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Base Management Case

[This section demonstrates that the project is being set up for success. It details the practical arrangements for project management, governance, risk management, and benefits realisation. It provides assurance that the project is deliverable and that its outcomes will be actively managed and evaluated.]

1. Project management and delivery arrangements

[Describe the team structure and key roles. Past projects consistently highlighted that having a dedicated project manager and a multi-disciplinary team was a critical success factor for these types of innovative projects.

Project team: Outline the core team. This should be multi-disciplinary. Past projects show that the most successful projects involved a blend of skills from Planning, Communications, IT/Digital, and Procurement from the outset. Include an organogram if possible.

Key roles and responsibilities:

2. Project governance and assurance

[Explain the decision-making and reporting framework. How will progress be monitored and decisions made? This section also outlines the specific controls for managing the project’s budget.

3. Programme plan and key milestones

[Provide a high-level project plan showing the key phases, major activities, and target completion dates. A Gantt chart is the clearest way to present this. 

Milestone / DeliverableTarget Completion Date
Business Case Approval[Date]
Procurement Initiated[Date]
Supplier Contract Awarded[Date]
Platform/Tool ‘Go-Live’[Date]
Project Evaluation Complete[Date]
Project Closure[Date]
Post-Project Benefits Review[Date]

4. Risk, constraint, and dependency management

[Summarise the key risks to the project’s successful delivery. This should link to a more detailed Risk Register which is managed and updated throughout the project lifecycle. 
 
Past projects identified several common risks:

Constraints: List any major constraints, e.g. fixed budget, immovable deadline, limited availability of specialist skills.

Dependencies: List any key dependencies, e.g. reliant on the Corporate IT team to approve security requirements; dependent on another project delivering a new CRM.

Contingency planning: This section provides assurance that the project has a credible fallback plan (“Plan B”) in the event a major risk materialises. This demonstrates that the project has a planned response to critical issues. Outline a response to 1-2 of your highest-impact risks:

5. Change management and communication

[This section is critical for ensuring the project achieves internal buy-in and is successfully adopted by staff and stakeholders. It outlines the plan for managing the “people side” of the transition from the old way of working to the new. 

6. Monitoring and evaluation (benefits realisation)

[This section is critical for accountability and ensuring the project delivers its intended benefits. 

Benefits realisation plan: Explain how you will track the benefits identified in the Economic Case. 

Who is responsible for collecting the data, and when will success be measured (e.g. at project closure, and then 6- and 12-months post-project). 

Monitoring and evaluation data table: Complete a table for your key project objectives. This turns your objectives into a practical monitoring framework.

ObjectiveMetric (What we will measure)Baseline (Where we are now)Target (Where we want to be)Data SourceFrequencyOwner
Increase responses from under-35s% of total responses from 18-35 age group.5% (from 20XX consultation)15%Commonplace Analytics / Survey DataPost-consultation[Project Manager]
Reduce officer time on manual processingOfficer hours spent on manual data entry per consultation.280 hours< 50 hoursStaff timesheets / Process mappingPost-consultation[Head of Service]
Improve user satisfaction% of users rating the platform ‘easy’ or ‘very easy’ to se.N/A (New Service)75%Post-consultation feedback surveyEnd of consultation[Project Manager]