Project Business Case

A Project Business Case is the concise justification for starting and continuing a Scrum project, outlining the problem or opportunity, expected benefits, costs, risks, and strategic alignment. Created by the sponsor and informed by the Product Owner, it supports go/no-go and pivot decisions across releases.

Key Points

  • Provides the value rationale for initiating and funding the Scrum project.
  • Serves as an input to the Create Project Vision process in the SBOK Initiate phase.
  • Owned by the sponsor; the Product Owner curates alignment with product goals and backlog priorities.
  • Lightweight and living; reviewed at release boundaries and major pivots.
  • Drives value-based prioritization of epics and user stories in the product backlog.
  • Links benefits and success metrics to measurable outcomes and acceptance criteria.
  • Can trigger termination or pivot if expected benefits no longer justify costs and risks.

Purpose

The purpose of the Project Business Case is to confirm that the product vision has a sound business justification before investing in delivery. It clarifies why the work matters, what success looks like, and how value will be realized and measured.

In Scrumstudy SBOK, it ensures the project vision, epics, and release planning remain anchored in value. It also provides a transparent basis for executive sponsorship, funding, and continued commitment.

Key Terms & Clauses

  • Problem or opportunity statement: The business need the project addresses.
  • Objectives and success metrics: Time-bound outcomes, KPIs, and benefit realization measures.
  • Options analysis: Do-nothing, do-minimum, preferred option, with rationale.
  • High-level scope and MVP: What is in, what is out, and the minimum slice to validate value.
  • Benefit and cost summary: Expected benefits, costs, funding approach, and timeline to benefits.
  • Assumptions and constraints: Business, technical, regulatory, and resource factors.
  • Risk overview: Major risks, uncertainty, and initial mitigation directions.
  • Strategic alignment: How the initiative supports organizational goals or portfolio themes.

How to Develop/Evaluate

  • Engage sponsor and key stakeholders to capture the problem, objectives, and success criteria.
  • Identify options, including do-nothing, and compare expected benefits, costs, and risks.
  • Outline MVP and high-level scope to test the value hypothesis early.
  • Estimate benefits and costs using simple, transparent methods appropriate to uncertainty.
  • Document assumptions and constraints as testable statements to be validated during sprints.
  • Summarize key risks and how iterative delivery will surface and mitigate them.
  • Review and approve for Initiate; re-evaluate at release gates using empirical results.

How to Use

Use the Project Business Case as an input to Create Project Vision and to set boundaries for epics during Develop Epic(s). The Product Owner refers to it when applying value-based prioritization to the product backlog.

During Conduct Release Planning, use benefits and constraints to shape release goals and timelines. At Sprint Reviews and release checkpoints, compare outcomes to the stated success metrics to decide whether to continue, pivot, or stop.

Example Snippet

Below is a concise example of a Project Business Case excerpt:

  • Problem: Customer onboarding takes 10 days, causing churn in the trial period.
  • Objective: Reduce onboarding time to under 2 days within 2 releases; increase trial-to-paid conversion by 8%.
  • Options: Do-nothing (status quo), Automate identity checks (preferred), Outsource verification.
  • MVP Scope: Self-service onboarding with basic verification and progress tracking.
  • Benefits vs Costs: Estimated annual net benefit 500k; delivery cost 280k; payback in 9 months.
  • Assumptions: 60% of users complete onboarding if under 2 days; integration API is stable.
  • Risks: Regulatory change may alter verification steps; mitigation via modular workflow design.
  • Success Metrics: Time-to-onboard, conversion rate, NPS during onboarding, operational cost per onboarding.

Risks & Tips

  • Pitfall: Overly detailed, static document that is never revisited. Tip: Keep it lean and update at release boundaries.
  • Pitfall: Optimistic benefits without proof. Tip: Turn assumptions into testable hypotheses validated by MVP and early metrics.
  • Pitfall: Ignoring non-financial value. Tip: Include risk reduction, compliance, customer satisfaction, and learning value.
  • Pitfall: Weak link to backlog. Tip: Tag epics and high-value stories to business case objectives and metrics.
  • Pitfall: Misalignment with strategy. Tip: Explicitly state strategic objectives and review with the sponsor.
  • Pitfall: Benefits drift. Tip: Use Sprint Reviews to check trajectory and adjust scope or stop if the case erodes.

PMP/SCRUM Example Question

During the Initiate phase, the Scrum Team is unsure how to justify the product vision and set high-level outcomes. Which artifact should the Product Owner and sponsor use as the primary input?

  1. Product roadmap.
  2. Project Business Case.
  3. Sprint backlog.
  4. Definition of Done.

Correct Answer: B — Project Business Case

Explanation: The Project Business Case provides the business justification and success metrics that inform the product vision. The other options do not establish initial justification or high-level outcomes.

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