Project Management Operations -- Prof. Juran.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 EO EMBA-2, BUP M. ASAD Operations Management for Competitive Advantages.
Advertisements

OPSM 301 Operations Management Class 8: Project Management: Introduction and CPM Koç University Zeynep Aksin
Project Management CHAPTER SIXTEEN McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
F O U R T H E D I T I O N Project Management © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2003 supplement 3 DAVIS AQUILANO CHASE PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie.
Project Management Project  A series of related jobs usually directed toward some major output and requiring a significant time to perform Project management.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
1 Project Planning BA Project Planning and Control Definition of Project Management Work Breakdown Structure Critical Path Scheduling Ideal Completion.
1 Chapter 3 part 1 Project Management. 2 Why is Project Management Important?  Why do I need to know this stuff? –Relevant across functional areas 
Project Management Operations -- Prof. Juran. 2 Outline Definition of Project Management –Work Breakdown Structure –Project Control Charts –Structuring.
Operations Management For Competitive Advantage © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2001 C HASE A QUILANO J ACOBS ninth edition 1 Project Management Operations.
CHAPTER 4 MANAGING PROJECT PROCESSES. THE CONCEPT A project is an interrelated set of activities that has a definite starting and ending point and that.
2 Project Management  Management of work to develop and implement an innovation or change in an existing organization Examples: –New buildings –Weapon.
Chapter 16 – Project Management
J0444 OPERATION MANAGEMENT Project Management Pert 5 Universitas Bina Nusantara.
Chapter 16 – Project Management
Project Management. Introduction What – Project Management Where – Where the success or failure of a project will have major consequences for the company.
4–14–1. 4–24–2 Chapter Four Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Chapter 3 Project Management.
Irwin/McGraw-Hill Project Management  Project series of related jobs usually directed toward some major output and requiring a significant period of time.
OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT INTEGRATING MANUFACTURING AND SERVICES FIFTH EDITION Mark M. Davis Janelle Heineke Copyright ©2005, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Operations Management Project Management
Chapter 3 Project Management.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Project Management Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter.
Projects CHAPTER 10. Learning Objectives 1. Explain what project management is and why it is important. 2. Identify the different ways projects can be.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. 1.
Project Management Project 01 – OFF CLASS. 3 Project Management Project – series of related jobs usually directed toward some major output and requiring.
1-1 1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved.
Operations Management For Competitive Advantage 1 Project Management Operations Management For Competitive Advantage Chapter 3.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT Chapter Four Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
1 Project Management Chapter Lecture outline Project planning Project scheduling Project control CPM/PERT Project crashing and time-cost trade-off.
1 Slides used in class may be different from slides in student pack Chapter 3 Project Management  Definition of Project Management  Structuring Projects.
Intro : Project Management. 1.Project : series of related jobs usually directed toward some major output and requiring a significant period of time to.
1 Chapter 3 Project Management  Definition of Project Management  Work Breakdown Structure  Project Control Charts  Structuring Projects  Critical.
1 Project Planning, Scheduling and Control Project – a set of partially ordered, interrelated activities that must be completed to achieve a goal.
1IT Project Management, Third Edition Chapter 6 Chapter 6: Project Time Management.
Project Management Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill.
Chapter 10. Activity-on-Node Network Fundamentals X Y Z Y and Z are preceded by X Y and Z can begin at the same time, if you wish (B) ABC A is preceded.
MBA 8452 Systems and Operations Management
8-1 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Project Management Chapter 8.
1 OMGT 3123 Project Management  Project Controlling  Project Management Techniques: PERT And CPM  The Framework Of PERT And CPM  Network Diagrams And.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Project Management Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT Approaches
Project Planning and Budgeting Recall the four stages Project Definition and Conceptualization Project Planning and Budgeting Project Execution and Control.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Project Management CPM and PERT.
Tata McGraw CHAPTER 3 Project Management. Chapter 3 Project Management.
1 8.0 Definition of Project Management Project  Series of related jobs or tasks focused on the completion of an overall objective. Project Management.
Operations Fall 2015 Bruce Duggan Providence University College.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., Chapter 3 Project Management.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Chapter 10 Projects.
1 Slides used in class may be different from slides in student pack Chapter 3 Project Management  Definition of Project Management  Work Breakdown Structure.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Project Management Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter.
Chapter Two Project Organization.
2010© Wiley Chapter 16 – Project Management Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 4 th Edition © Wiley PowerPoint Presentation by R.B.
IE 366 Chapter 6, Section 10 Project Planning and Scheduling.
Project Management.
Chapter 3 Project Management. Chapter 3 Project Management.
Project Management Project Controlling
Project Management Chapter Topics
Project Management: PERT/CPM
Chapter 4: Project Management
Project Scheduling Lecture # 1.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT WITH CPM/PERT.
Project Planning and Budgeting
Chapter 3 Project Management.
Project Management Operations -- Prof. Juran.
Critical Path Method Farrokh Alemi, Ph.D.
Lecture 6: Time-Cost Trade-Offs
Project Management CPM/PERT Professor Ahmadi.
Importance of Project Schedules
Presentation transcript:

