Project - Glossary of Terms & Acronyms

For those writing in the world of project planning and project management, words have very special meaning:

acceptance = a decision by the funding authority to accept project or stage and pay project cost or stage cost; see completion acceptance; see user acceptance

activity = any task or group of tasks that must be performed to achieve a given outcome

actual cost = ACWP + ACWS

ACWP = actual cost (of) work performed

ACWS = actual cost (of) work scheduled

AIPM = Australian Institute of Project Management

ANSI = American National Standards Institute: a membership organization that coordinates the development of US voluntary national standards in both the private and public sector

AS = Australian Standards

AS 1657:1992 = Fixed platforms, walkways, stairways and ladders - Design, construction and installation; See SAI Global

AS 1851:2005 = Maintenance of fire protection systems and equipment; See SAI Global

AS 2419.2:2009 = Fire hydrant installations - Fire hydrant valves; See SAI Global

AS 2865:2009 = Confined spaces; See SAI Global

AS 3806:1998 = Compliance programs

AS 3959:2009 = Construction of buildings in bushfire-prone areas; See SAI Global

AS 5037:2005 = Knowledge management - a guide

AS/NZS 2063:2008/Amdt 1:2009 = Bicycle helmets; See SAI Global

AS/NZS 3000:2007 = Electrical installations (known as the Australian/New Zealand Wiring Rules); See SAI Global

AS/NZS 3000:2007/Amdt 1:2009 = Electrical installations (known as the Australian/New Zealand Wiring Rules); See SAI Global

AS/NZS 3760:2003 = In-service safety inspection and testing of electrical equipment; See SAI Global

AS/NZS 4360:2004< = Risk management; See AS/NZS ISO 31000:2009

AS/NZS 4360:SET = Risk Management Set; See AS/NZS ISO 31000:2009

AS/NZS 4801:2001 = Occupational health and safety management systems - Specification with guidance for use; See SAI Global

AS/NZS 9001:2000 = Quality management systems - Requirements

AS/NZS ISO 14001:2004 = Environmental management systems - Requirements with guidance for use; See SAI Global

ARR = average rate of return

ASAP = "as soon as possible" (vernacular)

Australian Standards = SAI

base rate = quoted by individual bank as a price at which they are prepared to lend money

baseline project = initial agreed project plan

basis point = useful for quoting interest percentage points; one hundred basis points = 1%

BBO = Build-Buy-Operate

BCTC = budgeted cost to complete (activity) (also known as FCTC, which should be the same thing if budgets are kept up to date)

BCWP = budgeted cost (of) work performed

BCWS = budgeted cost (of) work scheduled

best practice = formulas and procedures that have proven successful in practice, identified by general international acceptance. In the IT world, best practice often refers to software development methodologies widely accepted internationally

best practice policy = policy written for and adopted by the company (usually based on and involving the adoption of international best practice)

BLA = bi-lateral agency

BLO = Build-Lease-Own

BLOT = Build-Lease-Own-Transfer

board project management sub-committee = a temporary committee set up by the board and delegated sufficient power by the board to enable it to make all decisions on behalf of the board related to the resources needed for the project to achieve its defined objective; the sub-committee will report regularly to the board

BOO = Build-Own-Occupy (small projects)

BOO = Build-Own-Operate (big projects)

BOOS = Build-Own-Operate-Sell

BOOST = Build-Own-Operate-Subsidise-Transfer

BOOT = Build-Own-Operate-Transfer

bp = basis point

BOR = Build-Operate-Renew

BOT = Build-Operate-Transfer

bridge finance = interim finance; get under way before long-term finance is complete

BRT = Build-Rent-Transfer

BS 7928-2:2009 = Head and face protection for cricketers. Face protectors for cricket wicket-keepers; See SAI Global

BS EN ISO 21987:2009 = Ophthalmic optics. Mounted spectacle lenses; See SAI Global

BS EN ISO 16061:2009 = Instrumentation for use in association with non-active surgical implants. General requirements; See SAI Global

