General

Progressive Elaboration

DE: Fortschreitende Detaillierung

Continuously improving a plan as more information becomes available.

Detailed Explanation

Progressive elaboration is the iterative process of increasing the level of detail in a project management plan as greater amounts of information and more accurate estimates become available. It recognizes that planning is not a one-time event but an ongoing process.

At project initiation, high-level estimates and broad scope are acceptable. As the team learns more through research, prototyping, and initial deliveries, plans become more detailed and accurate. This is not scope creep — the scope boundaries remain the same, but the understanding of how to deliver within those boundaries deepens.

Progressive elaboration is closely related to rolling wave planning and is a core principle of both agile and predictive approaches. The PMBOK Guide 7th Edition embraces it as fundamental to effective project management in uncertain environments.

Key Points

  • Iterative increase in planning detail over time
  • Recognizes that early estimates improve as learning occurs
  • Not scope creep — scope boundaries stay the same, detail increases
  • Closely related to rolling wave planning
  • Core principle in both agile and predictive approaches
  • Fundamental to managing uncertainty

Practical Example

A software project starts with a high-level estimate of EUR 500K and 6 months. After the 2-week discovery phase, the team refines: EUR 480K, 5.5 months, with detailed estimates for Phase 1 and rough estimates for Phase 2. After Phase 1 delivery, Phase 2 is estimated in detail: final project projection is EUR 510K and 6 months. The scope has not changed, but understanding has deepened.

Tips for Learning and Applying

1

Communicate to stakeholders that early estimates will be refined — set expectations

2

Use progressive elaboration as a tool for managing uncertainty honestly

3

Refine estimates at natural checkpoints: phase gates, iteration boundaries

4

Document the confidence range of your estimates at each stage

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