict tolerance 9. means-end orientation 10. open systems focus

6 work processes in resource management

1. plan 2. estimate 3. acquire 4. develop 5. manage 6. control

3 processes of procurement management

1. plan procurement engagement 2. conduct procurement engagement 3. control procurement

3 processes of project quality management

1. plan quality engagement 2. manage quality engagement 3. control quality

7 processes of project risk management

1. plan risk engagement 2. identify risks 3. perform qualitative risk analysis 4.perform quantitative risk analysis 5. plan risk responses 6. implement risk responses 7. monitor risk

3 processes in communications management

1. planning 2. managing 3. monitoring

procurement cons

1. reduced control 2. increased dependency on supplier 3. strategic assets may be lost 4. political issues 5. principal-agent problems

interactive communication

2 way exchange, we're working together

project systems

3 aspects: 1. person 2. organization 3. program (to be solved by the system)

systems thinking

3 places to look for issues: 1. business 2. organization 3. technology

pareto rule

80% of problems are caused by 20% of causes 80% of problems are caused by 20% of people (want to focus on the biggest problem first, it will solve the majority of other issues)

tracking gantt chart

A Gantt chart that compares planned and actual project schedule information

project archives

A complete set of organized project records that provide an accurate history of the project

requirement

A condition or capability that must be met by the project or that must be present in the product, service, or result to satisfy an agreement or other formally imposed specification what the project needs to do -- satisfies a business need -- enough detail so we can understand and measure it -- measurement needs to be an objective

collaborating mode

A conflict-handling mode in which decision makers incorporate different viewpoints and insights to develop consensus and commitment

rough order of magnitude (ROM) estimate

A cost estimate prepared very early in the life of a project to provide a rough idea of what a project will cost

definitive estimate

A cost estimate that provides an accurate estimate of project costs

budgetary estimate

A cost estimate used to allocate money into an organization's budget

bottom up estimates

A cost-estimating technique based on estimating individual work items and summing them to get a project total

parametric estimating

A cost-estimating technique that uses project characteristics (parameters) in a mathematical model to estimate project costs

top down estimates

A cost-estimating technique that uses the actual cost of a previous

analogous estimates

A cost-estimating technique that uses the actual cost of a previous similar project as the basis for estimating the cost of the current project; also called top-down estimates

scrum team

A crossfunctional team of five to nine people who organize themselves and the work to produce the desired results for each sprint

DevOps

A culture of collaboration between software development and operations teams to build, test, and release reliable software more quickly

work breakdown structure

A deliverable-oriented grouping of the work involved in a project that defines its total scope --outline of major activities in the project --may be organized in any logical system that makes sense to the project or project team --provides basis for building the schedule and assigning resources

project charter

A document that formally recognizes the existence of a project and provides direction on the project's objectives and management

communications management plan

A document that guides project communications --stakeholder communications requirements --who will receive the information and who will produce it --information to be communicated, including format, content, and level of detail --suggested methods or technologies for conveying the information --frequency of communication --escalation procedures for resolving issues --revision procedures for updating the communications management plan --glossary of common terminology

project scope statement

A document that includes at least a description of the project, including its overall objectives and justification, detailed descriptions of all project deliverables, and the characteristics and requirements of products and services produced as part of the project project charter provides basis for starting the scope statement

WBS dictionary

A document that includes detailed information about each WBS item

change control board

A formal group of people responsible for approving or rejecting changes on a project

change control system

A formal, documented process that describes when and how official project documents may be changed

organizational project management

A framework in which portfolio, program, and project management are integrated with organizational enablers in order to achieve strategic objectives.

executive steering committee

A group of senior executives from various parts of the organization who regularly review important corporate projects and issues

resource breakdown structure

A hierarchical structure that identifies the project's resources by category and type

kanban

A just-in-time method of inventory control that can be used in conjunction with Scrum

theory of constraints (TOC)

