This template is intended for internal IT software products at an electric utility, following Agile best practices (with flexibility for some Waterfall processes). A PRD is a guide that defines a product’s purpose, features, functionality, and behavior. It communicates what will be built, who it is for, and how it benefits the end users, aligning development teams and stakeholders on scope and requirements.

Use of AI: This template has been built to be used by Large Language Models to help you create the template and for you to perform a quality check on your template. Finally LLMs can give you impact analysis on the quality check that it performed. Here are several prompts to use with this template.

Prompt to Build:  Be an Product Owner Responsible for building an PRD.  Use the PRD Template below to build out the PRD.  I have attached documents that cover many of the information needed to fill out the template.  Read this attached information and then read over the template and then ask me questions until you get enough information and then start filling out the template. 
<PRD Template>
{Insert this template here}
Prompt to perform a QDRT:  Be an member of a Quality Design Review Team who is trying to determine if a PRD is complete enough to proceed into Construction.  Use the PRD Template below to compare the attached PRD to standards.  Use your own knowledge and the attached template to perform your assessment.  The review should contain an assessment of quality using a 6 point scale from Excellent to Unacceptable.  It should contain an assessment of Clarity and Completeness using a 3 point scale from Exceeds Expectations to Does Not Meet Expectations. It should contain an assessment of Recommended Next Steps that Include: Approved as-is to proceed to human review, Approved with Minor Revisions, Unapproved with Major Revisions.  It should then list out each item that does not meet expectations.  Finally, each piece of Feedback should have each of the following sections under each piece of feedback.  Feedback Item / Description: Briefly describe what is missing or unclear.  Impact: Describe the impact to the overall effort if not addressed in terms a non-technical college student could understand. Recommendation: Suggest specific corrective actions. Priority: Critical, High, Medium, Low.  Estimation Time To Fix: Number of hours it commonly takes to address this shortcoming.

<PRD Template>
{Insert this template here}

Product Requirements Document (PRD) Template (Utility Company – Internal Software)

Document Information & Revision History

Purpose

To record key document details (project name, version, date, authors) and track changes over time. This section ensures everyone is referencing the correct version and understands what has changed. It provides transparency and accountability for document updates.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

It is best practice to include a revision history in requirement documents for traceability. For example, IEEE recommends recording changes with version, date, author, and reason for changes in the SRS/PRD. This aligns with ISO/IEC documentation standards and helps maintain a “single source of truth” for the product definition.

Project Background & Overview

Purpose

To provide context and a high-level summary of the product. This section explains why the project is being undertaken and what the product is, ensuring readers understand the problem being solved and how the product fits into the utility’s business strategy or operations.

Instructions

Example

Background: Field technicians at our utility currently rely on paper work orders and manual data entry, causing delays and data errors. Regulatory audits (e.g., CPUC reporting) have highlighted inefficiencies in our maintenance tracking.

Overview: The Field Service Mobile App project will create a mobile application for field crews to receive work orders, document maintenance tasks, and synchronize data with the central system in real-time. This solution addresses the manual process inefficiencies by digitizing work orders, improving data accuracy and timeliness. It aligns with PowerCo’s strategic goal of operational excellence by streamlining field operations and supports California’s regulatory push for better outage response tracking.

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

It’s recommended to clearly articulate the product’s purpose and the problem it solves. For example, a PRD should briefly describe what the project is about and why you are doing it. Additionally, IEEE guidelines suggest relating the software’s objectives to corporate goals or business strategies when applicable. This ensures the PRD provides context linking the product to organizational strategy and needs.

Objectives & Success Metrics

Purpose

To define what the product aims to achieve (the objectives) and how success will be measured. This section translates the project’s vision into specific, measurable goals. It ensures that everyone knows the target outcomes and how they will be evaluated, providing clear success criteria for the product.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Goals and metrics should be concrete. It is best practice to use the SMART principle for setting goals: make them Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. Tying product features to these success metrics ensures each requirement contributes to business value. For example, instead of a vague goal like “improve efficiency,” specify a measurable target. Product management literature emphasizes defining success metrics to indicate you’re achieving the internal goals for the project. This practice aligns with both agile OKR (Objectives and Key Results) approaches and traditional project management.

