Integrated Initiation and Planning


Overview/Description
Target Audience
Expected Duration
Lesson Objectives
Course Number



Overview/Description
Collaboration, coordination, and consolidation are terms to describe integration. Project Integration Management is the knowledge area that coordinates with various process groups to ensure that each project is managed in a unified and consolidated way. The intention is to have processes interact smoothly. In this course, learners will be given an overview of the Project Integration Management knowledge area. They'll be introduced to best practices outlined in A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) – Fourth Edition published by the Project Management Institute (PMI®). Specifically, learners will be introduced to Project Integration Management and its processes, the project charter, including the statement of work and business case. They'll also be introduced to the project management plan. This course provides a foundational knowledge base reflecting the most up-to-date project management information so learners can effectively put principles to work at their own organizations. This course will assist in preparing the learner for the PMI® certification exam. This course is aligned with the PMBOK® Guide – Fourth Edition, published by PMI®, Inc., 2008. Copyright and all rights reserved. Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI®.

Target Audience
Existing project managers wishing to get certified in recognition of their skills and experience, or others who wish to train to become accredited project managers.

Expected Duration (hours)
2.0

Lesson Objectives

Integrated Initiation and Planning

  • identify various aspects of the role of Project Integration Management in a project
  • recognize key concepts related to how the Project Integration Management processes are linked
  • identify types of business needs that may trigger project creation
  • label customers as internal, buyers, or consumers
  • recognize the relationship between a business case, statement of work, and project charter
  • distinguish between a project charter, business case, and statement of work
  • identify examples of the inputs to the Develop Project Charter process
  • identify the role of expert judgment in developing a project charter
  • determine which elements are missing from a given project charter
  • identify the inputs to the Develop Project Management Plan process
  • recognize the types of information that should be included in a project management plan
  • Course Number:
    proj_06_a01_bs_enus