What is the Project Triangle?
Development projects need to be planned, managed, and delivered under certain constraints. In project management, these constraints are scope, time, and cost. These are also referred to as the Project Triangle, where each side of the triangle represents a constraint; wherein any changes to any of the sides causes a change in the other sides.
For example, a change or adjustment to reduce the time will change the scope and the cost. A further refinement of the constraints, places quality at the center of the triangle, and that turns it into a fourth constraint.
The triangle illustrates the relationship between four primary forces in a project. Scope refers to what must be done to produce the project's end result. The time is the planned schedule to deliver the project. The cost represents the planned budget or resources available. Quality represents the fit-to-purpose that the project must achieve to be a success.
These constraints are competing constraints: an increase in scope can result in an increase in the time and an increase in the cost, a reduction in the time constraint can only occur with a decrease in costs and reduced scope, and a reduction in the cost means a reduced scope and time.
The job of a Project Manager is to guide a project towards the desired goal of respecting those constraints. The difficulty lies in the fact that this is always a tradeoff. If more has to be created, then the project needs more time or more money. Project Management is a profession of tradeoffs and decisions. Understanding the project triangle allows for better choices, especially when the projects need to make tradeoffs; If the project adjusts any one side of the triangle, the other sides are affected.
For example, to adjust the project plan to:
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Changes to the plan can affect the triangle in various ways, depending on your specific circumstances and the nature of the project. For example, in some instances, shortening the schedule might increase costs. In other instances, it might actually decrease costs.
Quality is at the center of the project triangle, it affects every side of the triangle, and any changes made to any side of the triangle will affect quality. Quality is not a factor of the triangle; it is a result of what happens from the proper management of time, cost, and scope.
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5moThough so simply expressed, this accounts for an entire control/impact system within project implementation. A manager who understands the interplay of these "forces" and has the team understand how an implementation strategy is guided by observance of this, is more than 80% already sure of quality. Sad to say that some managers know this, but they either not consciously bothered or it's not in their position to ensure respect for The Triangle. Imagine a Manager who is at same time the Finance officer and then takes a 3 weeks leave... Or Project officers who are M & Es in their own perspectives. Thanks for this wonderful article Rodolfo Siles, PMP, MScM, BSc Eng.