A management philosophy that any complex system at any point in time often has only one aspect or constraint that limits the ability to achieve more of the system's goal

kill point

A management review that should occur after each project phase to determine if projects should be continued, redirected, or terminated; also called a phase exit`

function points

A means of measuring software size in terms that are meaningful to end users

cash flow analysis

A method for determining the estimated annual costs and benefits for a project

critical chain scheduling

A method of scheduling that takes limited resources into account when creating a project schedule and includes buffers to protect the project completion date

slipped milestone

A milestone activity that is completed later than planned

tuckman model

A model that describes five stages of team development: forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning

activity on arrow (AOA)

A network diagramming technique in which activities are represented by arrows and connected at points called nodes to illustrate the sequence of activities; also called arrow diagramming method (ADM)

precedence diagramming method (PDM)

A network diagramming technique in which boxes represent activities

forward pass

A network diagramming technique that determines the early start and early finish dates for each activity

scrum master

A person who ensures that the team is productive, facilitates the daily Scrum, enables close cooperation across all roles and functions, and removes barriers that prevent the team from being effective

requirements management plan

A plan that describes how project requirements will be analyzed, documented, and managed

use case modeling

A process for identifying and modeling business events, who initiated them, and how the system should respond to them

configuration management

A process that ensures that the descriptions of a project's products are correct and complete

deliverable

A product or service, such as a technical report, a training session, a piece of hardware, or a segment of software code, produced or provided as part of a project

program evaluation and review technique (PERT)

A project network analysis technique used to estimate project duration when there is a high degree of uncertainty about the individual activity duration estimates

critical path method (CPM)

A project network diagramming technique used to predict total project duration

hierarchy of needs

A pyramid structure illustrating Maslow's theory that people's behaviors are guided or motivated by a sequence of needs

start to finish dependency

A relationship on a project network diagram in which the "from" activity cannot start before the "to" activity is finished cannot finish task A until task B starts

start to start dependency

A relationship on a project network diagram in which the "from" activity cannot start until the "to" activity starts ex. we can start dismantling and cleaning up at the same time

finish to start dependency

A relationship on a project network diagram in which the "from" activity must be finished before the "to" activity can be started ex. can't start drying the car until after we finish washing it

fast tracking

A schedule compression technique in which you do activities in parallel that you would normally do in sequence --can shorten the schedule but may increase the cost --may increase risk which could increase the schedule

network diagram

A schematic display of the logical relationships or sequencing of project activities

champion

A senior manager who acts as a key proponent for a project

sprint

A set period of time, normally two to four weeks, during which specific work must be completed and made ready for review when using Scrum methods

milestone

A significant event that normally has no duration on a project; serves as a marker to help in identifying necessary activities, setting schedule goals, and monitoring progress -- 0 duration -- no time frame (marks something) -- builds confidence -- proves results should be SMART (specific, measurable, assignable, realistic, time-framed)

product backlog

A single list of features prioritized by business value

burst

A single node followed by two or more activities on a network diagram

gantt chart

A standard format for displaying project schedule information by listing project activities and their corresponding start and finish dates in a calendar format; sometimes referred to as bar charts

balanced scorecard

A strategic planning and management system that helps organizations align business activities to strategy, improve communications, and monitor performance against strategic goals

requirements traceability matrix (RTM)

A table that lists requirements, their various attributes, and the status of the requirements to ensure that all are addressed

activity list

A tabulation of activities to be included on a project schedule --identifier or number and brief description

work package

A task at the lowest level of the WBS

crashing

A technique for making cost and schedule trade-offs to obtain the greatest amount of schedule compression for the least cost shortens the schedule

resource leveling

A technique for resolving resource conflicts by delaying tasks

learning curve theory

A theory that when many items are produced repetitively, the unit cost of those items normally decreases in a regular pattern as more units are produced

cost baseline

A time-phased budget that project managers use to measure and monitor cost performance

