1 / 26

PROJECT TIME CONTROL

PROJECT TIME CONTROL. PROJECT SCHEDULING REFERENCES. PRIMARY REFERENCE IN THIS PRESENTATION IS Operations Management, Ed 6 , Heizer & Render, Prentice Hall, Inc., 2001 (H&R) A REFERENCE FOR MICROSOFT PROJECT ™ IS http://www.urban.uiuc.edu/Courses/varkki/msProject/msproject.html. Planning

neola
Download Presentation

PROJECT TIME CONTROL

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PROJECT TIME CONTROL

  2. PROJECT SCHEDULING REFERENCES • PRIMARY REFERENCE IN THIS PRESENTATION IS Operations Management, Ed 6, Heizer & Render, Prentice Hall, Inc., 2001 (H&R) • A REFERENCE FOR MICROSOFT PROJECT™ IS http://www.urban.uiuc.edu/Courses/varkki/msProject/msproject.html

  3. Planning • Objectives • Resources • Work break-down schedule • Organization • Scheduling • Project activities • Start & end times • Network • Controlling • Monitor, compare, revise, action PROJECT CONTROL MODEL • DYNAMIC PROCESS THROUGHOUT PROJECT SOURCE: (H&R)

  4. Project Planning 1. Setting goals 2. Defining the project 3. Tying needs into timed project activities 4. Organizing the team Time/cost estimates Budgets Engineering diagrams Cash flow charts Material availability details Project Scheduling 1. Tying resources to specific activities 2. Relating activities to each other 3. Updating and revising on a regular basis CPM/PERT Gantt charts Milestone charts Cash flow schedules Project Controlling 1. Monitoring resources, costs, quality, and budgets 2. Revising and changing plans 3. Shifting resources to meet demands • Reports • budgets • delayed activities • slack activities Before Project During Project PLANNING, SCHEDULING & CONTROLLING COMPONENTS • ANOTHER WAY TO SHOW RELATIONSHIPS

  5. HISTORY OF CRITICAL PATH SCHEDULING FOR PROJECTS • PROJECT SCHEDULE FOR USS NAUTILUS • TOTAL TIME = 4 YEARS • DESIGN IN EARLY 1950’s • CONSTRUCTION PERIOD 18 MONTHS IN 1952 – 1954. • FIRST NUCLEAR POWERED VESSEL • PARTS FROM MANY SUPPLIERS • LIMITED ACCESS FOR CONSTRUCTION http://www.nautilus571.com/index.htm

  6. COORDINATION CRITERIA • CONSTRUCTION SCHEDULE CONTROLLED DATES WHEN PARTS WERE NEEDED ON SITE • FABRICATION OF PARTS SCHEDULES WORKED BACKWARD FROM DATES NEEDED ON SITE • SPECIAL INSTALLATION EQUIPMENT HAD TO BE AT SITE ON NEED DATE • CONSTRUCTION PERSONNEL HAD TO BE AVAILABLE • LIMITED ROOM FOR INVENTORY OF PARTS AND MATERIALS • ALL SYSTEMS HAD TO BE TESTED WHILE THEY WERE STILL ACCESSIBLE FOR REPAIR OR REVISION

  7. PRIMARY COMPONENTS - PLANNING • PLANNING REQUIRES AN ANALYSIS OF • GOALS • METHODS • ACTIVITIES • RESOURCES • FORMING A TEAM SOURCE: (H&R)

  8. PRIMARY COMPONENTS - SCHEDULING • SCHEDULING CONVERTS THE PLANS INTO • WORK SEQUENCE • DELIVERABLES • ASSIGNMENTS • RESOURCE REQUIREMENTS SOURCE: (H&R)

  9. PRIMARY COMPONENTS - CONTROL • CONTROL OF THE PROJECT IS BASED ON ASSESSMENT OF THE PROGRESS VS. THE SCHEDULE SOURCE: (H&R)

  10. DESIGN TANK REQUEST BIDS AWARD FABRICATE TANK TEST TANK SHIP TANK TO SITE CLEAR SITE INSTALL FOUNDATIONS & UNDERGROUND INSTALL SUPPORT STEEL INSTALL TANK INSTALL ACCESS PLATFORMS INSTALL PIPING TEST PIPING INSTALL INSTRUMENTATION TEST INSTRUMENTATION INSTALL INSULATION INITIAL OPERATION PAINTING CLEAN-UP OPERATING MANUALS DEFINE ACTIVITIES OVERALL FOR INSTALLING A TANK

