Project management methodologies are structured approaches used to plan, execute, and deliver projects efficiently. They provide frameworks, processes, and best practices to manage scope, time, cost, quality, risk, and stakeholders.
Traditional (Predictive) Methodologies
The most well-known is the Waterfall model, a linear approach where phases—requirements, design, development, testing, and deployment—are completed sequentially. It works best when requirements are clearly defined and unlikely to change.
Agile Methodologies
Agile emphasizes flexibility, collaboration, and incremental delivery. Frameworks like Scrum use short iterations (sprints), defined roles, and regular feedback loops. Kanban focuses on visualizing work and limiting tasks in progress to improve flow. Agile suits projects with evolving requirements.
Hybrid Approaches
Many organizations blend predictive and Agile methods, combining structured planning with iterative execution.
Process-Based Methodologies
PRINCE2 is a structured, process-driven approach widely used in the UK and Europe. It emphasizes business justification, defined roles, and stage-based control.
Lean and Six Sigma
These focus on efficiency and quality improvement. Lean reduces waste, while Six Sigma minimizes defects through data-driven analysis.
Each methodology has strengths and trade-offs. The best choice depends on project complexity, stakeholder needs, regulatory requirements, and organizational culture.
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