Summary – Under a fixed budget, lack of scoping and communication causes scope creep, organizational friction, and erodes trust when requirements evolve. Unstructured demands and hidden expectations lead to misunderstandings and cost overruns, which rigorous, iterative Requirements Engineering converts into a clear, measurable, and adaptable scope.
Solution: specification workshops, a prioritized backlog, formalized scope metrics, and continuous validation to safeguard the budget without stifling agility.
In a context where fixed-price projects are increasingly sought after to control investment, a major challenge arises: how can one set an immutable budget while accepting a scope that evolves due to new requests or functional discoveries? Too often, scope creep is not linked to a technical obstacle but to a lack of framing and communication. Unstructured requirements and implicit expectations generate constant misunderstandings, leading to overruns, organizational friction, and loss of trust.
This is where rigorous Requirements Engineering comes into play, transforming an initially vague need into a clearly defined, measurable scope that can be adjusted without compromising the budget envelope.
The Paradox of a Fixed Budget Facing a Moving Scope
A fixed budget and a moving scope create a constant risk of creep and overruns. Structured Requirements Engineering makes it possible to turn a fuzzy idea into a clear, measurable scope.
Sources of Asymmetry Between Budget and Scope
The budget for a fixed-price project is defined up front based on a careful estimation of scope, required resources, and anticipated risks. Internal pressure to maintain margins and unpredictable user requests can quickly erode the original envelope. Learn more about negotiating your software budget in our detailed guide.






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