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Lindsay Sherwin
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Five Project Stages
Organisations that manage projects on a regular basis develop
their own internal framework of Project Stages, based on the
project life cycle but translated to suit their own projects and business. Such frameworks specify
the stages that projects should progress through with "stocktake"
points at the end of each stage.
The following are typical project stages.

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Stage 1 - Project Proposal
Essentially encompassing
the first two phases - Concept and Feasibility - this stage covers the work
involved in identifying a need or a problem, generating ideas and options,
and then developing a preferred agreed proposal or solution - "this
is what we should do".
The proposal stage should close with a
Project Proposal - a brief report covering what is to be
delivered by the project (outcomes and outputs) and the best
general approach to delivering them. After this is agreed, the project is formally
started.
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Stage 2 - Project Scoping & Planning
A
brief analysis and study to establish what the project will involve, what
the risks and possible difficulties are, and how the project should be organised
and tackled. To be carried out quickly (a few days or weeks for larger projects)
and summarised in a short Project Scoping Report or Project Plan.
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Stage 3 - Start Up
Because of the political
nature of many projects and the number of stakeholders involved, most
projects will need a start up stage to communicate the project, build support,
and generally prepare the ground. For some projects is simply part of implementation.
This should be described in the project scoping report.
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Stage 4 - Implementation
Carrying out the implementation
in terms of progressing the project activities, managing any people involved,
and ensuring support for the project.
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Stage 5 - Establish and Close
To ensure that
the project is closed and that the responsibilities have been allocated
for any future maintenance activities that need to be carried out.
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