Project Management with PMI.
Bring your projects to a successful close with the standard practice of the Project Management Institute. We apply the process groups and knowledge areas of the PMBOK to deliver on time, on budget, and within the committed scope.
The PMI standard (PMBOK) is the most widely recognized project management framework in the world. It defines how to initiate, plan, execute, monitor, and close a project in a predictable way, governing scope, time, cost, quality, and risk end to end.
Most projects fail because of management, not technique.
Scope that grows unchecked, timelines that blow past their limits, and no one accountable for the outcome. PMI provides the method, the governance, and the traceability to prevent it.
Predictability
Timelines, costs, and scope managed with a formal plan and a measurable baseline.
Scope control
Changes managed through a clear process: nothing gets in without an impact assessment.
Risk management
Risks identified, prioritized, and mitigated before they turn into problems.
Clear communication
Stakeholders informed at the right level and frequency at every stage.
Single point of accountability
A project manager who is accountable for the outcome from start to finish.
International standard
Globally recognized language and practices that are comparable and auditable.
The five PMBOK process groups.
Every project moves through these process groups, supported by the ten knowledge areas (integration, scope, schedule, cost, quality, resources, communications, risk, procurement, and stakeholders).
Initiating
Project charter, objectives, stakeholders, and project authorization.
Planning
Management plan: scope, schedule, cost, quality, risk, and resources.
Executing
Carrying out the work and managing the team and stakeholders.
Monitoring and Controlling
Tracking progress, change control, risk, and performance.
Closing
Formal handover, acceptance, lessons learned, and administrative closure.
What your organization gains.
Projects that deliver
A higher likelihood of delivering on the committed time, cost, and scope.
Executive visibility
Progress reports and metrics the committee understands and can act on.
Fewer surprises
Risks and changes managed proactively, not reactively.
Efficient use of resources
Planning that avoids overloads, rework, and waste.
Knowledge that stays
Documentation and lessons learned that improve future projects.
Governance and traceability
Decisions, approvals, and changes recorded and auditable.
From chaos to controlled delivery.
A solid project plan
An approved, measurable baseline for scope, time, and cost.
Execution under control
Progress, risk, and changes monitored with clear indicators.
Closure with value
Deliverables accepted and knowledge captured for the future.
What you receive.
- Project charter.
- Project management plan.
- Work breakdown structure (WBS).
- Schedule and time baseline.
- Budget and cost baseline.
- Risk matrix and response plan.
- Progress reports and tracking dashboard.
- Closure documents and lessons learned.
About project management with PMI.
What are PMI and the PMBOK?+
Does PMI work if we operate in an agile way?+
Doesn't it add too much bureaucracy?+
Do I need a PMO to use it?+
Do you execute or only advise?+
What types of projects does it apply to?+
How do I get started?+
Deliver your projects on time and under control.
Schedule an assessment and let's define how to manage your project or portfolio with PMI best practices.
Schedule an assessment (90 min) →