BSI = British Standards Institute; UK Standards body; now BSI National Standards

BT = Build-Transfer

BTO = Build-Transfer-Operate

budgeted cost = BCWP + BCWS

buy-back = promise to repurchase unsold production

buy-back = payment by company for cancellation of shares

buy-back = payment by company for cancellation of shares

CAB = change advisory board; See ECAB

CABER = change advisory board emergency review

CABES = change advisory board emergency session

change = an addition, modification or alteration that is agreed to be included contrary to expectation, that is to say, it was not intended in the original specifications or project plan or statement of works

change control = a formal process/procedure for controlling changes under Project. It governs the definition, impact assessment, assignment of responsibilities, specification, and allocation of resources, costing, scheduling and authorisation of modifications under strict laws governing the change until the change is properly approved, the version control impact has been systematically applied and the consequent changes are incorporated in the project plans as if they had been there from the outset

change management (CM) = change control

CM = change management

CMC = change management committee

cognitive milestone = a point reached in the project when an idea becomes a reality; a good time to give a demonstration to an outsider or to a decision-maker that progress has been made, because certain realities have been achieved that can impact on people's lives. This may be the same as, or different to, technical milestones. For example: the system is installed and working, however, without a significant body of data it is impossible to test it and fine-tune it. The technical milestone has been reached and certain payments may be appropriate but the "cognitive milestone" has yet to be reached, and therefore complete settlement would be inappropriate

completion = the end of a project or the end of stage of a project by the project company completing all activities in the project or stage

completion payment = payment to the project company following completion; usually follows completion acceptance test

completion acceptance test = test carried out by combined project company and funding agency under contract to allow payment to the project company following completion

compression = the strategy of shortening the time frame by increasing the number of resources per activity to achieve a particular benefit (fast tracking at increased rates)

concept document = pre-project plan; narrative account of the way it will work and reasons for proposal and benefits etc.

concession = special arrangements for project company to take over public sector operation and operate it for profit for given period of time

concession agreement = a contract between the government agency and the project company containing special arrangements for the project company to take over public sector operation and operate it for profit for given period of time

concurrency = the strategy of particular projects (inter-project planning) or project stages (intra-project planning) being performed concurrently to achieve a particular benefit or payout or elimination of waste or reduction in down time etc.

consortium = two or more companies going to tender together and/or working together on a project as a partnership or joint venture

consortium agreement = a joint venture agreement or a partnership agreement or a limited partnership agreement executed prior to two or more companies going to tender together and/or working together as a consortium

contingency project plan = an alternative project plan that is built on a known risk of the project and is switched to in the event that this risk eventuates

control = see project control

cost control = planning methods for reducing cost to complete

cost plus = method of costing where the supplier is paid for the actual resources employed plus a set percentage

costing = estimating cost to complete; researching and assigning costs to sourced activities

CPA = critical path analysis

CPM = critical path methodology

critical activity = an activity at present on the critical path (no float); subject to increased control as changes to this activity can affect the overall project time to completion

critical path = the longest duration (temporal series or sequence) of activities in the project to completion; the series that determines the earliest completion date of the project overall (a reduction in the time taken to complete to one or more of these activities will reduce the overall project time of the project and will bring the completion date forward)

CTC = cost to complete (activity) (also known as FCTC or BCTC, which should be the same thing if budgets are kept up to date)

CTC minimum = ACWP + BCWS

DCF = discounted cash flow

DCMF = Design-Construct-Manage-Finance

deliverable = any item, result or outcome from a project activity that can be sourced, measured and verified

due date = date upon which payment of interest, principal, or the execution of due diligence, hand-over, etc. becomes due

due diligence = detailed review prior to legal execution, acceptance, sign-off, completion, etc.

duration = time taken to complete a project activity

DOT = Develop-Operate-Transfer

ECAB = emergency change advisory board

ECABR = emergency change advisory board review

ECABS = emergency change advisory board session

ECT = earliest completion time (milestone)

EET = earliest event time

EFT = earliest finish time (activity)

EST = earliest start time (activity)

EIA = environmental impact assessment

EIS = environmental impact statement

ESHIA = environmental, social, (and) health impact assessment

EPC = Engineering-Procurement-Construction

EPC contract = contract separating out that part of the project subject to Engineering-Procurement-Construction

event = achievement of significant milestone measured in time

event default = failure to achieve significant milestone (such as delivery of deliverable or payment of interest or principal) or achievement of adverse milestone (such as or breach of covenant or cross default or insolvency or material change) triggers new circumstances, such as declaration of all loan amounts due and payable

fast track = plan for earlier EFTs (usually by compression at higher rates)

FCTC = forecast cost to complete (activity) (also known as BCTC, which should be the same thing if budgets are kept up to date)

financial milestone = a point reached in the project when payment is due as defined in the project contract or project plan, this could be a cognitive milestone, a technical milestone, an organisational milestone or it could simply be triggered by the passage of time

float = lag time available on any lag activity (the maximum time a lag activity can be delayed without itself becoming a critical activity)

functional requirements = an initial definition of a proposed system, which translates user requirements into a set of requirements internal to the system being created from which programming can take place

functional requirements specifications = a formal statement containing the functional requirements translated into a set of integrated specifications

Gantt = Henry L. Gantt, American engineer and social scientist involved in WWI production control