dummy activites

Activities with no duration and no resources used to show a logical relationship between two activities in the arrow diagramming method of project network diagrams

scope

All the work involved in creating the products of the project and the processes used to create them Deliverables plus the work to create them, including documentation (if we expand scope, cost is increased, time increased-- other 2 parts are affected)--we have some control over scope

activity

An element of work normally found on the WBS that has an expected duration, cost, and resource requirements; also called a task --specific actions that will produce the deliverables in enough detail to produce resource and schedule estimates --should agree with the WBS and WBS dictionary

task

An element of work normally found on the WBS that has an expected duration, cost, and resource requirements; also called an activity

earned value

An estimate of the value of the physical work actually completed

estimate at completion

An estimate of what it will cost to complete the project based on performance to date

three point estimate

An estimate that includes an optimistic, a most likely, and a pessimistic estimate

project manager

An individual who is an expert in project planning and management, defines and develops the project plan, and tracks the plan to ensure the project is completed on time and on budget, works with the project sponsors, team, and other people involved to achieve project goals

Rational Unified Process (RUP)

An iterative software development process that focuses on team productivity and delivers software best practices to all team members

groupthink

Conformance to the values or ethical standards of a group

executing processes

Coordinating people and other resources to carry out the project plans and create the products, services, or results of the project or project phase

indirect costs

Costs that are not directly related to the products or services of the project, but are indirectly related to performing the project

direct costs

Costs that can be directly related to creating the products and services of the project

bottom up approach

Creating a WBS by having team members identify as many specific tasks related to the project as possible and then grouping them into higher- level categories

top down approach

Creating a WBS by starting with the largest items of the project and breaking them into subordinate items

analogy approach

Creating a WBS by using a similar project's WBS as a starting point

smoothing mode

Deemphasizing or avoiding areas of differences and emphasizing areas of agreement

Six Sigma methodologies

Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control (DMAIC) is used to improve an existing business process, and Define, Measure, Analyze, Design, and Verify (DMADV) is used to create new product or process design

initiating processes

Defining and authorizing a project or project phase

prototyping

Developing a working replica of the system or some aspect of it to help define user requirements

unknown unknowns

Dollar amounts included in a cost estimate to allow for future situations that are unpredictable (sometimes called management reserves)

management reserves

Dollar amounts included in a cost estimate to allow for future situations that are unpredictable (sometimes called unknown unknowns) money not in the baseline but are in the budget in case of unknown risks

known unknowns

Dollar amounts included in a cost estimate to allow for future situations that may be partially planned for (sometimes called contingency reserves) and that are included in the project cost baseline

contingency reserves

Dollar amounts included in a cost estimate to allow for future situations that may be partially planned for (sometimes called known unknowns) and that are included in the project cost baseline money in the baseline for known risks

reserves

Dollar amounts included in a cost estimate to mitigate cost risk by allowing for future situations that are difficult to predict

probabilistic time estimates

Duration estimates based on using optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic estimates of activity durations instead of using one specific or discrete estimate

affiliative

Emphasizes the importance of teamwork and creating harmony by connecting people to each other. This approach is effective when trying to increase morale, improve communication, or repair broken trust.

confrontation mode

Facing a conflict directly using a problem-solving approach that allows affected parties to work through their disagreements

democratic

Focuses on people's knowledge and skills and creates a commitment to reaching shared goals. This leadership style works best when the leader needs the collective wisdom of the group to decide on the best direction to take for the organization.

