Asta PowerProject Tutorial
Asta PowerProject Tutorial
Tutorial
Asta Powerproject
Tutorial
Copyright
Copyright © 2006 Asta Development plc. All rights reserved.
Trademarks
Asta Powerproject and Asta Powerdraw are either registered
trademarks or trademarks of Asta Development plc.
Microsoft, Visual Basic and Windows are with registered
trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States or
in other countries. Oracle is a registered trademark of Oracle
Corporation.
All other trademarks are acknowledged.
Table of contents
1 Introduction.................................................................7
2 Installing Asta Powerproject .....................................9
2.1 Installing Asta Powerproject as a standalone
application..............................................................................9
2.2 Starting Asta Powerproject.........................................10
2.3 Licensing Asta Powerproject ......................................10
2.4 Getting Help................................................................10
3 Creating your first project .......................................11
3.1 Creating a new project ...............................................11
3.2 Creating your first task ...............................................13
3.3 Changing the scale of the bar chart ...........................14
3.4 Creating a task by drawing on the bar chart ..............15
3.5 Copying and pasting bars...........................................16
3.6 Editing the duration of tasks .......................................16
3.7 Understanding working and elapsed time ..................17
3.8 Moving tasks on the bar chart ....................................17
3.9 Drawing multiple tasks on a bar .................................18
3.10 Linking tasks...............................................................19
3.11 Rescheduling your project..........................................20
3.12 Undoing and redoing actions......................................20
3.13 Adding a bar in the middle of your project..................20
3.14 Formatting the bar chart .............................................21
3.15 Marking important events as milestones ....................22
3.16 Annotating your project ..............................................23
3.17 Choosing when to display annotations.......................23
3.18 Saving your project.....................................................23
4 Creating a programme of projects..........................25
4.1 Ways of organising projects .......................................25
Asta Powerproject standalone....................................25
Multi-user environment...............................................25
4.2 Starting the tutorial at this chapter..............................25
4.3 Moving your project into a subchart ...........................26
4.4 Copying a subchart.....................................................27
4.5 Indicating that subcharts represent projects ..............27
4.6 Defining users and access rights ...............................28
5 Categorising your tasks ..........................................35
5.1 Ways of using code libraries ......................................35
5.2 Starting the tutorial at this chapter..............................35
5.3 Creating code libraries ...............................................36
1 Introduction
This guide is intended to help you as you work with Asta
Powerproject™ for the first time. It introduces you to the key
features and enables you to get up and running with Asta
Powerproject quickly. While completing these lessons, you
will learn how to use Asta Powerproject to mirror the complex
array of activities, resources and costs that are involved in a
programme of projects
We recommend that you work through the chapters of this
tutorial in order, which should take between 2-3 hours,
depending on your level of experience in working with project
and programme management software, your familiarity with
project management, etc. However, you can also work
through individual sections of the tutorial on their own. To
enable you to do this, a number of Asta Powerproject project
files are located in the \Tutorial Project Files\ folder on the
Asta Powerproject CD. To start at a particular section of the
tutorial, simply open the appropriate project file from this
folder, then work through the section
This guide contains the following chapters:
R Introduction – the chapter you are currently reading,
introducing you to this guide.
R Installing Asta Powerproject – explains how to set up
Asta Powerproject as a standalone application.
R Creating your first project – explains how to get started
quickly with Asta Powerproject by creating a project and
populating it with basic information.
R Creating a programme of projects – explains how to
build up a programme of projects.
R Categorising your tasks – explains how to colour-code
the information within your projects so that their
appearance represents something relevant to you.
R Creating and assigning resources – explains how to
create a pool of resources for use within your
programme of projects.
R Managing costs – explains how to set up cost centres
and work with direct costs and resource costs within your
programme of projects.
R Progressing projects – explains how to record the
progress of your programme of projects in order to keep
your project information up to date.
R Printing project information – explains how to print
project information from within Asta Powerproject.
R Producing reports – explains how to produce reports on
your Asta Powerproject project data.
1. Run Windows.
1. Select the New command from the File menu. You see
the New Project Wizard:
spreadsheet
bar chart
project view
spreadsheet
bar chart
2. Move the cursor over the first bar in the Name column,
then click. A text insertion line appears, indicating where
the task name will appear when you start typing.
1. Place the cursor over a tick line (the small red vertical
lines) in the date zone so that the cursor changes to .
2. Hold down the left mouse button and drag the tick line to
the right. The date zone redraws as you drag, so that
you can see the effect of your changes immediately.