  11. ORGANIZE ACTIVITIES • PRECEDENCE HIERARCHY • WHAT MUST BE COMPLETED FIRST • WHAT CAN BE COMPLETED IN PARALLEL TO OTHER ACTIVITIES • FOR TANK EXAMPLE • DESIGN OF FOUNDATION • REQUIRES COMPLETION OF DESIGN • RECEIPT OF PHYSICAL LOCATION DRAWINGS AND LOAD DATA FROM FABRICATOR • DESIGN FOR ANY UNDERGROUND FACILITIES • DESIGN FOR CONNECTIONS TO TANK • DESIGN FOR DIKES OR TANK CONTAINMENT http://www.buckeyefabricating.com/

  12. PREPARATION OF DETAILED SCHEDULES • THE OVERALL SCHEDULE IS COMPRISED OF SUB-SCHEDULES • THESE SCHEDULES MAY BE INITIALLY ESTIMATED AND THEN DETAILED AS THE PROJECT PROGRESSES

  13. INITIAL PRESENTATION OF DATA • ACTIVITIES CAN BE ARRANGED BY PRECEDENCE ON A BAR CHART (ALSO CALLED A GANNT CHART) • THESE ACTIVITIES CAN BE FURTHER BROKEN DOWN INTO ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES • LINKS BETWEEN ACTIVITIES ARE SHOWN AS ARROWS

  14. TYPICAL GANNT CHART

  15. CRITICAL PATH • THE CRITICAL PATH IS BASED ON THE SEQUENCE OF ACTIVITIES THAT MUST BE COMPLETED TO MAINTAIN THE SCHEDULE • ITEMS OFF THE CRITICAL PATH INCLUDE FLOAT • THE CRITICAL PATH IS THAT SEQUENCE THAT INCLUDES ZERO FLOAT

  16. GANNT CHART WITH CRITICAL PATH

  17. USE OF PROJECT SCHEDULE • ALLOWS EVALUATION OF EACH STEP IN THE PROJECT • SHOWS RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN ACTIVITIES • ALLOWS OBJECTIVE DETERMINATION OF TIME • ALLOWS OPTIMIZED USE OF RESOURCES • ALLOWS A COMPREHENSIVE BUDGET FOR THE PROJECT TO BE DEVELOPED

  18. CRITICAL PATH DIAGRAM • THIS METHOD USES EVENT GRAPHICS AND ARROW PRECEDENCE • DATA IS SHOWN ON NODES • CRITICAL PATH HAS ZERO FLOAT

  19. PERT DIAGRAM • PERT DIAGRAMS (PROJECT EVALUATION AND REVIEW TECHNIQUE ) USES SIMILAR NODES • IN THIS CASE THE EARLY START – EARLY FINISH AND LATE START – LATE FINISH ARE INCLUDED • VALUES ARE THE SAME FOR CRITICAL PATH ACTIVITIES • IN MICROSOFT PROJECT™, THE PERT TOOLBAR IS USED TO ENTER OPTIMISTIC AND PESSIMISTIC DURATIONS • OPTIMISTIC AND PESSIMISTIC GANNT CHARTS AND EVENT DIAGRAMS ARE PRODUCED

  20. OPTIMISTIC GANNT CHART • EARLIEST POSSIBLE COMPLETION

  21. PESSIMISTIC GANNT CHART • LATEST ANTICPATED END DATE

  22. USE OF SCHEDULE FOR OPTIMIZATION • CRASHING A PROJECT • ADDING RESOURCES TO SHORTEN PROJECT DURATION • MUST BE APPLIED TO CRITICAL PATH ACTIVITIES • MAY RESULT IN A SWITCH IN CRITICAL PATH ACTIVITIES • RESOURCE LEVELING • AVOID MOBILIZATION/DEMOBILIZATION COSTS

  23. RESOURCE LEVELING EXAMPLE • INITIAL RESOURCE PLOT

  24. RESOURCE LEVELING • REARRANGING JOB SEQUENCES

  25. COST IMPACTS OF LOAD LEVELING • THE MAXIMUM PERSONNEL REQUIREMENT IS REDUCED • ALSO THERE IS A SINGLE INCREASE/REDUCTION SEQUENCE • COSTS OF MOBILIZATION AND DEMOBILIZATION ARE REDUCED • CONSISTENT WORK QUALITY IS OBTAINED FROM STABLE WORKFORCE

  26. CLASS PROBLEM • GIVEN: Backyard to be fenced. • WANTED: Gannt chart showing activities to construct the fence. • BASIS: Yard has neighbors on three sides. • SOLUTION: Provide Gannt sketch or use Project program if available.

More Related