Gantt Chart = a chart showing the productive process represented as a horizontal bar: when the horizontal array is "time" and the duration of an activity is represented as a bar over time, complex productive relationships can be represented very simply

gap analysis = formal analysis of the difference between a system specification and a particular set of functional analysis and user requirements

GB 002:2004 = Australian Business Excellence Framework

generalist technical writer = a professional writer (usually viewed as "ghost writer") who specialises in the writing process and the technical/scientific disciplines/processes; needs to learn particularities of the project before starting documentation process but may achieve high standards because of his/her knowledge of a broad range of standards; compare specialist

glossary = a list of words that have special meaning because of their context of use and an explanation of the special definitions assigned to them

grant payment milestone = a particular kind of financial milestone; a point reached in the government funded project when grant payment is due as defined in the project contract or project plan, this could be a cognitive milestone, a technical milestone, an organisational milestone or it could simply be triggered by the passage of time

H&S = health and safety

HES = health, environment (and) safety (See HSE)

HSE = health, safety (and the) environment

HSEQ = health, safety, environment, (and) quality

human resources

ISO = International Organization for Standardization, Geneva; an organization that sets international standards

IR = industrial relations

IRR = internal rate (of) return

ISO/FDIS 7240-24 = Fire detection and fire alarm systems - Part 24: Sound-system loudspeakers; See SAI Global

ISO 9000 = a series of standards for quality management

ISO 9000:2005 = Quality management systems - Fundamentals and vocabulary

ISO 9001:2000 = Quality management systems - Requirements

ISO 9004:2000 = Quality management systems - Guidelines for performance improvements

ISO/IEC 9126-1:2001 = Software engineering - Product quality - Part 1: Quality model (available in English only)

ISO 10002:2004 = Quality management - Customer satisfaction - Guidelines for complaints handling in organizations

ISO 10005:2005 = Quality management systems - Guidelines for quality plans

ISO 10006:2003 = Quality management systems - Guidelines for quality management in projects

ISO 10007:2003 = Quality management systems - Guidelines for configuration management

ISO/TR 10013:2001 = Guidelines for quality management system documentation

ISO/TR 10014:1998 = Guidelines for managing the economics of quality

ISO 10015:1999 = Quality management - Guidelines for training

ISO 10019:2005 = Guidelines for the selection of quality management system consultants and use of their services

ISO/IEC 13236:1998 = Information technology - Quality of service: Framework

ISO/IEC TR 13243:1999 = Information technology - Quality of service - Guide to methods and mechanisms

ISO 14000 = a series of standards regarding environmental management; their objective is to ensure products and services have the lowest possible environmental impact

ISO 14000is similar to ISO 9000 quality management in that both pertain to the process - the comprehensive outcome - of how a product is produced, rather than to the product itself. As with ISO 9000, certification is performed by third-party organisations rather than being awarded by ISO directly

ISO 28927-5:2009 = Hand-held portable power tools - Test methods for evaluation of vibration emission - Part 5: Drills and impact drills; See SAI Global

ISO 28927-8:2009 = Hand-held portable power tools - Test methods for evaluation of vibration emission - Part 8: Saws, polishing and filing machines with reciprocating action and small saws with oscillating or rotating action; See SAI Global

IS EN 50413:2008 = Basic Standard on Measurement and Calculation Procedures for Human Exposure to Electric, Magnetic and Electromagnetic Fields (0 hz - 300 Ghz); See SAI Global

joint = by taking on one the accuser is automatically taking on the other and each of the defending parties has the right to insist that the other party is co-defendant

joint and several = by taking on one the accuser is automatically taking on the other but each stands independantly liable for the whole amount and each of the defending parties while liable for the whole amount if the other defendant has nothing has the right to insist that the other party is co-defendant

joint venture = a form of partnership agreement tying two independantly incorporated parties in a project or venture

lag time = for activities not at present on the critical path there are periods of lag time adding opportunities for adjustment and reassigning resources without affecting the critical path

lag activity = an activity not at present on the critical path; subject to less control demands as changes to the start date for this activity may not affect the overall project time to completion

LDO = Lease-Develop-Operate

LROT = Lease-Refurbish-Operate-Transfer

milestone = a significant event in the life of the project, representing the completion of a major deliverable or group of deliverables; includes cognitive milestone, organisational milestone, technical milestone, financial milestone, grant payment milestone, etc.