Scope of Work (In Scope & Out of Scope)

Purpose

To clearly delineate what features and work are included in this product (in scope) and what is explicitly excluded (out of scope). Defining scope prevents misunderstandings and “scope creep” by setting boundaries around the product. This section ensures the development team and stakeholders have a common understanding of what will (and will not) be delivered.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Explicitly listing what is not being done is as important as listing what is. Industry templates often include a “Features Out” or “Exclusions” section to capture this. Clearly documenting out-of-scope items (and reasons if helpful) is recommended by product management best practices to manage stakeholder expectations. This practice helps maintain focus and avoid scope creep. Additionally, in formal methodologies (like PMI’s PMBOK), scope definition is a key step – including delineation of project boundaries and exclusions. Using visual aids (like a scope diagram or a MoSCoW prioritization chart) can also be helpful, though not mandatory.

Stakeholders

Purpose

To identify all the key stakeholders of the product – the individuals or groups who have a vested interest in its success or are affected by its outcome. This section ensures that everyone who needs to be involved or informed is recognized, and their roles are clear. It helps in communication planning and in validating requirements against stakeholder needs.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

A PRD (or any requirements document) should consider the needs of customers, users, and other stakeholders. Stakeholders are typically anyone with a vested interest in the product’s success. Best practice in product management is to involve stakeholders early and document who they are and what role they play. The International Institute of Business Analysis (IIBA) also highlights stakeholder identification as a core step in requirements planning. In this section, keep descriptions concise – the goal is to have a checklist of “who’s who” for consultation and approvals. This aligns with guidance that PRDs outline stakeholder roles and responsibilities so that everyone knows who is involved in what capacity.

Investments Needed

Purpose

Summarize the resources—financial, human, and material—needed to deliver the product, enabling budgeting and funding approval.

Instructions

  1. Cost Categories – Break down into Capital (CapEx) vs. Operating (OpEx).
  2. Line Items – Hardware, software licences, cloud IaaS/PaaS fees, external APIs, professional services, internal FTE effort, training, change‑management, devices, support contracts.
  3. Estimates – Provide quantity, unit cost, total cost, and budgeting assumptions.
  4. Timeline – Map large expenditures to project phases.
  5. Update whenever scope or vendor quotes change.

Example

Category Item Qty Unit $ Sub-total Notes
CapEx iPad (10th Gen, rugged case) 250 $650 $162,500 Replace aging tablets
CapEx Dev workstations upgrade 5 $2,000 $10,000 High-spec for mobile builds
OpEx Azure App Service 12 mo $1,200/mo $14,400 Staging + prod
OpEx Maximo API licence uplift $25,000 Vendor quote May 2025
OpEx External penetration test 1 $18,000 $18,000 Mandatory before go-live
OpEx Training & change mgmt. Lump $30,000 On-site roadshows
Total (Year 1)       $259,900 Contingency 15% not shown

Prerequisites

Standards & Best Practices

Follow corporate CapEx/OpEx accounting policy; Gartner TCO framework; SAFe Lean Budgets for Agile portfolios.

User Personas

Purpose

To describe the end users of the product – their characteristics, needs, and context. Defining user personas ensures the product is built with a clear understanding of who it is for, reflecting user-centric design. In an internal utility context, personas often correspond to job roles (e.g., field technician, system operator, dispatcher) that will use the software.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Understanding user classes and characteristics is crucial in requirements engineering. You should differentiate personas based on factors like frequency of use, technical expertise, and access level. For instance, an internal standard might require considering users with different privilege levels (regular tech vs. supervisor). Many product frameworks (like user-centered design and Agile) encourage using personas to keep development focused on user needs. In Agile/XP, the concept of the “user” is central to user stories (“As a field technician, I want…”) – having well-defined personas makes those stories more precise. While there’s no ISO standard for personas, the practice aligns with ISO 9241 (Ergonomics of human-system interaction) guidance to consider user characteristics in design. Make sure personas are believable and based on real observations to effectively guide product decisions.

