5.7 Define Activities

5.7 Define Activities
Inputs Tools & Techniques Outputs

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Purpose & When to Use

  • Translate the scope and WBS into a complete list of scheduled tasks needed to create the deliverables.
  • Performed during planning after the WBS is created, and repeated later using rolling wave planning as details become clearer.
  • Sets the foundation for estimating durations and costs, sequencing tasks, assigning resources, and building the schedule.

Mini Flow (How It’s Done)

  • Review the scope baseline and schedule approach. Confirm the WBS, WBS dictionary, scope statement, calendars, and any templates or lessons learned.
  • Apply decomposition. Break each work package into activities that produce a clear result and are small enough to estimate and manage.
  • Include enabling and support work. Add tasks for analysis, configuration, reviews, compliance, procurement handoffs, and quality activities as needed.
  • Use rolling wave planning. Detail near-term work now and keep future work at a high level until you have enough information.
  • Capture activity attributes. For each task, note a concise description, assumptions, constraints, expected predecessors or successors, required skills or roles, location or calendar, and acceptance criteria for completion.
  • Identify milestones. Add zero-duration checkpoints that signal key achievements or approvals.
  • Validate completeness. Compare the activity list to the WBS to confirm full coverage and remove overlaps or gaps.
  • Document outputs and communicate. Share the activity list, attributes, and milestone list with stakeholders for alignment and updates.

Quality & Acceptance Checklist

  • Every work package is decomposed into one or more activities with clear start and finish criteria.
  • Activities are small enough to estimate duration and effort with reasonable confidence.
  • Each activity has a single accountable owner or role.
  • All necessary support and quality tasks are included, not just build work.
  • No duplicate or overlapping activities appear across work packages.
  • Preliminary dependencies, assumptions, and constraints are recorded for each activity.
  • Milestones are defined and have zero duration.
  • Activities align with calendars, working time, and any schedule policies.
  • Changes that affect the WBS or scope baseline are routed through change control.

Common Mistakes & Exam Traps

  • Confusing work packages with activities; work packages are higher-level scope items, activities are the tasks you schedule.
  • Skipping support or quality tasks, which leads to optimistic schedules and rework.
  • Decomposing too far into minute steps, creating unnecessary admin overhead.
  • Trying to fully detail distant work instead of using rolling wave planning.
  • Mixing processes by sequencing activities here; formal sequencing happens in the next process.
  • Assigning named people now; resource assignment is refined in resource and schedule development processes.
  • Updating scope elements without change control when decomposition reveals missing or extra work.

PMP Example Question

The team has converted each work package into a set of tasks with clear completion criteria and identified key checkpoints. Which process are they performing?

  1. Create WBS.
  2. Define Activities.
  3. Sequence Activities.
  4. Validate Scope.

Correct Answer: B — Define Activities.

Explanation: Define Activities transforms work packages into scheduled tasks and milestones. Sequencing and validation occur in later processes.

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