NPV = net present value

NZS = New Zealand Standards

O&M = operation and maintenance

OH&S = occupational health and safety

OHS = occupational health (and) safety

OHSAS 18001 = occupational health, safety and security

organisational milestone = a point reached in the project when a key task in the timeline has been performed, that is to say a team or work group have completed their work and are ready to hand on to another team or work group, one manager to another etc. similar or identical to technical milestone: a key moment in the critical path that enables (technically) another set of tasks to get started. This could be used as an appropriate moment for financial milestone, but this is not necessarily the case

PCG = Project Control Group

PERT = programme evaluation (and) review technique

PERT Chart = a standard scheduling chart that shows activities/tasks as boxes and the arrows between the boxes show the dependencies between the activities/tasks; developed in the 1950s (Polaris), now widely used in project management

PM = Project Manager

PMO = Project Management Office

PMO = Project Management Officer

PMBOK = Project Management Book Of Knowledge; See ISO 10006; See

Prince2 = a project management methodology developed by the UK government and used internationally, especially for information technology system development and implementation projects and formal SDLC

Prince II = See Prince2

project = a set of activities that will achieve a defined objective; seen as a defined temporary endeavour of particular assigned resources with a start date and a completion date

Project time line = time line produced with MS Project

project control = managerial process includes reporting actual project costs (period costs and total costs to date); comparing costs (budget vs. actual); comparing team performance (planned performance vs. actual performance); analysing (reasons for) variance; evaluate possible alternatives; taking appropriate corrective action where possible

project management = a temporary process for managing all project activities that seeks to ensure that the project achieves its defined objective

project manager = a temporary manager employed under contract (either from inside or from outside) to accept responsibility for day-to-day control over the project; the project manager reports to the board project management sub-committee and works closely with the project sponsor

project sponsor = a temporary political advocate for the project who has sufficient power, prestige and influence to ensure that sufficient resources are made available to allow the project to achieve its defined objective; usually assigned this role by the board and usually also given the role of chairperson of the board project management sub-committee

PSA = preferred supplier agreement

PSA Panel = appointed panel for choosing preferred suppliers

QA = quality assurance

QA Testing = See UAT

quality =

quality assurance (QA) = a process (assigned to a department, procedure or programme) for testing that hardware and/or software performs as originally specified

quality assurance analyst = a person who is responsible understanding QA standards (such as the ISO 9000 family) and applying them within an organization

quality control = a process (assigned to a department, procedure or programme) for testing and manipulating so that the quality of output (products and/or services) is maintained above a minimal level

risk management

RLT = Refurbish-Lease-Transfer

ROA = return on assets

ROE = return on equity

ROI = return on investment

roll-out = implementation programme (vernacular)

ROO = Refurbish-Own-Operate

ROT = Refurbish-Own-Transfer

schedule = a list of activities arranged in date order

schedule of project completion = a list of planned activities arranged in date order with key milestones highlighted

sequence = dependant activities represented as a temporal array

sourcing = assigning a resource to an activity

SOW = statement of work

SR CLC TR 50515:2008 = List of Interpretations on Published Standards on 'alarm Systems'; See SAI Global

statement of work (SOW) = a narrative account of the products and services to be supplied under contract

TACWP = total actual cost (of) work performed

TACWS = total actual cost (of) work scheduled

TBCWP = total budgeted cost (of) work performed

TBCWS = total budgeted cost (of) work scheduled

TCTC = total cost to complete (project)

TCTC minimum = TACWP + TBCWS which is the same as TBCWS at start plus total variance to date

task = any task (or group of tasks that must be performed together) that can be assigned to a particular worker or work unit

technical milestone = a point reached in the project when a key task in the timeline has been performed; a key moment in the critical path that enables (technically) another set of tasks to get started. This could be used as an appropriate moment for financial milestone, but this is not necessarily the case

tendering = specialist terms & acronyms

user acceptance = a formal process for involving the user in the sign off of a new system. For an in-house developed system it involves early statement of user requirements, a sign off of the functional plan by the user, and the sign off by the user following user acceptance testing against the original requirements. For a purchased system it involves a user requirements statement and a gap analysis.

user acceptance testing (UAT) = a completion test for a system; the final testing stages by users of a new or changed system. The system is tested for stability and whether it is processing data according to requirements. If successful, it signals the approval by the user to implement the system live.

use case = a formal methodology for defining system requirements; a scenario; software developers and end users cooperate to define how the system will need to interact with the world, such as with an end user or another system, to achieve a specific business goal

user guide = a document written by a technical writer to give assistance to people using the system.

user manual = user guide

user requirements = practical outcomes that will impact the user that are the reason for the development of a new system or for enhancements and modifications to an existing system

user requirements documentation = a business or strategic plan containing all user requirements and the reason for their inclusion

user requirements specification = a formal list of all user requirements contained within the user requirements documentation written in a form that allows validation that changes meet user requirements

variance = budget - actual

variance to date = BCWP - ACWP