Closing_ Guiding Questions and Tips
Closing_ Guiding Questions and Tips
Project closing consists of ensuring the team completes all project work, executing any remaining project
management processes, and obtaining stakeholder recognition that the project is complete.
These guiding questions and tips, compiled by dozens of project managers at Google, can help you ensure
your team collaborates successfully to produce work that everyone can be proud of.
Follow these tips to ensure all tasks are completed and that everyone involved understands the project
has closed:
● Conduct a formal closing process after the final project phase or milestone.
● Document acceptance from all stakeholders to confirm that they are happy with the deliverables
and outcomes.
● Model the kind of behavior and responses you’d like to elicit from the team.
● Phrase questions in a non-confrontational way. Rather than “What went wrong?” and “What went
well?”, try asking, “What about this project should we start, stop, and continue?”
● Remind your team of the different milestones they reached over the course of the project to spark
more discussion about the entire project.
● Invite key stakeholders and senior leadership to your impact report presentation.
● Amplify your outcome: in addition to presenting your impact to key stakeholders and senior
leadership, consider other outlets for sharing your project’s impact, such as at a company all-hands
meeting or in a newsletter or at a meeting with another team that could benefit from the lessons
learned from your project.
Celebrations
It is important to help a team celebrate the end of a project in a way that is appropriate for the project and
company. Celebrations help the team feel recognized and rewarded for all of their hard work.
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Develop project documentation
Documenting and organizing project components provides visibility and accountability. It's common for
project team members and senior stakeholders to reference and contribute to your project documents
throughout the project.
📔 Impact report
● Created for senior stakeholders or project sponsors at the end of the project
● Demonstrates the project’s value to those who were not directly involved
📔 Closeout report
● Created by project managers for project managers
● A blueprint that documents what the team did, how they did it, and what they delivered
● Provides an evaluation of the quality of the work
● Evaluates the project’s performance with respect to budget and schedule