Digital Construction

How to make the most of Project Information Requirements

Abstract image to illustrate project information requirements
Image: Nonwarit | Dreamstime.com

Project Information Requirements are the bedrock of a successful project – and the more you make of them, the better-managed your project will be, suggests Iain Miskimmin.

Project Information Requirements (PIR) can be hit and miss. On many of the projects I have advised and assisted over the years, they are happily forgotten or merged into the asset or engineering worlds. Their importance, and specifically their importance to the people who finance and own the project, is not communicated. Yet this is where we can win a significant battle to get investment in digital delivery.

That top level – the financial backers, the shareholders, the board, the investors and their customers – want to know that the project is in good hands, is not wasting money, taking unnecessary risks and will finish when promised. Much of this information is generated somewhere already, but not communicated until it is perhaps too late and not in a way that it can be linked to other project data that will allow for analysis for red flags and triggers, so we can predict and avoid, rather than impact and react.

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