" You may have to use 3. Release the drag when the task appears approximately
the scroll bars to move the same size as the picture above.
along the date zone in
between your drags to Notice how the appearance of the task has changed, but its
keep the task in view. duration remains 1 week. This is because you have altered
the scale of the bar chart, not the duration of the task.
You can display up to three scale zones on the bar chart,
and display information using a different scale in each zone.
For example, you could display zones representing the past,
present and future, in which information relating to the past
and future is displayed using a small scale and information
relating to the present is displayed using a large scale (in
detail), as illustrated below:
The date zone is configurable: you can choose the lines that
appear in it and reorder their position. Your date zone may
contain different lines to the ones that appear in this guide.
You will now configure the date zone so that it includes the
line that shows the days of the week:
You can specify the order in which the lines in the date zone
appear by dragging them up and down in the date zone. Try
this now, by dragging the line that shows the days of the
week to the bottom of the date zone:
2. Holding down the left mouse button, drag the line to the
bottom of the date zone, then release the mouse button.
You can hide lines that are currently displayed in the date
zone:
2. Press and hold down the left mouse button, then drag
the cursor to the right. As you drag, a popup box displays
the start date, end date and duration of the task you are
drawing:
1. Move the cursor over the task on bar 3 so that the cursor
changes to , then click. The task is selected.
2. Press and hold down the left mouse button, then drag
the cursor to the right. As you drag, a popup box displays
the start date, end date and duration of the task you are
editing.
2. Press and hold down the left mouse button, then drag
the cursor to the right. As you drag, a popup box displays
the start date, end date and duration of the task you are
moving.
2. Press and hold down the left mouse button, then drag
the cursor to the right to draw another task on the same
bar:
Now that you have seen that the names you have entered
relate to bars, not tasks, you will rename the bars in your
project.
Rename the four bars as follows:
R Site Planning.
R Fabrication.
R Construction.
R Completion.
2. Hold down the left mouse button and drag the cursor
away. Notice that you now have a line from the end of
the task to the cursor. The line is attached to the cursor
until you release the mouse button.
3. Clear the Free float, Total float and Critical path check
boxes, then click Apply.
" You may have to move Notice that the float and critical path are no longer
the dialog out of the displayed on the bar chart.
way to see the
changes on the bar 4. Reselect the Free float, Total float and Critical path
chart. check boxes, then click Close to close the dialog and
redisplay the float and critical path.
1. Click .
" This cursor indicates 2. Position the cursor to the right of the Completion task in
that the annotation will the bar chart so that the cursor looks like , then click
be attached to the right and drag a small box in which to place the annotation.
hand side of the task.
3. Release the mouse button when the box is a few
centimetres square. A text insertion bar appears in the
top left hand corner of the box.
Multi-user environment
If you use Asta Powerproject in a multi-user environment by
connecting to an Enterprise server, you can save a project
locally, as with Asta Powerproject standalone, or to a server-
mounted database. Each database holds one or more group
projects, each of which can contain one or more projects.
Each project can then be subdivided into subprojects.
Objects such as resources, calendars and codes are shared
across group projects.
2. Hold down SHIFT and click bar 5 in the Line column. All
the bars in the project are now selected.
5. Enter Site A in the Bar Title and Task Title fields, then
click OK.
" An alternative method The five bars are moved into a subchart, which is displayed
of creating a project underneath the root chart in the project view:
hierarchy is by
summarising tasks.
2. Hold down SHIFT and click the Site C expanded task. All
three expanded tasks are now selected.
Note also that the icon of the root chart has changed to .
This indicates that the chart contains one or more projects.
You have now created a simple programme of projects.
Having more than one project within the same file enables
you to manage your projects as a portfolio. All the projects
share common items such as the resource pool, codes and
calendars. You can also report on the projects individually, or
together as a portfolio.
In addition, for each individual project, you can record the
likelihood, in percentage terms, of the project actually going
ahead, and reflect this likelihood in histograms. This is useful
during the early stages of project and resource planning.
2. Select User from the tree view. You see the default user
folder, Admin, that is defined initially in the list view in the
right-hand pane. This is the top-level user, with full
access rights to the entire programme. You will turn this
user into a folder, so that it can contain subusers.
You will now create the other two users within the Admin
folder:
Now that you have created the users, you can define their
access rights. By default, users have full access rights to the
entire programme, from the root chart downwards. As this
level of access is appropriate for the Admin user, you do not
need to edit this user's access rights.
To define access rights:
" You can define access You use this tab to specify the rights that the user has to
rights to a fine level of each subchart in your programme of projects. The
detail. This is a simple project hierarchy is displayed in an expandable tree on
example. the left.
