Work breakdown structure (WBS):
By:
Jabina Shrestha
Work
breakdown structure (WBS):
It is a fundamental
tool used in project management and system engineering. It is like tree
structure (look similar to organizational chart but they are alike) which
consists of summing of subordinates. The main idea of WBS is used to define and
organize the total scope of the project. The concept of WBS developed with the
Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) in the United States Department
of Defense (DoD).
The purposes of the WBS
are;
-
it
helps more accurately and specifically define and organize the scope of the
total project
-
it
helps in assigning responsibilities,
resource allocation, monitoring the project and controlling the project
-
it
allows to check all the deliverables specific with the stakeholders and allow
to be sure of no missing and overlapping
One of the most
important WBS design principles is 100%
Rule. The Practice Standard for Work
Breakdown Structures (Second Edition), published by the Project Management
Institute (PMI) define the 100% rules as follows;
“The
100% Rule ... states that the WNS
includes 100% of the work defined by the project scope and capture all
deliverables- internal, external, interim-interim of the work to be completed,
including project management. The 100% rule is one of the most important
principles guiding the development, decomposition and evaluation of the WBS.
The rule applies at all levels within the hierarchy; the sum of the work at the
“child” level must equal 100% of the work represent by the “ parent” and the
WBS should not include any work that falls outside the actual scope of the
project, that is, it cannot include more
than 100% of work.. It is important to remember that the 100% rue also applies
to the activity level. The work represented by the activities in each work
package must add up to 100% of the work necessary to complete the work
package.”
Likewise there are
others design principles to create WBS, those are;
-
Planned
outcomes, not planned actions
-
Mutually
exclusives elements
-
Level
of detail
-
Decomposition
Considerations
-
WBS
coding scheme
-
Terminal
element
There are some pitfalls
while creating a WBS; those are
-
Level of Work
Package Detail;
must decide how specific and details are needed, must be careful not to get too
detailed
-
Deliverables not
Activities or Tasks:
should contain list of broken deliverables
not a list of specific tasks used to get the deliverables
-
WBS is not a
Plan or Schedule:
cannot be used as plan or schedule
-
WBS Updates
Require Change Control: changes in WBS change the deliverables and thus
the scope of the project
-
WBS is not an
Organizational Hierarchy:
List of Tools for WBS:
-
WBS
Chart PRO
-
Match
Ware
Maybe you want to try www.wbs-tool.net for WBS.
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