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Defining Project Management Roles

Defining Project Management Roles

Defining clear project roles and responsibilities is important for success in project management. Irrespective of which project management methodology has been selected, lack of clarity about who is responsible for what will lead to:

All of these issues can be avoided by defining the project management roles early in the project. It is important to start with defining the necessary roles for the project and then assign individuals to these project roles depending on their skills and experience. Doing it the other way round, trying to develop roles around what team members would like to do, is likely to lead to a mismatch between the best project roles and responsibilities of individuals.

Using a RACI matrix for defining project roles and responsibilities

A useful technique for defining any roles is the RACI approach. In this technique, a matrix is developed with all of the tasks that need to be carried out on one axis and all of the expected roles on the other axis. Against each task and each project role, a consideration is made about what involvement is required. The role can either be Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, or Informed.

Using this RACI approach has been proven to result in project roles and responsibilities that are better thought through with no gaps or overlaps. For example, for any task, only one of the project management roles can be accountable for its delivery, making it clear where the buck stops if there are any issues. 

The different project management roles

Each project management methodology defines its own roles. Some of the more traditional methodologies, such as PRINCE2, have a lot of project roles, in this case, 9 of them. Others have far fewer, combining many of the responsibilities into a smaller number of roles. This can make understanding more difficult, so here are the project management roles as defined in PRINCE2:

In summary

Many different project management roles are required to deliver a project. These project roles and responsibilities will be defined differently for every methodology and indeed, for every project, but success with project management depends on careful definition and communication of the precise project management roles within the organization.

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