f there’s one PMBOK knowledge area that quietly determines whether a project succeeds or fails, it’s Integration Management.
While scope, schedule, cost, risk, and stakeholders often get the spotlight, Integration Management is what holds everything together. Without it, projects become a collection of disconnected plans rather than a coordinated effort working toward a single outcome.
In practice, most project failures aren’t caused by poor planning in isolation — they happen because changes, decisions, and trade-offs aren’t integrated across the whole project.
What Is Integration Management?
Project Integration Management is the PMBOK knowledge area responsible for coordinating all aspects of a project into a coherent whole.
It ensures that:
- Decisions in one area consider impacts in others
- Changes are assessed holistically
- The project remains aligned to objectives and strategy
- Trade-offs are made consciously, not accidentally
In simple terms, Integration Management answers the question:
“How does this decision affect the project overall?”
Where Integration Management Sits in PMBOK
Integration Management spans all five PMBOK Process Groups:
- Initiating – defining the project at a high level
- Planning – integrating subsidiary plans into one management plan
- Executing – coordinating work across teams and suppliers
- Monitoring & Controlling – assessing impacts of change and performance
- Closing – ensuring the project finishes cleanly and deliberately
Unlike other knowledge areas, Integration Management is continuous, not confined to one phase.
Key Integration Management Processes (In Practice)
1. Develop Project Charter
This is where the project is formally authorised.
Integration perspective:
- Objectives, constraints, and success criteria are aligned from the start
- Authority is clearly defined
- Competing priorities are surfaced early
Without integration here, projects begin with conflicting expectations.
2. Develop Project Management Plan
This is the most visible integration activity.
Integration perspective:
- Scope, schedule, cost, risk, procurement, and communications plans are aligned
- Assumptions and dependencies are consistent
- Trade-offs are agreed, not hidden
A plan that looks complete but isn’t integrated will unravel quickly once change occurs.
3. Direct and Manage Project Work
This is where integration becomes operational.
Integration perspective:
- Work across teams is coordinated
- Dependencies are actively managed
- Delivery aligns with the approved plan
This is where project managers spend most of their time connecting dots.
4. Manage Project Knowledge
Integration Management also includes learning.
Integration perspective:
- Lessons are captured as the project progresses
- Knowledge is applied, not just documented
- Past experience informs current decisions
Projects that ignore this repeat mistakes unnecessarily.
5. Monitor and Control Project Work
This is where integration is most critical — and most often weak.
Integration perspective:
- Performance is assessed across all dimensions
- Forecasts reflect combined impacts
- Decisions are based on the whole picture, not one metric
A schedule recovery plan that ignores cost or risk is not integrated control.
6. Perform Integrated Change Control
This is the heart of Integration Management.
Integration perspective:
- Every change is assessed for impact on scope, time, cost, risk, quality, and benefits
- Decisions are documented and authorised
- Uncontrolled change is prevented
Most project failures can be traced back to poor change integration, not change itself.
7. Close Project or Phase
Integration continues through closure.
Integration perspective:
- Deliverables are accepted holistically
- Financials, contracts, and resources are closed properly
- Benefits ownership is transitioned
Closing poorly creates operational and reputational risk long after delivery ends.
Why Integration Management Is Often Weak
Integration Management is challenging because it:
- Requires judgement, not just process
- Forces trade-offs between competing priorities
- Sits across organisational silos
- Is difficult to delegate
As a result, it’s often assumed rather than actively managed.
| PMBOK | PRINCE2 |
|---|---|
| Integrated change control | Change control & exception management |
| Project Management Plan | Project Initiation Documentation |
| Charter authority | Executive ownership of Business Case |
| Monitor & control | Manage by exception |
Many organisations use PRINCE2 for governance and PMBOK Integration Management for execution — a highly effective combination.
Key Takeaways
- Integration Management is the connecting force in PMBOK
- It ensures decisions consider the whole project, not isolated plans
- Change control is the most critical integration activity
- Strong integration separates professional delivery from chaos
Next Steps
If your projects suffer from constant change, conflicting priorities, or rework, Integration Management is usually the missing discipline.
Fill in the form below to download the free Project Kick-Off Checklist, which helps you align objectives, scope, stakeholders, and governance from day one.
If you’re looking for practical documents to support integrated control, the PRINCE2 Starter Kit provides governance-aligned templates that pair effectively with PMBOK Integration Management in hybrid environments.
You Might Also Like
To understand how integration fits into the broader lifecycle, PMBOK Process Groups – A Simple Walkthrough explains how work flows through a project.
If you’re deciding between frameworks, PRINCE2 vs PMBOK vs P3O – Which One Should You Use? explores how governance and execution approaches differ.
For clarity on early-stage alignment, Project Brief vs Project Management Plan – What’s the Difference? breaks down two commonly confused artefacts.
And if risk feels disconnected from delivery, Risk Management – Beyond the Risk Register shows how risk should be integrated into everyday decision-making.