Difference between revisions of "Deliverable"

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In contracted efforts, deliverable may refer to an item specifically required by contract documents, such as an item on a Contract Data Requirements List or mentioned in the statement of work.
 
In contracted efforts, deliverable may refer to an item specifically required by contract documents, such as an item on a Contract Data Requirements List or mentioned in the statement of work.
  
A deliverable is something (hard or soft) that can be ready to dispatch to the site or the Client as partial item of the supply foreseen in the contract, e.g. when the project has started some part of the design (when settled), can be anticipated to the sub-supplier who has therefore the possibility of starting his purchase activity of raw material, even if many other parameters are not yet designed by the designer. (TO DO: fix run-on sentence.)
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A deliverable is something (hard or soft) that can be ready to dispatch to the site or the Client as partial item of the supply foreseen in the contract, e.g. when the project has started some part of the design (when settled), can be anticipated to the sub-supplier who has therefore the possibility of starting his purchase activity of raw material, even if many other parameters are not yet designed by the designer.
  
 
In this way many time-savings are possible, shortening greatly the whole project final supply term.
 
In this way many time-savings are possible, shortening greatly the whole project final supply term.
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* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deliverable Deliverable] @ Wikipedia
 
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deliverable Deliverable] @ Wikipedia
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[[Category:Management]]

Latest revision as of 04:23, 21 April 2016

Deliverable is a term used in project management to describe a tangible or intangible object produced as a result of the project that is intended to be delivered to a customer (either internal or external).

Description

A deliverable could be a report, a document, a work package, a server upgrade or any other building block of an overall project.

Sub-deliverables

A deliverable may be composed of multiple smaller deliverables.

It may be either:

  • An outcome to be achieved
    • "The corporation says that becoming profitable this year is a deliverable."
  • An output to be provided
    • "The deliverable for the completed project consists of a special-purpose electronic device and its controlling software."

Differs from a project milestone

A deliverable differs from a project milestone in that a milestone is a measurement of progress toward an output whereas the deliverable is the result of the process. For a typical project, a milestone might be the completion of a product design while the deliverable might be the technical diagram of the product.

More than a project document

A deliverable is more than just a project document in that a project document is typically part of a project deliverable. A project deliverable may contain a number of documents and physical things. In construction, a deliverable (work package) is a broken down piece of a project managed by a Workface planner.

Technical projects

In technical projects, deliverables can be further classified as:

Contracts

In contracted efforts, deliverable may refer to an item specifically required by contract documents, such as an item on a Contract Data Requirements List or mentioned in the statement of work.

A deliverable is something (hard or soft) that can be ready to dispatch to the site or the Client as partial item of the supply foreseen in the contract, e.g. when the project has started some part of the design (when settled), can be anticipated to the sub-supplier who has therefore the possibility of starting his purchase activity of raw material, even if many other parameters are not yet designed by the designer.

In this way many time-savings are possible, shortening greatly the whole project final supply term.

This designing activity can be represented in the drawings with a "cloud" around a not yet designed part and means: "this part (size, or other characteristics) will be studied later". The part settled can be "delivered" to the interested parties.

See also

External links