scope validation

Formal acceptance of the completed project deliverables

benchmarking

Generating ideas by comparing specific project practices or product characteristics to those of other projects or products inside or outside the performing organization

referent power

Getting others to do things based on a person's own charisma

legitimate power

Getting people to do things based on a position of authority

SMART criteria

Guidelines to help define milestones that are specific, measurable, assignable, realistic, and time-framed

stakeholder register

ID info, assessment (requirements and expectations), influence, phase when most interested, classification (internal/external, supportive/ resistant), etc. precursor for the stakeholder engagement plan which is a separate document

integrated change control

Identifying, evaluating, and managing changes throughout the project life cycle

activity attributes

Information about each activity, such as predecessors, successors, logical relationships, leads and lags, resource requirements, constraints, imposed dates, and assumptions related to the activity

push communication

Information is sent or pushed to recipients without their request you didn't ask for this but I'm sending it to you anyways

pull communication

Information is sent to recipients at their request you have to get this or request it yourself

kaizen

Japanese term for continuous improvement or change for the better

explicit knowledge

Knowledge that can be easily explained using words, pictures, or numbers and is easy to communicate, store, and distribute, such as information in textbooks, project documents, and plans

sunk cost

Money that has been spent in the past

commanding

Most often used, also called autocratic or military style leadership. This style is most effective in a crisis or when a turnaround is needed.

visionary

Needed when an organization needs a new direction, and the goal is to move people toward a new set of shared dreams. The leader articulates where the group is going, but lets them decide how to get there by being free to innovate, experiment, and take calculated risks

coaching

One-on-one style that focuses on developing individuals, showing them how to improve their performance. This approach works best with workers who show initiative and request assistance.

6 processes of scope management

PCDCVC 1. Plan scope management -- creating and deciding what is and isn't in the scope (the deliverable is the project management plan) 2. Collect requirements 3. Define scope 4. Create WBS 5. Validate scope -- check it against requirements, make sure everyone agrees 6. Control scope -- make sure it doesn't go out of bounds

4 processes of project cost management

PEDC 1. plan cost management 2. estimate costs 3. determine the budget 4. control costs

stakeholders

People involved in or affected by project activities (include the project sponsor, project team, support staff, customers, users, suppliers, and opponents of the project)

resources

People, equipment, and materials

forecasts

Predictions of future project status and progress based on past information and trends

lessons learned report

Reflective statements written by project managers and their team members to document important information they have learned from working on a project

monitoring and controlling processes

Regularly measuring and monitoring progress to ensure that the project team meets the project objectives

internal dependencies

Relationships between project activities that are generally inside the project team's control

progress reports

Reports that describe what the project team has accomplished during a certain period of time

status reports

Reports that describe where a project stands at a specific point in time

tacit knowledge

Sometimes called informal knowledge, this type of knowledge is difficult to express and is highly personal, such as beliefs, insight, and experience

decomposition

Subdividing project deliverables into smaller pieces

duration

The actual amount of time worked on an activity plus elapsed time

overrun

The additional percentage or dollar amount by which actual costs exceed estimates

resource loading

The amount of individual resources an existing schedule requires during

slack

The amount of time a project activity may be delayed without delaying a succeeding activity or the project finish date; also called float AKA wiggle room

float

The amount of time a project activity may be delayed without delaying a succeeding activity or the project finish date; also called slack AKA wiggle room

total slack

The amount of time an activity may be delayed from its early start without delaying the planned project finish date (AKA Total Float)

project management

The application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities to meet project requirements

schedule baseline

The approved planned schedule for the project

baseline

The approved project management plan plus approved changes

scope baseline

The approved project scope statement and its associated WBS and WBS dictionary

variance

The difference between planned and actual performance

early finish date

The earliest possible time an activity can finish based on the project network logic

early start date

The earliest possible time an activity can start based on the project network logic

cost variance (CV)

