Deliverable Expectation Document definition
Examples of Deliverable Expectation Document in a sentence
Testing of the Projects and ERP System shall be performed as set forth in the Statement of Work, relevant Work Order thereto, and Deliverable Expectation Document (DED) for such Deliverable.
The Deliverable Expectation Document (DED) will be used for Critical Deliverables and for other deliverables at DIR’s discretion to document mutually agreed-upon deliverable descriptions and applicable standards, and to more clearly define acceptance criteria.
Deliverables will be mutually agreed upon using the Deliverable Expectation Document (DED) in Attachment F of this contract.
The Vendor will document the results of this activity in a Deliverable Expectation Document (DED).
The State and Contractor shall develop a mutually acceptable Deliverable Expectation Document (DED) prior to beginning any work as outlined below.
A Deliverable is “unsuccessful” when the deficiencies, errors or failures are not what would be expected behavior for normal operations of the Deliverable or as defined in the Artifact and Deliverable Acceptance criteria set forth in the associated Deliverable Expectation Document.
Contractor will perform the Services under the Statement of Work in accordance with the applicable Service Level Requirements along with calculation methodologies and other detailed terms as detailed in the Statement of Work, the Deliverable Expectation Document, or the Service Level Agreement, as the case may be.
For each Product 1 Deliverable, DSHS and the Contractor will mutually agree upon a Product 1 Deliverable Expectation Document (DED) that outlines the expected format, content and mutually agreed acceptance criteria.
Deliverables, in accordance with the Deliverable Expectation Document (Section 7), have assigned due dates that reflect the latest date when the Contractor will deliver the artifact.
Seller has not received any written notice from (nor delivered any notice to) any federal, state, county, municipal or other governmental department, agency or authority concerning any petroleum product or other hazardous substance discharge or seepage.