An unresolved scope conflict emerged during the 2025-11-11 sync call over whether redesigning 81 service pages to support product variants constitutes new scope. Asymmetric and La Marie Beauty hold opposing positions, and the dispute was escalated to decision-makers on both sides without resolution on the call.
This is a useful reference case for how variant complexity can be obscured during initial scoping when a CSV is used as the handoff artifact rather than the live system of record.
"It's just the full product page redesigns for all of them." — Melissa Cusumano
"The source of truth in this case, which has been Square throughout, that data was already represented as variants existing." — Kimberly Gehrmann
Not all 81 service pages necessarily require the same treatment. Kimberly and Roxana (La Marie Beauty's service expert) need to sync separately to distinguish:
This distinction matters because it may reduce the actual number of pages requiring full redesign treatment.
Even if variant selectors themselves are considered in-scope, the volume of new content (galleries, before/after photos, expanded descriptions) attached to the redesigned pages is where Asymmetric sees the clearest scope expansion. The original service pages were minimal; the new template is substantially richer.
The root cause of the misalignment is that the CSV — not Square — was treated as the scoping artifact. When Roxana compiled the CSV, she was also actively updating content, meaning the CSV reflected a point-in-time editorial view rather than the structural reality of Square's data model. This is a process gap worth addressing in future projects: scope estimates should reference the live system of record, not a derived export.
| Item | Status |
|---|---|
| Internal Asymmetric discussion (Melissa → Mark) | In progress |
| La Marie Beauty internal discussion (Kimberly → Lisa) | Planned |
| Kimberly + Roxana sync on variants vs. enhancements | Planned |
| Resolution / agreed path forward | ❌ Unresolved |
CSV handoffs obscure data structure. When a client's system of record has relational or hierarchical data (variants, arrays, nested objects), a flat CSV will flatten that structure and create false simplicity in estimates. Always validate against the live system before scoping.
Scope disputes are harder to resolve when work has already started. Asymmetric had begun absorbing variant work before the conflict was formally raised. Early flag → early decision.
Content volume is often the real scope driver, not the feature itself. Adding a variant selector UI is small. Populating 81 pages with galleries, copy, and before/after images is not. Separate the two in estimates.
Distinguish the source of truth from the working document. The CSV was a working document. Square was the source of truth. These should not be conflated during scoping.