User Scenarios & Use Cases

Purpose

To illustrate how users will interact with the product through real-world scenarios. User scenarios (or use cases) provide narrative examples of the product in action, demonstrating how it fulfills user needs. This helps everyone visualize functionality in context and ensures the requirements cover all intended user flows. It serves as a bridge between high-level objectives and detailed requirements. The purpose of defining acceptance criteria is to establish clear, specific, and testable conditions that verify the successful implementation of user scenarios. Acceptance criteria ensure alignment between stakeholders, developers, and QA teams by articulating the initial context, user actions, and expected outcomes. These criteria serve as the foundation for User Acceptance Testing (UAT), providing a measurable standard to confirm that the product meets user requirements and expectations. In Agile workflows, acceptance criteria represent the confirmation of a user story’s completion and act as a shared agreement on what constitutes “done.”

Instructions

Example

(User Scenarios)

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

User scenarios (or use cases) are a common way to ensure requirements are rooted in real user needs. Atlassian’s and Product School’s templates suggest including full user stories or scenarios about how personas will use the product in context. This narrative approach aligns with agile and user-centered design principles by keeping the focus on user goals. In more formal terms, it resembles use case modeling (UML use cases) where you describe interactions between an “actor” (user) and the system to achieve a goal. IEEE SRS standards often include use cases in an appendix or prior to functional requirements to illustrate requirements in context. Including scenarios here helps validate that the functional requirements (next section) adequately support all critical user flows. It’s also a communication tool – stakeholders can read a scenario and confirm “Yes, this is how we expect it to work.”

Additionally, it’s a best practice to include acceptance criteria with each scenario or user story. This ensures there is a clear definition of done for each feature. The acceptance criteria should be unambiguous and testable, so that during UAT and QA testing, everyone can agree whether each condition is met. By writing them in a Given/When/Then format (or as a checklist of verifiable statements), you make it easier to develop test cases and avoid misunderstandings about expected behavior  . Ultimately, well-defined acceptance criteria improve quality and serve as a contract that the development team, product owner, and QA all understand and sign off on.

UI / UX Design Specifications

Purpose

Describe how the product should look and feel so that developers and designers deliver a consistent, user‑friendly experience aligned with corporate style and field‑use constraints.

Instructions

  1. Design Principles – List the key principles to follow (e.g., “mobile first,” “glove‑friendly controls,” “minimal data entry”).
  2. Visual Standards – Reference corporate style‑guide elements: color palette, typography, spacing, iconography.
  3. Interaction Patterns – Define reusable UI patterns (e.g., bottom‑navigation bar, modal confirmation dialogs, offline status banner).
  4. Accessibility – Specify WCAG 2.1 AA criteria the app must meet (contrast ratios, alternative text, focus order, etc.).
  5. Artifacts – Link to wireframes, high‑fidelity mock‑ups, interactive prototypes, and a component library (e.g., Figma file).
  6. Usability KPIs – List measurable UX targets (task completion time, error rate, SUS score).

Example

KPI Name Target Rationale
Task Completion Rate ≥ 95% of users can complete core tasks (e.g., update work order) without assistance Confirms the system is intuitive and meets baseline usability expectations.
First-Time Task Success ≥ 90% of new users complete a task without training Measures learnability for new or infrequent users; critical for field deployment.
Time to Complete Work Order Median time < 3 minutes Ensures workflows are efficient and do not slow down field operations.
Error Rate per Task < 2% user-generated errors (e.g., failed submissions) Indicates clarity of design and resilience to user mistakes.
System Usability Scale (SUS) Score ≥ 75 (from technician surveys post-deployment) Benchmarks user satisfaction against industry standards.
Tap Accuracy Rate ≥ 98% for key UI controls (buttons, lists, inputs) Ensures UI is accessible with gloves and in adverse field conditions.
Offline Sync Success Rate ≥ 99% of queued tasks sync successfully after reconnecting Validates offline mode robustness for areas with poor or no connectivity.
Training Time for New Users ≤ 1 hour to reach basic proficiency Ensures the app is simple enough for rapid onboarding and minimal friction.
Navigation Steps per Task ≤ 3 taps to complete a primary task Minimizes cognitive load and streamlines daily work for field crews.
Help/Support Usage Rate ≤ 10% of users need in-app help or raise support tickets Low support needs suggest intuitive design and clear workflows.

