Charters, Mandates, Roadmaps and Other Artefacts at the Launch of a Project: Characteristics and Similarities

Authors

  • Pierre Bonnal CERN Switzerland Switzerland
  • Christopher Rauser CERN Eng. Dept. Switzerland

Keywords:

Project Charter, Project Mandate, Project Proposal, Roadmap, Project Mission Statement, Project Brief, Statement of Work

Abstract

If the Abernathy-Utterback model about the innovation of technology was applied to the approaches and methodologies of project management, it would be clear that, five decades after the birth of modern project management, the domain would persist in a “fluid phase”, where approaches are still numerous and no dominant design or particular methodology really emerged yet. Comparing the many standards and methodologies one by one would be certainly useful. However, the task is ambitious and can only reasonably be undertaken in bits and pieces. In this article, we are interested in the only artefact that initialize a project: according to the authors and obedience, this one takes different names: project charter, project mandate, project proposal, roadmap, project mission statement, project brief or statement of work (SoW). System engineering also promotes two additional types of documents: ConOps (concept of operations), replaced in 2010 by the OpsCon (operational concept) or OCD (operational concept document). First, we have tried to compare a few documents which reflect the main obedience, according to their temporal locations along a project life cycle, their managerial aims and their typical contents. In a second step, we propose a model of a unifying document that could be satisfying to all. In any case, it is this artefact that the CERN Engineering Department promotes through a system engineering framework called openSE (www.cern.ch/openSE) to federate multidisciplinary contributions to the many programmes and projects on going at CERN.

Author Biographies

  • Pierre Bonnal, CERN Switzerland Switzerland

    Senior Project Engineer with the Office of the Director of Accelerators and Technology, involved in providing project management support and advices to projects (as from Sept. 2010) > Technical Coordinator for the PS Booster Upgrade Project > CERN's Scientist-in-charge for the PURESAFE Initial Training Network > Member of the CERN A&T Sector's Maintenance Management Initiative > Member of the CERN's Corporate Risk Management Initiative. Senior lecturer Université de Lausanne / HEC School of Business February 2007 – Present (6 years 4 months) Instructor of the "R&D Management" course (M.Sc. in Management program) Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse Ph.D., Industrial Systems Management 1997 – 2001 Université Paul Cézanne (Aix-Marseille III) D.E.A., Industrial Project Management 1989 – 1990 Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières M.Sc., Project Management 1989 – 1990 Ecole centrale de Marseille M.Sc., Industrial Eng. 1988 – 1990 Ecole nationale d'Ingénieurs de Tarbes M.Sc., Mechanical Eng. 1983 – 1988 Interests: Project management and governance, Front-end project management (feasibility analyses), Project risk management, Quality management, Product Lifecycle Management (PLM), Innovation and R&D management and governance, Corporate strategy and governance.

  • Christopher Rauser, CERN Eng. Dept. Switzerland

    Christopher Rauser was a technical student at CERN from 2016 to 2017. As part of this studentship, he wrote, under the supervision of Dr. Pierre Bonnal, his bachelor’s thesis related to the article published. In 2017 he graduated from the Hochschule-Ruhr-West in Germany and started in the same year his Master Degree at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra Barcelona.

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Published

2022-05-20

How to Cite

Charters, Mandates, Roadmaps and Other Artefacts at the Launch of a Project: Characteristics and Similarities. (2022). The Journal of Modern Project Management, 5(2). https://journalmodernpm.com/manuscript/index.php/jmpm/article/view/JMPM01403

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