The earned value minus the actual cost what you want: POSITIVE (work costs less than planned costs)

schedule variance

The earned value minus the planned value what you want: POSITIVE (less time than planned)

sprint backlog

The highest-priority items from the product backlog to be completed in a sprint

late finish date

The latest possible time an activity can be completed without delaying the project finish date

late start date

The latest possible time an activity may begin without delaying the project finish date

scrum

The leading agile development methodology for completing projects with a complex, innovative scope of work

effort

The number of workdays or work hours required to complete a task

product owner

The person responsible for the business value of the project and for deciding what work to do and in what order when using a Scrum method

planned value

The portion of the approved total cost estimate planned to be spent on an activity during a given period

murphy's law

The principle that if something can go wrong, it will

parkinson's law

The principle that work expands to fill the time allowed

project scope management

The processes involved in defining and controlling what work is or is not included in a project

project cost management

The processes required to ensure that the project is completed within the approved budget should identify: --level of accuracy of estimates such as rounding guidelines --units of measure, such as labor hours vs. days and basis of currency used --org procedures (esp. related to accounting) --control thresholds --reporting formats, process descriptions for managing costs, etc.

project schedule management

The processes required to ensure timely completion of a project

rate of performance

The ratio of actual work completed to the percentage of work planned to have been completed at any given time during the life of the project or activity

cost performance index (CPI)

The ratio of earned value to actual cost; can be used to estimate the projected cost to complete the project what you want: >1 (100%) -- greater than 1 under budget

schedule performance index (SPI)

The ratio of earned value to planned value; can be used to estimate the projected time to complete a project what you want: >1 (100%) -- greater than 1, ahead of schedule

profit margin

The ratio of profits to revenues

discretionary dependencies

The sequencing of project activities or tasks defined by the project team and used with care because they may limit later scheduling options

mandatory dependencies

The sequencing of project activities or tasks that are inherent in the nature of the work being done on the project

external dependencies

The sequencing of project activities or tasks that involve relationships between project and non-project activities

relationship

The sequencing of project activities or tasks; also called a dependency

dependency

The sequencing of project activities or tasks; also called a relationship

node

The starting and ending point of an activity on an activity-on-arrow diagram

scope creep

The tendency for project scope to keep getting bigger by adding more requirements

life cycle costing

The total cost of ownership, or development plus support costs, for a project

actual cost

The total of direct and indirect costs incurred in accomplishing work on an activity during a given period

feeding buffers

Time added before tasks on the critical chain if they are preceded by other tasks that are not on the critical path

project buffer

Time added before the project's due date

merge

Two or more nodes that precede a single node on a network diagram

pacesetting

Used to set high standards for performance. The leader wants work to be done better and faster and expects everyone to put forth their best effort.

compromise mode

Using a give-and-take approach to resolve conflicts; bargaining and searching for solutions that bring some degree of satisfaction to all the parties in a dispute

forcing mode

Using a win/lose approach to conflict resolution to get one's way

JAD (joint application design)

Using highly organized and intensive workshops to bring together project stakeholders—the sponsor,

reward power

Using incentives to induce people to do things

expert power

Using one's personal knowledge and expertise to get people to change their behavior

coercive power

Using punishment, threats, or other negative approaches to get people to do things they do not want to do

systems approach

a holistic and analytical approach to solving complex problems that includes using a systems philosophy, systems analysis, and systems management.

to complete performance index (TCPI)

a measure of the cost performance that must be achieved with the remaining resources to meet a specific goal, such as the BAC or EAC

gantt chart

a standard format for displaying project schedule information by listing project activities and their corresponding start and finish dates in calendar form

issue log

a tool to document and monitor the resolution of project issues -these are unresolved issues that are or may cause conflict if not handled immediately -ideally, issues should not remain unresolved for long

enagement

actively giving and receiving feedback, communicating project and managing expectations

Brook's Law

adding people to a late project makes it later

political frame

addresses organizational and personal politics

issue

anything that has already impacted a project's success

transformational leadership

by working with others to identify needed changes, these leaders empower others and guide changes through inspiration

project life cycle

collection of project phases: 1. starting the project 2. organizing and preparing 3. carrying out the work 4. finishing the project

interactional leadership

combination of transactional, transformational, and charismatic

expectations management matrix

deliverable that : -identifies key requirements -spreadsheet/table format showing stakeholders' major expectations and how to manage them -big expectations identified and ranked by multiple stakeholders

stakeholder engagement plan

deliverable that defines: -current and desired engagement levels -interrelationships among stakeholders (their networks) -communication requirements -potential strategies for managing the stakeholder -process to update the stakeholder management plan