Prerequisites

Standards & Best Practices

WCAG 2.1, ISO 9241‐210 (Human‑centred design), Nielsen 10 usability heuristics, Apple HIG / Material Guidelines (for native iOS/Android patterns).

Functional Requirements & Features

Purpose

To enumerate the specific functional capabilities that the product must provide. This section breaks down the product into individual features or requirements, describing what the system should do to support the user needs and scenarios described earlier. It forms the core checklist for developers to implement and testers to verify.

Instructions

Example

  1. [Scenario: Viewing Assigned Work Orders] - “As a Field Technician, I want to view a list of my assigned work orders for the day, so that I can plan and prioritize my tasks.”
  1. [Scenario: Updating Work Orders While Offline] - “The system shall allow the Field Technician to update a work order’s status and record task results while offline.”
  1. [Scenario: Notifying Supervisor on High-Priority Completion] - “The system shall send a notification to the supervisor when a high-priority work order is completed.”
  1. [Scenario: Viewing Work Orders on a Map] - “As a Field Technician, I want to see the location of my work orders on a map, so that I can navigate to the site efficiently.”
  1. [Scenario: Logging in with Corporate SSO] - “The system shall integrate with the corporate Single Sign-On (SSO).”
  1. [Scenario: Enforcing Role-Based Access Control] - The system shall enforce role-based access control.
  1. [Scenario: Downloading a Daily Summary Report] - “As a Field Supervisor, I want to download a daily summary report of completed and pending work orders, so that I can report progress to management.”

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Functional requirements should be clear, unambiguous, and verifiable. According to IEEE standards, each requirement should be concise, complete, and testable. In a Waterfall model, you might enumerate “The system shall…” statements with unique identifiers. In Agile, writing user stories is common; when doing so, follow the INVEST criteria – each story should be Independent, Negotiable, Valuable, Estimable, Small, and Testable. For example, ensure every user story clearly states the value (so that it’s truly needed) and is small enough to implement in a short iteration. It’s also advisable to avoid prescribing the solution in this section – focus on what the system should do, not how to do it (leave design decisions for later), unless a particular implementation is a constraint. By adhering to these guidelines, the requirements become actionable for development and measurable for QA. INVEST & BDD guidelines; IEEE 829 / ISO 29119 for test documentation; Agile Definition‑of‑Done checklists.

Non-Functional Requirements (Quality Attributes)

Purpose

To specify the criteria that judge the operation of the system, rather than specific behaviors. These include performance, security, usability, reliability, and other quality attributes. Non-functional requirements (NFRs) ensure that the product not only does what it should, but does so with the desired level of quality, speed, safety, etc., which is crucial in a utility context where reliability and safety are paramount.

Instructions

List and describe the key non-functional requirements. It’s often useful to categorize them by type of quality attribute. Common categories include:

Use bullet points, each starting with the category or a short name of the NFR followed by the specific requirement. Provide measurable criteria where possible (e.g., actual numbers for performance, dates for retention, etc.).

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Covering a broad range of quality attributes aligns with industry standards like ISO/IEC 25010 (which defines product quality characteristics such as reliability, performance efficiency, usability, security, maintainability, portability, etc.). Ensuring each of these relevant attributes is addressed helps create a well-rounded product. For example, reliability is critical for utility software – downtime can affect operations, so stating uptime requirements is important. Security standards (e.g., following OWASP Top 10 for web/mobile security) should be referenced if applicable. Many organizations also adhere to NIST guidelines for cybersecurity and data protection – our PRD’s security NFRs should reflect those. By specifying these NFRs, we provide clear criteria for acceptance: the product isn’t done just when features are built, but when it meets performance benchmarks, passes security tests, and so on. INVEST & BDD guidelines; IEEE 829 / ISO 29119 for test documentation; Agile Definition‑of‑Done checklists.

