Responsibility matrix
A responsibility matrix is a chart that maps project work to roles to clarify who is responsible, accountable, consulted, and informed. It reduces ambiguity about ownership, decision rights, and communication expectations across stakeholders.
Key Points
- Also known as a RACI or Responsibility Assignment Matrix (RAM).
- Links activities or deliverables to roles to clarify R, A, C, and I participation.
- Prevents gaps, overlaps, and conflicting approvals by making decision rights explicit.
- Works best when aligned to the WBS and schedule for clear traceability.
- Aim for one Accountable per work item to avoid confusion and delays.
- Create early and maintain as scope, organization, or resources change.
Purpose
- Clarify who does the work and who owns the outcome for each work item.
- Accelerate decisions and approvals by defining authority and escalation paths.
- Set expectations for consultation and communication among stakeholders.
- Support onboarding and handoffs across functions or vendors.
- Provide inputs to the communications and governance approaches.
Field Definitions
- Work Item: The activity, deliverable, or work package being assigned.
- Role/Org Unit: The role or team accountable for or participating in the work.
- R - Responsible: Performs the work to produce the output.
- A - Accountable: Owns the outcome and gives final approval; exactly one is recommended.
- C - Consulted: Provides input or expertise; two-way communication.
- I - Informed: Receives status updates or decisions; one-way communication.
- Notes: Assumptions, constraints, or clarifications for the assignment.
How to Create
- List the work items from the WBS or backlog that need clear ownership.
- Identify roles or organizational units involved in delivering or approving the work.
- Select a responsibility model (e.g., RACI or RASCI) and define what each letter means.
- Assign R, A, C, and I for each work item; aim for one A, verify sufficient R, and keep C/I purposeful.
- Review with stakeholders to resolve gaps, overlaps, or conflicting authorities.
- Publish the matrix in a shared repository, version it, and link it to the WBS and schedule.
How to Use
- Reference it during planning and execution to confirm who approves, who performs, and who is consulted or informed.
- Embed responsibilities into meeting invites, change requests, and workflow steps.
- Use it to streamline approvals and escalate decisions per the defined accountabilities.
- Leverage it for onboarding, handoffs, and vendor coordination.
- Update it whenever roles, scope, or governance change, and communicate updates.
Ownership & Update Cadence
- Owner: Project manager maintains the matrix with input from sponsors and functional leads.
- Baseline: Establish during planning once key roles and work items are known.
- Updates: At phase gates, organizational changes, major scope changes, or resource shifts.
- Governance: Control through change management and store under version control.
Example Rows
Roles: Sponsor (SP), Project Manager (PM), Business Analyst (BA), Technical Lead (TL), Quality Lead (QL).
- Approve Project Charter — SP: A; PM: R; BA: I; TL: I; QL: I.
- Define Requirements — SP: A; BA: R; PM: C; TL: C; QL: I.
- Develop Work Package A — PM: A; TL: R; BA: C; QL: C; SP: I.
- Quality Review — PM: A; QL: R; TL: C; BA: C; SP: I.
- Release Deliverable — SP: A; PM: R; TL: C; QL: C; BA: I.
PMP Example Question
A team is missing deadlines because approvals are unclear and stakeholders are unsure who to consult for inputs. Which artifact will best resolve this issue?
- Stakeholder register
- Responsibility matrix
- Issue log
- Work breakdown structure
Correct Answer: B — Responsibility matrix
Explanation: A responsibility matrix defines who is responsible, accountable, consulted, and informed for each work item, clarifying approvals and communication. The other artifacts do not map decision rights to work items.
HKSM