See also the common glossary of definitions which includes a list of defined terms and phrases used across the suite of government functional standards. The glossary includes the term, definition, and which function owns the term and definition.
A
accountable (person)
Someone who is accountable is required and expected to justify actions or decisions to a person or body with greater authority, from whom the accountability has been formally assigned.
Note: accountabilities can be tiered such that there is a hierarchy of accountabilities, with a higher-level having overall accountability over lower- level accountabilities.
Note: an accountable person usually has associated formally delegated authority for their actions and decisions, such as through delegation letters.
assurance
A general term for the confidence that can be derived from objective information over the successful conduct of activities, the efficient and effective design and operation of internal control, compliance with internal and external requirements, and the production of insightful and credible information to support decision making. Confidence diminishes when there are uncertainties around the integrity of information or of underlying processes.
B
baseline
A measurement, calculation, or location used as a basis for comparison. In a project delivery context baselines typically apply to plans and to sets of data relating to the solution.
Note: examples include schedule baseline, cost baseline, requirements baseline, design baseline.
benefit (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, benefit is the measurable value or other positive impact resulting from an outcome perceived as an advantage by one or more stakeholders, and which contributes towards one or more objective(s).
business case
The justification for an organisational activity (strategic, programme, project or operational) which typically contains benefits, outcomes, timescales, costs and risks against which continuing viability is tested.
C
constraint (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, a constraint is a limitation or restriction on planning or undertaking work.
Note: planning constraints can include, but are not limited to scope, performance, time, cost, resources and risk.
D
delivery strategy (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, the delivery strategy outlines longer term objectives, outcomes and outputs, and the means to achieve them, to inform future decisions and planning and includes phasing and strategies for commercial, business, societal change and solution delivery aspects.
disbenefit (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, disbenefit is the measurable value or other impact resulting from an outcome perceived as a disadvantage by one or more stakeholders, and which partially or fully negates the achievement of one or more objective(s).
defined (way of working)
In the context of standards, ‘defined’ denotes a documented way of working which people are expected to use. This can apply to any aspect of a governance or management framework for example processes, codes of practice, methods, templates, tools and guides.
E
established (way of working)
In the context of standards, ‘established’ denotes a way of working that is implemented and used throughout the organisation. This can apply to any aspect of a governance or management framework for example processes, codes of practice, methods, templates, tools and guides.
G
gate
A decision point carried out as part of formal governance, at significant points in the life cycle to ensure that the decision to invest as stated in an agreed business case and plans is, and remains, valid.
governance
Governance defines relationships and the distribution of rights and responsibilities among those who work with and in the organisation. It determines the rules and procedures through which the organisation’s objectives are set and provides the means of attaining those objectives and monitoring performance.
governance and management framework
A governance and management framework sets out the authority limits, decision making roles and rules, degrees of autonomy, assurance needs, reporting structure, accountabilities and roles, and the appropriate management practices and associated documentation needed to meet this standard.
government major project
A central government funded project or programme that requires HM Treasury approval during its life, as set out in Delegated Authority letters, or is otherwise of special interest to the government. A government major project is listed in the Government Major Projects Portfolio (GMPP).
Government Major Projects Portfolio (GMPP)
The portfolio of the Government’s largest, complex, innovative, risky and ambitious projects that have been agreed by the Infrastructure and Projects Authority, HMT and departments and are delivering the government’s main policy initiatives.
I
integrated assurance and approval plan (IAAP)
The planning, co-ordination and provision of assurance activities and approval points throughout the ‘policy to delivery’ life cycle, proportionate to levels of project cost and risk. From Treasury approvals process for programmes and projects.
integrated assurance strategy (IAS)
The integrated assurance strategy sets the strategic requirements for assurance provision to ensure agreed and consistent standards across an organisation’s portfolio of major projects.
issue
A relevant event that has happened, was not planned and requires management action. It could be a problem, benefit, query, concern, change request or risk that has occurred.
L
life cycle
The life cycle provides a phased structure for governing the work and underpinning the delivery plan, from start to finish. Life cycles can be applied to a portfolio, service, product, system, programme or project.
O
organisation
In the context of government functional standards, ‘organisation’ is the generic term used to describe a government department, arm’s length body, or any other entity, which is identified as being within the scope of the functional standard.
other related work (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, other related work comprises work within a portfolio or programme which is not managed as a project.
Note: examples of other related work are support services (such as for finance and human resources, support offices and specialist information and engineering offices), ongoing improvement initiatives not run as projects, service delivery and business as usual operations
outcome
The result of change, normally affecting real-world behaviour or circumstances. Outcomes are desired when a change is conceived. Outcomes are achieved as a result of the activities undertaken to effect the change; they are the manifestation of part or all of the new state conceived in the target operating model.
output
A specialist product (the tangible or intangible artefact) that is produced, constructed or created as a result of a planned activity and handed over to users.