7. Click OK.
10. With Root chart selected, click Select All, then click
None. All access rights are removed from the root chart
and from all its subcharts.
11. Select the check boxes in the Read column to give the
Admin Assistant read-only access to the programme of
projects.
13. Select the View submenu from the View menu, then
select Close to close Library Explorer.
6. Click OK.
11. Enter Projman in the New password for user field. The
password does not appear on the screen as you type it,
for security reasons.
" You must click Open 3. Select Tutorial.pp and click Open as New User. The
as New User to open Logon to Project dialog appears:
the project using a
different username
and password.
5. Click and drag the Medium risk factor code from the
project view and drop it onto one of the selected tasks.
6. Click and drag the Low risk factor code from the project
view and drop it onto the Inspection task.
10. This screen lists the available code libraries. You want to
filter by the Preston location code, so click the + symbol
next to the Location code library to view the location
codes, then select the check box next to the Preston
code:
4. Click the Filter Criteria tab and click Edit. The first
screen of the Filter Wizard appears.
5. Click Close.
The annotation disappears, as the milestone to which it is
attached is not yet complete, so does not match the filter
criteria.
Later on, you will progress your project. When you progress
the final task in the project (the Completion milestone), the
annotation will appear automatically.
3. Hold down CTRL and SHIFT, then click and drag the
icon over the Approver permanent resource folder in the
tree view:
" You can assign Notice that two new rows are inserted into the spreadsheet
and bar chart under the Construction and Completion tasks,
consumable resources
to tasks in the same indicating the permanent resources that are assigned to
way. them:
You use this tab to define the graphs you want to include
in the histogram. The Allocation graph appears by
default. In this lesson you will change this to Capped
Allocation and add the Over Allocation graph.
10. Click the new graph in the Name column and select Over
Allocation from the list that appears.
1. Create a new task on the first spare row of the bar chart
called Electrics. Give it a duration approximately half that
of the Construction task.
7 Managing costs
This chapter explains how to set up cost centres and work
with direct costs and resource costs within your programme
of projects.
This chapter includes the following information:
R Introduction to costs.
R Creating a cost centre library.
R Setting up your cost centres.
R Assigning direct costs to tasks.
R Assigning costs to permanent resources.
R Assigning costs to consumable resources.
R Viewing cost information.
5. Click Close.
Now set up the other cost centres you have created, entering
the following information into the Default Assignment tab for
each cost centre:
Construction costs
Field Enter/Select
Calculation type Time Based
Start type Relative To Task Start
Start delay 1d
End type Relative To Task End
End delay 1d
Cost £200.00 per Day
Completion costs
Field Enter/Select
Calculation type Fixed
Start type Relative To Task Start
Start delay 1w
Point spend Selected
Cost £500.00
Planning costs
Field Enter/Select
Calculation type Time Based
Start type Relative To Task Start
Start delay 0h
End type Relative To Task End
End delay 0h
Cost £500.00 per Elapsed Month
When you have set up the cost centres, select the View
submenu from the View menu, then select Close to close
Library Explorer.
4. Click and drag the Planning costs cost centre from the
project view and drop it onto the second task on the Site
Planning bar.
This cost is time-based, with its start and end directly related
to the start and end of the second Site Planning task.
Therefore the duration of the task mirrors that of the task
precisely. If you were to move the second Site Planning task
to a later date, or increase its duration, the associated cost
changes accordingly. Try this now to see the effect on the
cost, then click to return the second Site Planning task to
its original dates and duration.
8. Click Close.
Now that you have assigned cost rates to Martin Webb, you
will assign him to a number of tasks:
9. Click Close.
Follow the steps above to specify default costs for the Steel
and Wood consumable resources as follows:
Steel
Field Enter/Select
Cost per use £10.00
Cost per unit £0.50
Expenditure cost centre Construction costs
Wood
Field Enter/Select
Cost per use £15.00
Cost per unit £1.00
Expenditure cost centre Construction costs
When you have set up the default costs, select the View
submenu from the View menu, then select Close to close
Library Explorer. You will now assign the three consumable
resources to the Fabrication task in the Site A project:
2. Click and drag each resource in turn and drop them onto
the Fabrication task.
8 Progressing projects
This chapter explains how to record the progress of your
programme of projects in Asta Powerproject. Progressing
projects on a regular basis is essential in order to keep your
project information up to date.
This chapter includes the following information:
R Ways of progressing projects.
R Creating progress periods.
R Baselining your projects.
R Recording progress.
R Comparing the progressed project with the original
baseline.
R Completing your project.
R Recording progress remotely.
