August 23, 2024
Your quick-start guide to Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
Work breakdown structure (WBS) is a tried and true method for making complex projects more efficient. If you want to learn everything there is to know about WBS, the Project Management Institute (PMI) has hours, days, and weeks of information for you that can be hard to sift through.
If you need a quick introduction to WBS before diving into some more intense literature, this article will help you understand what WBS is, why you should use it, and how — you’ll also get a glimpse of how monday.com’s WBS Template can optimize your planning.
What is work breakdown structure (WBS)?
According to PMI, a WBS is a hierarchical decomposition of the total scope of work to be carried out by the project team to accomplish project objectives and create the required deliverables.
A bit more simply, work breakdown structure, or WBS, is a system of organization for project management and project planning. It’s a specific method of breaking down large or complicated goals into manageable project objectives to create a manageable project plan.
WBS is for project managers that want to plan, schedule, and budget for each component of their project in a way that is complete but not overly detailed, easy to track and follow for the duration of the project, and makes it simple to communicate their progress and needs.
What’s an example of a work breakdown structure?
Project managers in just about any field can use WBS to reach their goals, but for the purpose of this article, let’s use a universal example, moving.
There are a lot of different types of tasks that go into a successful move, and at the end of it, you have to be entirely out of one place and completely settled in the next one. Writing the tasks involved in moving from one rental to another, the list is long and overwhelming like this:
- Shop for a new place to live
- Submit an application and fee
- Pay a deposit
- Sign a lease
- Notify your landlord you will be moving out
- Throw a going away party
- Transfer your renters’ insurance
- Turn on the utilities in the new home
- Turn off the utilities in the current home
- Change your mailing address and forward your mail
- Secure a mode of transportation to move your belongings
- Pack everything, breakdown furniture
- Hire a removal company to organize and secure the moving process
- Coerce your friends to help you move all of your belongings into a moving truck
- Repair walls, paint and clean
- Turn in your old keys
- Pick up the new keys
- Move everything inside the new home
- Unpack
You may be thinking, “Wait, there’s more!” or maybe, “Some of those tasks have multiple parts” and you are correct. This checklist is long, unorganized, and doesn’t cover everything that needs to happen—not even close. Writing each and every task in a checklist is a solid way to make sure everything gets done. However, a list alone won’t account for dependencies between tasks, how much work and resources each task needs, and consequently doesn’t give a clear picture of the totality of the project.
A WBS is a way to solve these problems. One by one, we’ll go over the elements of successful WBS in project management. Or you can go ahead and try out our WBS Template.
WBS elements
Before getting into the technical components of a specific tool for managing work breakdown structure (WBS), it’s good to get familiar with it’s core elements:
- Hierarchy
- Deliverables over actions
- Visual organization
1. Hierarchy
Think back to the moving checklist. Some of these tasks depend on others, meaning, they can’t be completed until other tasks have been completed first. For example, you’ll probably load your furniture in the moving truck before you turn in the keys, therefore, turning in your keys is dependent on being out of the apartment.
These dependencies will begin to shape a hierarchy of tasks. However, dependencies are not the only factor that matters. Let’s say you were to write your moving checklist in order of dependencies. Loading the moving truck would come before turning in the keys, but when should you turn on the utilities in the new place? Would that come before or after turning in your keys? Or how about simultaneously?
First-level items are larger goals, and within each larger goal, the second level of dependent tasks are grouped. This hierarchy can go on as much as needed.
In the moving example, the first level of tasks might be:
- Secure a new apartment
- Transfer belongings
- Close out the old apartment
Under each of these first-level items, we can arrange their dependent tasks.
- Secure a new apartment
- Pay deposit
- Sign lease
- Turn in application and associated documents
- Turn on utilities
- Begin mail forward
- Call electric company
- Transfer belongings
- Close out old apartment
This is how you begin creating a WBS, but it’s not the end of WBS. There are still a few critical factors that make this system work.
2. Deliverables, not actions
If you are familiar with WBS, you may have noticed an error in the above hierarchy: each item was listed as a verb. It’s common to think of to-do lists as actions, “Do this” and “do that.” WBS is different. Rather than prescribing a method or process, a WBS is described in deliverables. Look at how this changes our list.
