Phase Gate Walkthrough
How Projects Are Governed Inside the Live PMO
In professional project environments, work does not move forward informally.
Projects progress through phase gates — structured checkpoints where readiness, risk, and alignment are evaluated before proceeding.
The Live Project Management Office (PMO) inside The Eddie System follows this same governance model.
This page outlines how phase gates operate inside the Live PMO.
What Is a Phase Gate?
A phase gate is a formal review point where a project is assessed before moving into the next stage.
At each gate, decision-makers evaluate:
- Readiness
- Risk
- Scope clarity
- Planning quality
- Alignment with objectives
The outcome is typically:
- Go
- Go with conditions
- No-go
This structure protects organizations from avoidable failure.
Why Phase Gates Matter
Phase gates enforce discipline.
They:
- Prevent premature execution
- Surface risks early
- Improve decision quality
- Clarify ownership
- Encourage professional communication
They are a hallmark of mature project organizations.
Phase Gates Inside the Live PMO
Projects inside the Live PMO move through defined phase gates designed to mirror real-world governance.
Each gate requires:
- Specific deliverables
- Clear communication
- Decision justification
- Feedback incorporation
Participants must present and defend their work — not just submit documents.
Example Phase Gate Flow
1. Initiation Gate
Purpose:
Confirm the project is valid and properly defined.
Typical focus areas:
- Project objectives
- Business justification
- High-level scope
- Key stakeholders
- Initial risks
What this trains:
- Translating ideas into formal projects
- Early risk awareness
- Stakeholder alignment
2. Planning Gate
Purpose:
Evaluate whether the project is ready for execution.
Typical focus areas:
- Detailed scope
- Project schedule
- Risk and dependency management
- Budget considerations
- Communication approach
What this trains:
- Structured planning
- Trade-off decisions
- Anticipating execution challenges
3. Execution & Control Reviews
Purpose:
Assess progress, risks, and changes during delivery.
Typical focus areas:
- Status and progress
- Emerging risks and issues
- Change requests
- Schedule or budget impact
- Corrective actions
What this trains:
- Managing uncertainty
- Communicating under pressure
- Adjusting plans responsibly
4. Closure Gate
Purpose:
Formally close the project and evaluate outcomes.
Typical focus areas:
- Delivery against objectives
- Outstanding issues
- Lessons learned
- Stakeholder satisfaction
- Formal closure documentation
What this trains:
- Accountability
- Reflection and improvement
- End-to-end project ownership
How Phase Gate Reviews Work
Phase gate reviews inside the Live PMO are:
- Structured
- Time-bound
- Focused on decision-making
- Aligned with professional standards
Participants are expected to:
- Explain their reasoning
- Defend trade-offs
- Respond to questions
- Incorporate feedback
This mirrors how project managers operate in real PMOs.
Why This Builds Real Experience
Phase gates force participants to:
- Think critically about readiness
- Communicate clearly
- Make defensible decisions
- Accept feedback
- Adjust course when needed
This is how judgment is developed.
How This Translates to Interviews
Because of phase gate exposure, participants can confidently say:
“Here’s how I justified moving into execution.”
“Here’s a risk identified at a gate that changed the plan.”
“Here’s feedback I received and how I incorporated it.”
“Here’s why a change request was approved or rejected.”
These answers signal real experience.
Relationship to the Live PMO
Phase gates are the governance backbone of the Live PMO.
They connect:
- Simulations
- Deliverables
- Feedback
- Accountability
Without phase gates, projects are exercises.
With phase gates, projects become experience.
Learn How the Live PMO Is Structured
To see how phase gates fit into the broader PMO environment, explore the full overview here:
👉 Real IT Project Management Experience – The Live PMO
Summary
Phase gates are not about slowing work down.
They are about:
- Making better decisions
- Reducing risk
- Improving outcomes
- Building professional judgment
The Live PMO uses phase gates to ensure experience is built the right way.