Security & Compliance Requirements

Purpose

To detail the specific security measures and compliance obligations the product must adhere to. This section is crucial for a utility company, as such companies operate critical infrastructure and are subject to strict regulations (e.g., cybersecurity standards, data privacy laws, safety regulations). It ensures that security is built into the product from the start and that the product will not violate any legal or regulatory requirements.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Utility companies are heavily regulated and are expected to build systems with compliance in mind. For instance, NERC CIP is a mandatory cybersecurity standard for power utilities – even if this system is not directly controlling the grid, adhering to CIP principles (like strong access control and logging) is a good practice. Also, following industry security frameworks such as NIST SP 800-53 or the OWASP ASVS can guide comprehensive security requirements. From a PRD perspective, explicitly listing these requirements ensures they are not forgotten – security and compliance must be treated as first-class requirements. It’s much cheaper to design in compliance from the start than to retrofit later. In agile, one might even create “security user stories” or “compliance acceptance criteria” – either way, including them here provides clear visibility. Aligning with international standards like ISO/IEC 27001 (information security management) can be mentioned if the organization follows it. Remember, failing to meet these requirements can have legal or financial consequences, so this section should be reviewed by domain experts (security/compliance officers) for completeness. INVEST & BDD guidelines; IEEE 829 / ISO 29119 for test documentation; Agile Definition‑of‑Done checklists.

Operating Environment & Technical Constraints

Purpose

To outline the environment in which the software will operate and any technical or regulatory constraints that will impact development. This section informs the development team of the context and limitations, such as hardware, software, or policy constraints, ensuring the solution is designed appropriately for its environment.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Describing the operating environment is a recommended practice in requirements docs – it ensures developers understand the context (hardware, OS, other software) in which the system must operate. Likewise, documenting design and implementation constraints (corporate policies, hardware limits, required tools, etc.) is crucial. For example, IEEE SRS guidelines explicitly call out listing regulatory policies and hardware or technical constraints that limit developers’ options. By capturing these upfront, we align with systems engineering best practices and avoid rework (e.g., discovering late that our tech choice isn’t allowed). In an agile setting, some of these constraints might also appear as “non-functional requirements,” but it’s still useful to consolidate them here for clarity.

Product Architecture Overview

Purpose

Present the high‑level technical architecture—major components, data flows, and architectural patterns—so that engineers share a common blueprint and non‑technical stakeholders grasp how the solution hangs together.

Instructions

  1. Architecture Diagram – Provide or link to a C4‑level 2 or UML component diagram (PNG/SVG) showing mobile app, backend services, data stores, external systems.
  2. Component Descriptions – List each component with purpose, tech stack, key patterns.
  3. Integration Points – Describe protocols (REST/JSON, MQTT, message bus), authentication method, expected SLAs.
  4. Patterns & Tactics – Mention architectural patterns (micro‑services, offline‑first sync, CQRS, event sourcing) and quality‑attribute tactics (retry logic, circuit breaker).
  5. Deployment View – Note hosting (Azure App Service, on‑prem K8s, etc.) and CI/CD pipeline outline.
  6. Security Zones – Identify trust boundaries (DMZ, internal subnet, device).
  7. Keep this section brief; deeper detail belongs in a separate Solution Architecture Document (SAD) referenced here.

Example

Components

Patterns Used

Prerequisites

Standards & Best Practices

C4 model, ISO/IEC/IEEE 42010 (architecture description), Azure Well-Architected Framework, NIST Cloud Security guidance, TOGAF (The Open Group Architecture Framework).

Assumptions & Dependencies

Purpose

To document assumptions that have been made during requirements definition and any external dependencies that the project or product has. This section highlights things that are believed to be true (but not yet confirmed) and what the product relies on, so that risks can be identified if assumptions turn out false or if dependencies change. It helps in risk management and planning by making these factors explicit.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Listing assumptions and dependencies is a common practice in project and requirements documents. It allows teams to monitor these items and validate them over time. For example, PMBOK (Project Management Body of Knowledge) suggests documenting assumptions and constraints early in a project. The BABOK (Business Analysis Body of Knowledge) also highlights the importance of recording assumptions that could influence requirements. Moreover, clearly stated dependencies ensure that those responsible (other teams or vendors) are aware of the importance. It aligns with risk management standards – each assumption is essentially a risk (“if this turns out false”) that should be tracked. In agile contexts, dependencies are often managed in the product backlog or risk board, but having them in the PRD provides a one-stop overview of what the product team relies on. Regularly revisit this section: as the project progresses, confirm assumptions (or adjust if they prove false) and update the status of dependencies.

