- Release Methodology
- A deployment of completed features to users. In Agile, releases may contain multiple sprints of work. PM software with release management features allows teams to bundle related tasks into a single deployment unit.
- Report (PM) Feature
- Formatted output from PM software that summarizes project data — task completion rates, time tracking summaries, workload distribution, and project health. Reporting depth varies widely: basic tools offer simple charts, enterprise tools offer customizable dashboards and data exports.
- Resource Allocation Feature
- The process of assigning team members, equipment, and budget to specific tasks. PM software with resource management features shows who is over- or under-utilized and helps balance workloads across the team.
- Retrospective Methodology
- A meeting held at the end of a sprint or project phase where the team reflects on what went well, what didn't, and how to improve. A key Agile ceremony. Retrospectives build continuous improvement into the team culture and are one of the highest-value Agile practices.
- Risk Register General
- A document listing identified risks, their likelihood and impact, and planned responses. PM software often includes risk tracking modules or allows teams to build risk registers as a custom project artifact.
- Scope Creep General
- Uncontrolled expansion of project requirements beyond the original agreed scope, often caused by unclear requirements, stakeholder pressure, or inadequate change control. The most common cause of project overruns. Managed through formal change request processes.
- Sprint Methodology
- A fixed time period (typically 1-4 weeks) during which a specific set of work must be completed and ready for review. Scrum uses sprints as its core cadence; each sprint starts with planning and ends with a review and retrospective.
- Standup (Daily Standup Meeting) Methodology
- A brief daily meeting (usually 15 minutes or less) where team members share: what they did yesterday, what they plan to do today, and any blockers. Originally from Scrum, now widely adopted across all project management styles as a lightweight coordination mechanism.