Scope Statement

Scope statements may take many forms depending on the type of project being implemented and the nature of the organization. The scope statement details the project deliverables and describes the major objectives. The objectives should include measurable success criteria for the project.

A scope statement should be written before the statement of work and it should capture, in very broad terms, the product of the project, for example, "developing a software based system to capture and track orders for software." A scope statement should also include the list of users using the product, as well as the features in the resulting product.

As a baseline scope statements should contain:

  • The project name
  • The project charter
  • The project owner, sponsors, and stakeholders
  • The problem statement
  • The project goals and objectives
  • The project requirements
  • The project deliverables
  • The project non-goals (what is out of scope)
  • Milestones
  • Cost estimates

In more project oriented organizations the scope statement may also contain these and other sections:

  • Project scope management plan
  • Approved change requests
  • Project assumptions and risks
  • Project acceptance criteria

Famous quotes containing the words scope and/or statement:

    Happy is that mother whose ability to help her children continues on from babyhood and manhood into maturity. Blessed is the son who need not leave his mother at the threshold of the world’s activities, but may always and everywhere have her blessing and her help. Thrice blessed are the son and the mother between whom there exists an association not only physical and affectional, but spiritual and intellectual, and broad and wise as is the scope of each being.
    Lydia Hoyt Farmer (1842–1903)

    The parent is the strongest statement that the child hears regarding what it means to be alive and real. More than what we say or do, the way we are expresses what we think it means to be alive. So the articulate parent is less a telling than a listening individual.
    Polly Berrien Berends (20th century)