By listing deliverables instead of actions, you gain more flexibility in the process of how each task is done. In a traditional project management setting, this allows your team to be more agile and frees you from micromanaging. As the project manager, it is more important that the furniture is transferred than planning exactly how it is loaded in the truck. This means that the friends helping you move will be able to judge how best Tetris your belongings, while you have more time to manage the bigger picture.
3. Visual organization
Take a moment to consider the importance of visuals in communication. It is far easier to understand information when it is represented in a picture than in words. Going back to our moving example, let’s say you’ve bought all the materials and tools you need to repair a few nail holes left if your walls. The written instructions will surely give you the details you need, but a few images showing how to repair the wall will be much more intuitive and easily understood.
A WBS is visual to facilitate your management of the project as well as team communication.
If you want to get this same ease of communication in project management, take the sophisticated hierarchy of deliverables and make it visual. Contain each mutually exclusive deliverable in a box, layer the boxes as they relate in the hierarchy, connect dependent variables, and apply a color code scheme that draws attention where attention is needed.
Imagine looking at the spread of deliverables to move into your new apartment with a simple color scheme showing that finished items are green, pending items are yellow, red items need help, and grey items have not yet begun.
Unexpected challenges are bound to occur, but with a WBS, it is immediately clear what deliverable is holding up the project. In this case, maybe the paint was the wrong color and you need to exchange it for the correct one. By flagging the deliverable in red, you and your team can see that cleaning the apartment and turning in the keys may be delayed. monday.com’s drag-and-drop and customizable structure also includes customizable color and text labels to make a visual WBS.
How to create a WBS
When you begin organizing your to-do list into a hierarchy of deliverables, make sure each item is mutually exclusive. There should be no overlap between one deliverable and another. These boundaries prevent duplicate work and make it possible to plainly allocate resources.
During the planning process, you likely know how many people are on your team, what your budget is, and so on. These resources are divided up between the mutually exclusive deliverables and should all together equal 100%.
- New apartment secured 20% Time & effort $1000
- Belongings transferred 70% Time & effort $300
- Previous apartment closed 10% Time & effort $150
The division of resources should reflect the hierarchy, so each level is completed 100% by the deliverables below it. Notice how the second level in the hierarchy adds up to equal 100% of the resources allocated to “Belongings transferred.”
1. New apartment secured 20% Time & effort $1000
2. Belongings transferred 70% Time & effort $300
2.a. Old apartment packed 35% Time & effort $50
2.b. Truck loaded 30% Time & effort $175
2.c. Truck unloaded 30% Time & effort $25
2.d. Friends appreciated 5% Time & effort $50
3. Previous apartment closed 10% Time & effort $150
Create a Work Breakdown Structure with monday.com
With all of these considerations, you’re probably wondering how to organize it all. Before reaching for just any old project management software or template, consider monday.com Work OS. We even have a curated Work Breakdown Structure Template to help you get started fast with:
- Easy import from Excel
- Customizable groups
- Timeline Column
- Formula Column
- Unique status colors and labels
- Mobile app
Even better, you can add automations for things like deadline reminders and assigning specific team members to your deliverables.
Set your projects up for success with an automated and easy-to-update source of truth WBS platform. Incorporate the most important details from this guide into the user-friendly and on-the-go monday.com platform.
WBS FAQ
What are the three levels of work breakdown structure?
It can vary, but many work breakdown structures have three levels that represent its main deliverable, control accounts, project deliverables and work packages.
What makes a good WBS?
There are two main characteristics of a good WBS, which can be understood by asking two questions — is it definable and is it managerable? Definable means it can be described and easily understood by project stakeholders. Manageable describes a meaningful unit of work where specific responsibility and authority can be assigned to someone.
Does every project need a WBS?
Pretty much every project has a WBS, similar to how they would have schedules and budgets. However, oftentimes they aren't always well done or even written down, but project managers typically have some idea of what they are doing, an estimated duration, and a probable budget.
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