6.2 Manage Project Knowledge

6.2 Manage Project Knowledge
Inputs Tools & Techniques Outputs

Systematically use existing knowledge and create new knowledge so the project performs better now and future work benefits from what was learned.

Purpose & When to Use

  • Purpose: make smarter decisions by reusing what the organization already knows and capturing new insights as the project unfolds.
  • Use throughout the project, starting on day one, not only at closing.
  • Apply during planning to avoid past mistakes, during execution to solve problems faster, and at phase gates or major reviews to spread lessons.
  • Continuously update organizational assets so other teams can benefit later.

Mini Flow (How It’s Done)

  • Define knowledge needs: what the team must know to meet objectives and where gaps exist.
  • Find sources: organizational repositories, previous project artifacts, subject matter experts, and communities of practice.
  • Capture tacit knowledge: hold peer shares, interviews, shadowing, and retrospectives to surface experience-based tips.
  • Record explicit knowledge: document checklists, decision logs, playbooks, and lessons with clear context and recommended actions.
  • Validate and curate: have experts review, tag items with keywords, and store in the right repository for easy retrieval.
  • Apply and share: integrate insights into plans, risk responses, and processes; brief the team and stakeholders.
  • Track actions: assign owners and due dates for lesson follow-ups; update the lessons learned register regularly.
  • Update organizational assets: when a lesson changes a standard or template, route through change control and publish the new version.
  • Protect information: respect confidentiality and access rules while still enabling learning.
  • Measure and adapt: monitor reuse and outcomes (e.g., fewer defects, faster cycle time) and adjust the approach.

Quality & Acceptance Checklist

  • Knowledge needs are defined and linked to project objectives.
  • Relevant repositories and experts were consulted early and often.
  • Lessons include date, context, trigger, what happened, why it mattered, recommendation, owner, and status.
  • At least one knowledge-sharing event occurred after each major milestone.
  • New insights were applied to deliverables, plans, risks, or processes and are traceable to decisions.
  • Items are tagged, searchable, and stored in the approved location with version control.
  • Action items from lessons are tracked to closure and reflected in updated assets.
  • Sensitive information is handled per policy and access controls are in place.
  • Stakeholders confirm they can find and use the knowledge provided.

Common Mistakes & Exam Traps

  • Collecting lessons only at project close. Capture and use them continuously.
  • Storing insights without applying them to decisions, plans, or standards.
  • Focusing only on documents and ignoring tacit knowledge that emerges through conversation.
  • Confusing knowledge sharing with communications management. Knowledge management is about creating, curating, and reusing know-how; communications is about sending the right information to the right people.
  • Skipping expert validation, which leads to outdated or incorrect guidance being reused.
  • Not routing improvements through change control, so updates never make it into organizational assets.
  • Over-documenting without indexing, making content hard to find and unlikely to be reused.

PMP Example Question

A project manager wants to reduce risk by avoiding mistakes made on similar past projects. What should the manager do first?

  1. Schedule a lessons learned workshop at project closing.
  2. Create a new checklist based on the team’s current assumptions.
  3. Review organizational repositories and consult experts, then apply relevant lessons to the plan.
  4. Send a status report asking stakeholders to email any tips they recall.

Correct Answer: C — Review organizational repositories and consult experts, then apply relevant lessons to the plan.

Explanation: Start by reusing existing knowledge from organizational assets and experts, then integrate it into planning. Lessons gathering should be continuous, not only at closing.

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