Demand Management
- 1. New Issues
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New Issues may originate nearly anywhere within an enterprise. They may appear in current projects,
customer service departments, help desk groups, and external systems. Highly diverse issues may be
tracked even if they contain data or data structures that are unique to the organization, or to the
project itself.
- 2. Routing Rules
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Routing Rules define the resolution path for that issue. Assignments, roles, flow, placement, review,
approval process, and other requirements for success are determined here.
- 3. Notification
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Notification by email may be sent automatically as needed to facilitate collaboration and
synchronization via user-defined software settings.
- 4. Review
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Issues may be automatically routed to projects, tasks, teams, individuals, or may be routed to
a person who evaluates and re-routes them. Further, if a review is not required at the time for
certain issues, they may be automatically linked together for ease of approval later on.
- 5. Issue Assignment
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Issues can control workflow by being linked to projects, tasks, or other issues.
- 6. Issue Approval
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Issue tracking may or may not be set to require a final approval before being declared complete.
- 7. Issue Completion
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Users are automatically notified of any relevant status changes including completion. Approval
flows may be set up in almost any manner. For example, a group of linked issues may be declared
complete whenever one of the linked issues is marked as completed.
- 8. Reports
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Reports may be generated quickly and easily by searching the enterprise's project databases. The
project manager may wish to report on outstanding issues or on issues completed this week. Timely
reports help project stake holders and organization managers stay interested, up to date, and in
the business loop. Search capabilities include grouping, filtering, and/or aggregating the information.
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PPM Processes
PDF Documents
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