As The Teal Book is designed as a reference, it does not need to be read in full for someone to make use of it. People fulfilling different roles or even those fulfilling the same role can use The Teal Book in varying ways, for example:
- those responsible for an organisation’s methods, processes and tools might work through the entire book to verify that their approaches are consistent with the guidance
- a senior responsible owner might want to verify whether the governance of their programme or project is effective, proportionate and consistent with good practice
- a programme or project manager at the start of a new programme or project might start in Part D: Managing programmes and projects, and then delve into more of the book as they develop the governance and management framework and work through the life cycle
- a risk manager might start directly in the risk management chapter and then refer out to the chapters on issues management and change control as they seek to ensure alignment
- a change manager might start directly in the chapter on organisational and societal change and then move into other chapters as they seek to ensure that change activities are planned, controlled and appropriate
- a resource manager might start in the chapter on team induction, managing resources, or equality, diversity and inclusion, depending on what aspects they are interested in
While there is no single way to use The Teal Book, it is recommended that everyone makes themselves familiar with Part A to understand how project delivery is organised across government and Part B to understand how to tailor the guidance to the sector, scale or environment they could be working in. These parts provide useful context to keep in mind when considering the practices described in later parts of the book.