R Viewing projects remotely.
2. Select Progress Period from the tree view. You see the
default progress period displayed in the list view. The
report date of this progress period is the date on which
you started to create your programme of projects. You
will edit this progress period and create some more.
5. Click Close.
You will now create six more progress periods:
5. Click Close.
Notice that coloured lines are displayed on the bar chart,
indicating the report date of each progress period:
" You can baseline 1. As you want to baseline your entire programme of
individual objects projects, click Root chart in the project view to view the
within a project by root chart:
selecting them before
you create the
baseline.
4. Click OK.
The project is rescheduled. As the progress line of the Week
2 progress period was already straight – ie progress was
exactly on track – there is no change to the project.
You can also assign a progress period to a task or allocation
by dragging the progress period from Library Explorer onto
the task:
" You can assign a 5. Click and drag the Week 3 progress period from Library
progress period to Explorer and drop it onto the second task on the Site
more than one task at Planning bar.
a time by selecting Progress is displayed on the second task in green, the
multiple tasks. colour of the Week 3 progress period, and also on its
allocation:
3. Enter 50% in the first row of the Current column and click
outside the field. The progress information is updated to
show the 50% of the task remains to be completed.
4. Click Close.
Notice that the task is now split into two. Progress is
displayed on the first portion of the task in green, the colour
of the Week 3 progress period and no progress is shown on
the second half of the task:
Let us now assume that you have reached the end of the
Week 3 progress period. Reschedule your project as
described above, but this time select Week 3 in the
Straighten progress line to period field, to indicate that you
want to straighten the progress line of the Week 3 progress
period, pushing all uncompleted tasks to the right of it.
After the project is rescheduled, note how all uncompleted
tasks are pushed to the right of the Week 3 progress line,
indicating that the tasks have yet to be completed and that
the project is starting to run behind schedule:
" Alternatively, you can 4. Left-click the % progress control and select 70% from
enter a precise the drop-down list. Progress is displayed on the first
percentage into the portion of the task in blue, the colour of the Week 4
control. progress period and no progress is shown on the second
half of the task.
3. Click and drag the Progress Entry Mode cursor over the
task from left to right. Notice that a popup window
displays the amount of progress you are entering as you
drag:
Let us now assume that you have reached the end of the
Week 4 progress period. Reschedule your project again, but
this time select Week 4 in the Straighten progress line to
period field, to indicate that you want to straighten the
progress line of the Week 4 progress period.
After the project is rescheduled, note how all uncompleted
tasks are pushed to the right of the Week 4 progress line:
5. Let us now assume that you have reached the end of the
Week 5 progress period. Reschedule your project again,
but this time straighten the progress line to Week 5. The
Construction task is split, progress is recorded on the
first portion of it, and the second portion of it is moved
beyond the Week 5 progress line:
" If you had created 3. The baseline you created is displayed in both panes.
more than one Select the check box to the left of each instance of the
baseline, you could baseline to indicate that you want to display the tasks
choose which ones to and allocations of the baseline in your progressed
display on the bar project.
chart.
4. Click Apply. The tasks and allocations from the baseline
appear in the bar chart underneath the corresponding
tasks and allocations in the progressed project:
5. Clear the two check boxes that you had selected in the
Format Bar Chart dialog and click Close to remove the
baseline from the bar chart.
You will now record that the final task in the project, the
Completion milestone, is complete. Once the milestone is
complete, the Project Complete annotation will be displayed:
" You can use the Print 2. When you move the cursor over the preview, the cursor
Preview toolbar to
shape changes to . Click and drag the cursor over a
change the way in
section of the previewed page to zoom in and view the
which the view is
selection in more detail. The cursor shape then changes
printed.
to . Click to zoom out.
10 Producing reports
This chapter explains how to produce reports from within
Asta Powerproject.
This chapter includes the following information:
R Introduction to tabular reports.
R Creating a tabular report category.
R Creating a tabular report.
R Executing a tabular report.
R Conclusion.
You can now create a tabular report within the category you
have created.
4. When you have entered all the report settings, the wizard
displays a screen that enables you to review the settings
you have selected. click Finish to create the report once
you have reviewed your selections.
You can use the Print Preview toolbar to configure the way in
which the report will be printed, then click to print the
report.
10.6 Conclusion
This completes the Asta Powerproject tutorial. You now have
the knowledge you need to create and maintain programmes
of projects within Asta Powerproject.
This tutorial has taught you the basics. For more detailed
information on how to make the most of Asta Powerproject’s
powerful features, refer to Asta Powerproject’s
comprehensive online Help.