Identifying stakeholder groups in SAP OCM (Prepare phase) builds the foundation for engagement. Option B is correct because documenting the number of impacted employees—e.g., “50 warehouse staff affected by inventory changes”—quantifies the scope, aiding resource planning (e.g., training sessions) and impact assessment (e.g., resistance scale). Without this, efforts might under- or over-allocate, like scheduling one session for 200 users, overwhelming trainers.
Option A is incorrect—arbitrarily setting “five groups” per unit lacks basis; groups (e.g., key users, managers) depend on impact, not a fixed number. Option C is incorrect—management teams are distinct stakeholders if impacted (e.g., finance leads losing report customization), requiring specific strategies. Option D is incorrect; identification iterates as the project evolves (e.g., new units added in later waves). SAP OCM emphasizes scale documentation for practical planning.
“When identifying stakeholder groups, document the number of impacted employees to assess the scale and tailor change management efforts accordingly” (SAP Activate, Stakeholder Identification Guidelines).