PERT weighted average

e (Optimistic time 1 4 * most likely time 1 pessimistic time)/6

human resources frame

focuses on producing harmony between the needs of the organization and the needs of people

symbolic frame

focuses on symbols and meaning (not actually what happened but what it means)

program

group of related projects, subsidiary programs, and program activities managed in a coordinated manner to obtain benefits and control not available from managing them individually

project organizational structure

hierarchical, but instead of functional managers or vice presidents reporting to the CEO, program managers report to the CEO. Their staffs have a variety of skills needed to complete the projects within their programs. An organization that uses this structure earns its revenue primarily from performing projects

functional organizational structure

hierarchy most people think of when picturing an organizational chart. Functional managers or vice presidents in specialties such as engineering, manufacturing, IT, and human resources report to the chief executive officer (CEO).

time

how long should it take to complete the project

structural frame

how the organization is structured (usually depicted in an organizational chart) and focuses on different groups' roles and responsibilities to meet the goals and policies set by top management.`

quality assurance

improve work processes used on all projects

stakeholder categories

internal / external to the company not to the project support/ resistant interested/ disinterested

critical path

it is the the longest path, but it also represents the shortest time required to complete a project. If one or more activities on the critical path take longer than planned, --tasks that have 0 wiggle room, cannot be delayed without delaying everything

probability impact matrix

likelihood of each risk x its impact (high/med/low) to help prioritize response

transactional leadership

management by exception approach focuses on achieving goals or compliance by offering team members appropriate rewards and punishments

lean

maximizing customer value, minimizing waste

laissez faire leadership

meaning "let go", hands off approach lets teams determine their own goals and how to achieve them

servant leader leadership

people using this approach focus on relationships and community first and leadership is secondary

program manager

provides leadership and direction for the project managers heading the projects wihin a program

quality management

quality assurance + quality control = QM

matrix organizational structure

represents the middle ground between functional and project structures. Personnel often report both to a functional manager and to one or more project managers

profits

revenue minus expenses (total costs)

secondary risk

risk caused by a response strategy, like water damage after putting out a fire

residual risk

risk left after using all of the response strategies; might have to live with it

triple constraint

scope, time, cost

organizational culture

set of shared assumptions, values, and behaviors that characterize the functioning of an organization

quality audit

structured review of specific QM activities to identify lessons learned, to improve future performance

earned value management

system for providing forecasts of project performance based on past performance A project performance measurement technique that integrates scope, time, and cost data

risk register

table or spreadsheet that lists the risks and information about them, including triggers which indicate risk is occuring

project

temporary endeavor undertaking to create a unique product, service, or result -stages or lifecycles -progressive elaboration -makes major changes or responds to external pressure

quality control

test and improve the product itself -accept, rework, or process adjustments directly related to the product

principal agency theory

the agent represents the principal in transactions with third parties, or performs a service on the principal's behalf

project management knowledge areas

the key competencies that project managers must develop

budget at completion

the original total budget for a project

charismatic leadership

these people can inspire others based on their enthusiasm and confidence

risk

uncertain event that may or may not occur during a project -anything that could impact a project's success -proactive

control threshold

variance allowed before action needs to be taken

cost

what should it cost to complete the project, budget?

contingency plans

what to do if a risk happens

scope

what work will be done as part of the project

operations

work done to sustain the business -continuous and ongoing -varies by time of year or industry -day to day functions to stay in business

finish to finish dependency

y A relationship on a project network diagram in which the "from" activity must be

cleanroom software engineering

•A philosophy of developing software that emphasizes high-quality, defect-free products •Cleanroom software engineering is a team-oriented process and methods that makes development more manageable and predictable because it is done under statistical quality control. •Formal, yet practical, approach to develop zero-defect software.


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