P
plan
A plan sets out how objectives, outcomes and outputs are to be delivered within defined constraints, in accordance with the strategy.
portfolio
A portfolio comprises part or all of an organisation’s investment required to achieve its objectives. Governed through its portfolio (or business) plan, a portfolio comprises work components, such as other portfolios, programmes, projects, other related work and work packages.
portfolio management
Portfolio management is a co-ordinated collection of strategic practices and decisions that together enable the most effective balance of organisational change and business as usual.
portfolio strategy
A collection of top-level strategic information that provides total clarity to all stakeholders regarding the content and long-term objectives of the portfolio.
programme
A programme is a unique, temporary, flexible organisation created to co-ordinate, direct and oversee the implementation of a set of projects and other related work components to deliver outcomes and benefits related to a set of strategic objectives.
project
A project is a unique temporary management environment, undertaken in stages, created for the purpose of delivering one or more business products or outcomes.
project delivery
Collectively, portfolio, programme and project management are referred to in government as ‘project delivery’.
Q
quality
The degree to which the features and inherent or assigned characteristics of a product, person, process, service and/or system bear on its ability to show that it meets expectations or stated needs, requirements or specification.
quality assurance
The planned systematic process that will be used to provide confidence that outputs will match their defined quality criteria.
quality control
The process of monitoring specific project results to determine whether they comply with relevant standards and of identifying ways to eliminate causes of unsatisfactory performance.
R
residual risk
The risk remaining after the risk response has been applied.
responsible (person)
Someone who is responsible has some control over or care for an action, or the obligation to do something as part of a wider job role.
Note: a responsible person is responsible to an accountable person, or themselves if they are the accountable person.
risk
The effect of uncertainty on objectives. Risk is usually expressed in terms of causes, potential events, and their consequences
- a cause is an element which alone or in combination has the potential to give rise to risk
- an event is an occurrence or change of a set of circumstances and can be something that is expected which does not happen or something that is not expected which does happen. Events can have multiple causes and consequences and can affect multiple objectives
- the consequences should the event happen – consequences are the outcome of an event affecting objectives, which can be certain or uncertain, can have positive or negative direct of indirect effects on objectives, can be expressed qualitatively or quantitatively, and can escalate through cascading and cumulative effects
risk appetite
The amount of risk the organisation, or subset of it, is willing to accept. risk tolerance The threshold levels of risk exposure that, with appropriate approvals, can be exceeded, but which when exceeded will trigger some form of response (for example, reporting the situation to senior management for action).
S
senior responsible owner (SRO)
The individual accountable to the sponsoring body for a programme or project meeting its objectives, delivering the required outcomes and realising the required benefits.
Note: the senior responsible owner owns the business case and is accountable for governance.
Note: the sponsoring body could be a group or individual.
Note: the senior responsible owner of a government major project is ultimately accountable to Parliament.
stage (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, a stage is a subdivision of a project life cycle.
stakeholder
Any individual, group or organisation that can affect or be affected by, or perceive itself to be affected by an initiative (programme, project, activity, risk).
strategy
A strategy outlines longer term objectives, outcomes and outputs, and the means to achieve them, to inform future decisions and planning.
T
target operating model
A model of the future organisation, its working practices and processes, the information it requires and the technology that supports its operations.
Note: it is often called a blueprint.
termination
Termination is the premature closure of a work component because it is no longer needed or viable, or because the risks associated with it have become unacceptably high.
tolerance
The permissible deviation above and below a plan’s target for time and cost without escalating the deviation to the next level of management. There can also be tolerance levels for quality, scope, benefit and risk. Tolerance is applied at project, stage and team levels.
tranche (project delivery)
In the context of project delivery, a tranche is a subdivision of a programme designed to enable an incremental approach to delivery of outputs, outcomes and benefits.
transformation
A distinct change to the way an organisation conducts all or part of its business.
two-way traceability
The ability to trace both forward and backward (for example, from requirement to an element of the solution and from the solution element back to requirement). It can also be applied in other areas, such as to output-outcome-benefits mapping, and solution-plan mapping.
V
validation
An activity that ensures a solution (or part of) meets the needs of the business. Validation ensures that business requirements are met even though these might have changed since the original design.
value for money
Value for money is a balanced judgment based on the benefit cost ratio which brings together social costs and benefits including public sector costs over the entire life of a proposal, together with decisively significant unquantified deliverables, and unmonetised risks and uncertainties, to deliver a proposal’s objectives.
verification
An activity that ensures that a solution (or part of) is complete, accurate, reliable and matches its design specification.
W
work component
A defined and managed part of a portfolio, such as a lower-level portfolio, programme, project, other related work, or work package.
work package
A group of related activities that have a defined scope, deliverable, timescale and cost, contributing to the required outputs and outcomes.