Risks & Mitigations

Purpose

To identify major project and product risks and outline mitigation strategies for each. While not always included in a traditional PRD, documenting key risks in this context (internal project at a utility) is a best practice to ensure awareness and proactive management. This section helps prepare the team for potential challenges that could impact the product’s success (schedule delays, budget issues, technical hurdles, adoption problems, etc.).

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Proactively listing risks in a PRD underscores a culture of planning and quality. Agile methodologies encourage addressing risks early (spikes, proof-of-concepts to mitigate technical risks). Traditional PM frameworks (PMBOK) have entire processes for risk management; summarizing the top risks in this doc means they’re visible to all stakeholders reading it. It’s noted that a good PRD can also act as a tool for risk mitigation by identifying challenges early. Many successful teams use the PRD review as a chance to discuss “what could go wrong” – capturing those results here. While the PRD is mainly about requirements, including a risk section (especially for an internal critical project) is considered a best practice by many product leaders to ensure everyone is mindful of challenges ahead. The goal is to reduce the likelihood of surprises later, thereby avoiding costly delays or failures.

Timeline & Milestones

Purpose

To outline the high-level timeline for the project, including key milestones and release plans. This gives the development team and stakeholders a schedule reference – when major phases or deliverables are expected. Even in Agile environments, a rough timeline or roadmap is useful for alignment (knowing target release dates, etc.), especially in a utility where coordination with operational schedules or regulatory deadlines might be necessary.

Instructions

Example

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Even in agile projects, having a high-level timeline or roadmap is recommended to manage stakeholder expectations. For instance, agile release planning typically forecasts 2-6 months of work across multiple sprints. In this section, we effectively present an agile release plan in milestone form. It’s aligned with the idea of Milestone Planning (Scrum’s concept of release goals) and with traditional milestone charts. Providing target dates for milestones helps cross-functional teams (like training, infrastructure, or user readiness teams) to prepare. Also, utility companies often have to plan around operational calendars, which necessitates some date-driven planning. This timeline is not set in stone – as Agile principles allow change – but it offers a baseline. It’s important to regularly update and communicate changes to these milestones as the project progresses, keeping this section current if the PRD remains a living document.

Appendix & References

Purpose

To provide any additional information, supporting materials, or references to external documents that are relevant to the PRD. This section ensures that readers can find further details or source materials if needed, without cluttering the main sections. It can include glossaries, detailed data, or links to other documents like design specs or regulatory texts.

Instructions

Example

References:

Glossary:

Additional Notes:

Prerequisites

Standards and Best Practices

Including references in a requirements document is part of IEEE recommendations – it provides traceability to source materials and clarifies the basis of requirements. A glossary is highly recommended by many technical writing standards to ensure common understanding, especially in cross-functional teams (it prevents confusion over terms and acronyms). By following this approach, the PRD remains focused yet doesn’t lose important supplementary information. International standards for documentation (like ISO/IEC/IEEE 26513 for documentation) encourage providing references and glossaries for completeness. This section will help new team members or auditors (if they ever review the requirements) to find background information and understand domain-specific language used in the PRD.

Open Questions / Issues Log

Purpose

Track unanswered questions and pending decisions so that nothing critical is overlooked and owners are accountable for resolution.

Instructions

  1. Maintain a rolling list with ID, Question, Owner, Needed‑by Date, Status.
  2. Review at each sprint planning or stakeholder meeting.
  3. Promote resolved items to assumptions, requirements, or risks sections as appropriate.
  4. Archive closed questions to keep the list concise.

Example

ID Question Owner Needed-by Status
Q-01 Will field techs require electronic signature capture? Ops Mgr. 2025-07-12 OPEN
Q-02 Can we reuse existing ArcGIS licence seats? GIS Lead 2025-07-05 ANSWERED — Yes
Q-03 What is the maximum photo size supported by Maximo API? Vendor Rep 2025-07-18 PENDING
Q-04 Does Legal approve storing limited PII on tablets? Legal Counsel 2025-07-25 OPEN

Prerequisites

Standards & Best Practices

PMBOK issue‑log practice; Agile “parking lot” technique; RACI for ownership clarity.