According to the PMBOKĀ® Guide, the Project Benefits Management Plan is a key business document that is developed before the project is officially initiated. It describes how and when the benefits of the project will be delivered and establishes the mechanisms to measure those benefits.
Pre-Project Work: The Benefits Management Plan, along with the Project Business Case, are considered " Business Documents. " These are generally created during the pre-project phase (often by a business analyst and project sponsor) to justify the investment and provide a basis for the Project Charter.
Purpose: It outlines the target benefits (e.g., increased market share, improved efficiency), the alignment with strategic goals, the timeframe for realizing benefits (short-term vs. long-term), and the " benefit owner " who will be responsible for monitoring them after the project is closed.
Ownership: While the project manager may provide input or help maintain the document, the ultimate responsibility for the benefits management plan often lies with the organization or the sponsor, as many benefits are realized long after the project ' s physical deliverables are completed.
Why other options are incorrect:
Option A: Starting the project: This stage involves the creation of the Project Charter. By the time you are starting the project, the Benefits Management Plan should already exist as an input to help define the project ' s success criteria.
Option B: Organizing the project: This refers to the Planning phase. During this stage, the project manager develops the Project Management Plan. The Benefits Management Plan is an input to this process, not an output developed during it.
Option C: Executing the product: Execution focuses on creating the project ' s deliverables. While the project manager monitors the project to ensure it remains aligned with the intended benefits, the development of the plan occurred much earlier.