What does MoSCoW stand for?
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Correct answer: Must-have, should-have, could-have, won’t-have.
Why this is the answer
MoSCoW is a prioritization technique commonly used in project management and business analysis to categorize requirements. It stands for Must-have, Should-have, Could-have, and Won't-have (or Would-like-to-have but not this time). "Must-have" features are critical for the project's success. "Should-have" features are important but not essential. "Could-have" features are desirable but not necessary. "Won't-have" features are those agreed not to be delivered in the current iteration. The other options are incorrect because "Impact, cost, effort" are common project metrics but not the components of the MoSCoW acronym, and "Most important, clutter, worst" is not a recognized prioritization framework.
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