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Manageable

Manageable is an adjective describing something that can be controlled, handled, or dealt with without excessive difficulty. In everyday use, a task, workload, or problem is considered manageable when it can be planned, resourced, and executed within available time and constraints. The term often implies a balance between scope and capability, such that effort, risk, and complexity do not exceed an ordinary person's or team's capacity to address them.

Etymology: The word is formed from the verb manage plus the suffix -able, from Old French managier

Applications: In project management and work planning, a manageable scope allows for progress tracking, milestone setting,

Limitations: What is manageable varies by context, resources, and experience. A task that is manageable for

Related terms: manageability (noun), manage, manageable; opposites include unmanageable and unfeasible.

and
Latin
manu
(hand)
for
the
sense
of
handling
or
directing
by
hand;
the
current
form
has
been
in
use
since
the
early
modern
period.
and
risk
mitigation.
Teams
aim
for
breakable
tasks,
clear
ownership,
and
measurable
outcomes
to
keep
work
manageable.
In
software
and
systems
design,
manageable
complexity
refers
to
keeping
the
number
of
interacting
parts
within
the
cognitive
limits
of
the
developers
and
operators;
maintainability
and
operability
are
related
concepts.
In
risk
assessment,
a
risk
is
considered
manageable
if
its
probability
and
impact
can
be
reduced
to
an
acceptable
level
through
controls
and
resources.
a
large
organization
may
be
unmanageable
for
a
small
team.