1 - The board has overall responsibility for the governance of project management.
2 - The organisation differentiates between projects and non-project based activities.
3 - Roles and responsibilities for the governance of project management are defined clearly.
4 - Disciplined governance arrangements, supported by appropriate cultures, methods, resources and controls are applied throughout the project life cycle. Every project has a sponsor.
5 - There is a demonstrably coherent and supporting relationship between the project portfolio and the business strategy and policies, e.g. ethics and sustainability.
6 - All projects have an approved plan containing authorisation points at which the business case, inclusive cost, benefits, and risk is reviewed. Decisions made at authorisation points are recorded and communicated.
7 - Members of delegated authorisation bodies have sufficient representation, competence, authority and resources to enable them to make appropriate decisions.
8 - Project business cases are supported by relevant and realistic information that provided a reliable basis for making authorisation decisions.
9 - The board or its delegated agents decide when independent scrutiny of projects or project management systems is required and implement such assurance accordingly.
10 - There are clearly defined criteria for reporting project status and for the escalation of risks and issues to the levels required by the organisation.
11 - The organisation fosters a culture of improvement and of frank internal disclosure of project management information.
12 - Project stakeholders are engaged at a level that is commensurate with their importance to the organisation and in a manner that fosters trust.
13 - Projects are closed when they are no longer justified as part of the organisation's portfolio.