Week 4 Time Chapter 06
Week 4 Time Chapter 06
Collecting requirements: defining and documenting the features and functions of the products produced during the project as well as the processes used for creating them Defining scope: reviewing the project charter, requirements documents, and organizational process assets to create a scope statement Creating the WBS: subdividing the major project deliverables into smaller, more manageable components Verifying scope: formalizing acceptance of the project deliverables Controlling scope: controlling changes to project scope throughout the life of the projectTechnology Project Information
Management, Sixth Edition 1
Learning Objectives
Understand the importance of project schedules and good project time management Define activities as the basis for developing project schedules Describe how project managers use network diagrams and dependencies to assist in activity sequencing Understand the relationship between estimating resources and project schedules Explain how various tools and techniques help project managers perform activity duration estimating
Individual Work Styles and Cultural Differences Cause Schedule Conflicts Some people prefer to follow schedules and meet deadlines while others do not Difference cultures and even entire countries have different attitudes about schedules
Defining Activities
An activity or task is an element of work normally found on the work breakdown structure (WBS) that has an expected duration, a cost, and resource requirements Activity definition involves developing a more detailed WBS and supporting explanations to understand all the work to be done so you can develop realistic cost and duration estimates
Activity attributes provide more information such as predecessors, successors, logical relationships, leads and lags, resource requirements, constraints, imposed dates, and assumptions related to the activity
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Milestones
A milestone is a significant event that normally has no duration It often takes several activities and a lot of work to complete a milestone Theyre useful tools for setting schedule goals and monitoring progress Examples include obtaining customer sign-off on key documents or completion of specific products
Sequencing Activities
Involves reviewing activities and determining dependencies A dependency or relationship is the sequencing of project activities or tasks You must determine dependencies in order to use critical path analysis
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Network Diagrams
Network diagrams are the preferred technique for showing activity sequencing A network diagram is a schematic display of the logical relationships among, or sequencing of, project activities Two main formats are the arrow and precedence diagramming methods
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their finish nodes and draw arrows between node 1 and those finish nodes. Put the activity letter or name and duration estimate on the associated arrow. 2. Continue drawing the network diagram, working from left to right. Look for bursts and merges. Bursts occur when a single node is followed by two or more activities. A merge occurs when two or more nodes precede a single node. 3. Continue drawing the project network diagram until all activities are included on the diagram that have dependencies. 4. As a rule of thumb, all arrowheads should face toward the right, and no arrows should cross on an AOA network diagram.
Information Technology Project Management, Sixth Edition
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How difficult will it be to do specific activities on this project? What is the organizations history in doing similar activities? Are the required resources available?
A resource breakdown structure is a hierarchical structure that identifies the projects resources by category and type
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Three-Point Estimates
Instead of providing activity estimates as a discrete number, such as four weeks, its often helpful to create a three-point estimate
An estimate that includes an optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic estimate, such as three weeks for the optimistic, four weeks for the most likely, and five weeks for the pessimistic estimate
Three-point estimates are needed for PERT and Monte Carlo simulations
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Gantt Charts
Gantt charts provide a standard format for displaying project schedule information by listing project activities and their corresponding start and finish dates in a calendar format Symbols include:
Black diamonds: milestones Thick black bars: summary tasks Lighter horizontal bars: durations of tasks Arrows: dependencies between tasks
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Note: Darker bars would be red in Project 2007 to represent critical tasks.
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SMART Criteria
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Best Practice
Schedule risk is inherent in the development of complex systems. Luc Richard, the founder of www.projectmangler.com, suggests that project managers can reduce schedule risk through project milestones, a best practice that involves identifying and tracking significant points or achievements in the project. The five key points of using project milestones include the following:
1. Define milestones early in the project and include them in the Gantt chart to provide a visual guide. 2. Keep milestones small and frequent. 3. The set of milestones must be all-encompassing. 4. Each milestone must be binary, meaning it is either complete or incomplete. 5. Carefully monitor the critical path.
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Remember the example of growing grass being on the critical path for Disneys Animal Kingdom
There can be more than one critical path if the lengths of two or more paths are the same The critical path can change as the project progresses
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Free slack or free float is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the early start of any immediately following activities Total slack or total float is the amount of time an activity may be delayed from its early start without delaying the planned project finish date A forward pass through the network diagram determines the early start and finish dates A backward pass determines the late start and finish dates
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Figure 6-9. Calculating Early and Late Start and Finish Dates
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A method of scheduling that considers limited resources when creating a project schedule and includes buffers to protect the project completion date
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A buffer is additional time to complete a task Murphys Law states that if something can go wrong, it will Parkinsons Law states that work expands to fill the time allowed In traditional estimates, people often add a buffer to each task and use it if its needed or not Critical chain scheduling removes buffers from individual tasks and instead creates:
Project buffers or additional time added before the projects due date Feeding buffers or additional time added before tasks on the critical path
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Duration estimates based on using optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic estimates of activity durations, or a threepoint estimate
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8 workdays + 4 X 10 workdays + 24 workdays = 12 days 6 where optimistic time = 8 days most likely time = 10 days, and pessimistic time = 24 days Therefore, youd use 12 days on the network diagram instead of 10 when using PERT for the above example
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Goals are to know the status of the schedule, influence factors that cause schedule changes, determine that the schedule has changed, and manage changes when they occur Tools and techniques include:
Progress reports A schedule change control system Project management software, including schedule comparison charts like the tracking Gantt chart Variance analysis, such as analyzing float or slack Performance management, such as earned value (Chapter 7)
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Mittal Steel Poland earned Polands Project Excellence Award in 2007 for implementing a SAP system Derek Prior, research director at AMR Research, identified three things the most successful SAP implementation projects do to deliver business benefits: Form a global competence centre Identify super-users for each location Provide ongoing involvement of managers in business processes so they feel they own these processes
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Chapter Summary
Project time management is often cited as the main source of conflict on projects, and most IT projects exceed time estimates Main processes include:
Define activities Sequence activities Estimate activity resources Estimate activity durations Develop schedule Control schedule
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