The Scope Creep Conundrum: How to Keep Your Projects from Spiraling Out of Control
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Lauren Atherton
Today, we’re stepping into the lab, where a seemingly simple website project takes a dark turn. Let’s dive into the scientist’s log to see how it all went wrong.
Experiment Log
Day 1:
The project begins. My objective is clear—build a clean, user-friendly nonprofit website. Easy navigation, streamlined pages, and clear calls to action. Everything looks perfect, and I’m optimistic about how smoothly it will all come together. What could go wrong?
Day 3:
A new idea emerges—a fancy interactive feature! “This will impress visitors,” I think. It’s just a small addition to the homepage. Surely, it won’t disrupt anything.
Day 5:
Suddenly, more ideas flood in: a gallery page, a donation meter, a blog section. One by one, they get added to the site. The homepage grows longer, more complex. After all, more content must mean better engagement, right?
Day 7:
The layout starts shifting. Each new element demands space. I begin tweaking the design, adding more tabs, buttons, and drop-down menus. The website is evolving, but with every tweak, it’s becoming more elaborate—and less recognizable.
Day 10:
Complete chaos. The simple, elegant website I envisioned has spiraled into a tangled mess of features and bloated pages. The user experience? A maze of confusion. What was once a sleek design has mutated into a clunky, disorganized beast. The original vision? Gone, buried under the weight of too many ideas. Scope creep has taken over, and now my creation is devouring itself!
The Cure: Prioritize and Categorize Your Ideas
In this cautionary tale, scope creep occurred when too many ideas and features were added without a clear direction or accountability. The result was a complicated, inconsistent user experience that ultimately detracted from the nonprofit’s goals.
To keep your website from mutating into an unmanageable mess, think critically about every new feature before adding it. The MoSCoW method offers a simple, effective way to categorize ideas and avoid scope creep by organizing features into clear priorities: Must Have, Should Have, Could Have, and Won’t Have. Hat tip to nonprofit website strategist Laura Quinn for introducing me to Dei Clegg’s method in her Nonprofit Website Insider newsletter – sign up here!
Here’s how the MoSCoW method works:
Must Have
These are the non-negotiable features—the ones that your website can’t function without. Ask yourself: “Will the project still work if we don’t include this?” If the answer is no, it’s a “must have.”- Examples: Easy navigation, a functional online donation tool, and mobile responsiveness are must-haves for any nonprofit website. Without these core elements, your website won’t serve your users effectively.
- Pro Tip: Be selective! If you mark too many things as a priority, none of them will truly be prioritized. Focus on the essentials.
Should Have
These are the features that will significantly improve the user experience or project but aren’t absolutely essential. If they require minimal effort and time, include them, but don’t let them distract your team from the core objectives.- Examples: A blog section or a testimonial slider might enhance your content strategy and engagement, but they aren’t essential to the core functionality of the website.
- Pro Tip: Should-have features are ideal to include if they fit within the timeline or budget, but always ensure they don’t derail your primary goals.
Could Have
These are nice to haves—features that would add some value but aren’t critical for the website’s immediate success. If there’s extra time or budget, consider including these, but they should always be the first to cut when faced with constraints.- Examples: Interactive elements like fancy animations or non-essential design flourishes are great, but they can also increase load time or complicate future updates.
- Pro Tip: Keep track of these features for future phases or updates, but avoid letting them sneak into the current project.
Won’t Have
These are the features that won’t be included in the current project at all. It may seem silly to list these ideas at all, but you’d be surprised how as a project lingers a lot of these excluded features will come up. It’s important to document them and explain why they were excluded. This way, you avoid revisiting the same discussions later.- Examples: Perhaps your team considered adding a complex custom event calendar, but after evaluating your capacity to maintain it, you decided to rule it out.
- Pro Tip: Clearly stating why these ideas were ruled out (e.g., budget constraints, maintenance difficulties, or misalignment with the mission) helps you keep everyone on the same page and prevent unnecessary debates down the line.
Using the MoSCoW Method Effectively
Whether you’re working solo or in a group, using the MoSCoW method ensures that you focus on what matters most and manage your website project efficiently. For larger teams or complex projects, consider these additional tips to get everyone on the same page:
Keep it simple: Even a basic spreadsheet can help categorize tasks and bring decision-makers together. This makes it easy to track priorities, communicate with stakeholders, and keep the project on track.
Get consensus: If you’re working with a group of decision-makers, consider using a survey or card-sorting tool to gather input on which features fall into each category. This helps collect everyone’s thoughts and only focus discussions on areas where opinions differ.
Add cost and timeline estimates: To enhance your decision-making process, add rough time or cost estimates to each feature. This allows you to weigh the effort against the potential value, making it easier to cut unnecessary features and focus on what truly matters.
By using the MoSCoW method, you’ll maintain focus, make clearer decisions, and manage your website project more effectively—ensuring it doesn’t spiral into the dreaded scope creep.
Final Findings: Tame Your Team’s Temptations
With the exciting promise of a new website for your nonprofit, it’s easy for ideas to multiply within your team—each one feeling like the perfect addition. But as we’ve seen, unchecked internal temptations can turn a simple project into a chaotic mess. By applying the MoSCoW method, you can prioritize the essential features while ensuring your team’s ideas don’t overwhelm the original vision.
With thoughtful prioritization, you can keep your project aligned with your mission, user-friendly, and maintainable for the long term. So, the next time your team brainstorms new ideas, remember: taming those internal temptations is key to avoiding the dreaded scope creep.
Lauren Atherton
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