This guide is based on The Standard for Project
Management [1]. A standard is a document established by an authority, custom,
or general consent as a model for example. As an American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) standard, The Standard for Project Management was
developed using a process based on the concepts of consensus, openness, due process,
and balance. The Standard for Project Management is a foundational
reference for PMI’s project management professional development programs and
the practice of project management. Because project management needs to be
tailored to fit the needs of the project, the standard and the guide are both
based on descriptive practices, rather than prescriptive practices.
Therefore, the standard identifies the processes that are considered good
practices on most projects, most of the time. The standard also identifies the
inputs and outputs that are usually associated with those processes. The
standard does not require that any particular process or practice be performed.
The Standard for Project Management is included as Part II of A Guide
to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide).
The PMBOK® Guide provides more detail about key concepts, emerging trends, considerations for tailoring the project management processes, and information on how tools and techniques are applied to projects. Project managers may use one or more methodologies to implement the project management processes outlined in the standard.
The PMBOK® Guide provides more detail about key concepts, emerging trends, considerations for tailoring the project management processes, and information on how tools and techniques are applied to projects. Project managers may use one or more methodologies to implement the project management processes outlined in the standard.