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"Analyzing activity sequences, durations, resource requirements and schedule constraints to create the project schedule"
The definition shown above in italics is taken from the Glossary of the Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, (PMBOK® Guide) – Fifth Edition, Project Management Institute Inc., 2013
Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, (PMBOK® Guide) – Fifth Edition, Project Management Institute Inc., 2013 Figure 6-16 Page 173
Schedule Network Analysis
A technique to generate the project schedule employing various analytical techniques such as critical path, critical chain, what-if analysis and resource optimisation techniques (leveling/smoothing)
Critical Path Method
Seen earlier
Critical Chain Method
A schedule network analysis method. We:
This gives you a schedule with a duration which is ¾ of the original but with greater risk
This technique tries to strike a balance between what is anticipated for the project from:
Critical Chain Example:
Critical Path |
Critical Chain |
Activities are calculated without regard to resource limitations |
Resource Limitations are taken into account |
The focus is on managing float |
The focus is on managing the duration buffer and resources |
Activities are scheduled based on Early Start and Early Finish |
Activities are scheduled based on Late Start and Late Finish |
Early Start - the earliest date that uncompleted activities can be started given the network logic and any schedule constraints
Early Finish - the earliest date that uncompleted activities can be finished
Late Start - the latest date that an activity can begin without compromising a specified milestone e.g. project finish date
Late Finish - the latest date than an activity can finish without compromising a specified milestone
Total Float - "the time an activity can be delayed from its early start date without delaying the project finish date"
Free Float - "amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the early start of any dependent following activity"
The definitions shown above in italics are taken from the Glossary of the Project Management Institute, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge, (PMBOK® Guide) – Fifth Edition, Project Management
Slack Time or Total Float = Late Finish - Early Finish, or Late Start - Early Start
Free Float = ES of B – EF of A
If you can‟t change the scope, there are two ways to meet schedule constraints:
Crashing
Fast Tracking
In order to shorten the duration of the project it is necessary to reduce the duration of the critical path (the critical path is the path that determines the duration of the project) – candidate activities are C, D and G.
Cost of reducing duration of C:
= £(10,000 – 8,000) / (8 – 6) = £2000/2 = £1,000 / day
Cost of reducing duration of D
= £(8,500 – 8,000) / (5 – 4) = £500/1 = £500 / day
Cost of reducing duration of G
= £(6,500 – 5,000) / (3 – 2) = £1,500/1 = £1,500 / day
You should choose the option which has the least negative effect on the impact on the project
As a result, D should be crashed first, then C and then G.
Used to consider different situations that might occur and influence the schedule.
Monte Carlo computes different schedules based on potential delays.
Simulated outcomes can be used in risk response plans and help to select the optimum plan.
What-if scenario considers the impact of one variable at a time. For Example:
The Resource Graph is a time-phased display of the work assigned to each project resource
Resource Calendar
Project Calendar
The Resource Graph is a time-phased display of the work assigned to each project resource
Resource Smoothing
Resource Levelling
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