Project Management Operations -- Prof. Juran

Outline Definition of Project Management Critical Path Scheduling PERT Work Breakdown Structure Project Control Charts Structuring Projects Critical Path Scheduling By Hand Linear Programming PERT Operations -- Prof. Juran 2

Project Management A Project is a series of related jobs usually directed toward some major output and requiring a significant period of time to perform Project Management is the set of management activities of planning, directing, and controlling resources (people, equipment, material) to meet the technical, cost, and time constraints of a project An extreme case: Smallest possible production volume, greatest possible customization Operations -- Prof. Juran 3

Project Control Charts: Gantt Chart Operations -- Prof. Juran 6

Operations -- Prof. Juran

A pure project is where a self-contained team works full-time on the project Advantages: The project manager has full authority over the project Team members report to one boss Shortened communication lines Team pride, motivation, and commitment are high Disadvantages: Duplication of resources Organizational goals and policies are ignored Lack of technology transfer Team members have no functional area "home" Operations -- Prof. Juran 8

Functional Projects President Research and Development Engineering Manufacturing Project A B C D E F G H I Example: Project “B” is in the functional area of Research and Development. Operations -- Prof. Juran 9

Functional Projects Advantages: A team member can work on several projects Technical expertise is maintained within the functional area The functional area is a “home” after the project is completed Critical mass of specialized knowledge Disadvantages: Aspects of the project that are not directly related to the functional area get short-changed Motivation of team members is often weak Needs of the client are secondary and are responded to slowly Operations -- Prof. Juran 9

Matrix Project Organization Structure President Research and Development Engineering Manufacturing Marketing Manager Project A Project B Project C Operations -- Prof. Juran 12

Matrix Structure Advantages: Enhanced communications between functional areas Pinpointed responsibility Duplication of resources is minimized Functional “home” for team members Policies of the parent organization are followed Disadvantages: Too many bosses Depends on project manager’s negotiating skills Potential for sub-optimization Operations -- Prof. Juran 13

Work Breakdown Structure A hierarchy of project tasks, subtasks, and work packages Program Project 1 Project 2 Task 1.1 Subtask 1.1.1 Work Package 1.1.1.1 Level 1 2 3 4 Task 1.2 Subtask 1.1.2 Work Package 1.1.1.2 Operations -- Prof. Juran 4

Network Models A project is viewed as a sequence of activities that form a “network” representing a project The path taking longest time through this network of activities is called the “critical path” The critical path provides a wide range of scheduling information useful in managing a project Critical Path Method (CPM) helps to identify the critical path(s) in the project network Operations -- Prof. Juran 15

Prerequisites for Critical Path Method A project must have: well-defined jobs or tasks whose completion marks the end of the project; independent jobs or tasks; and tasks that follow a given sequence. Operations -- Prof. Juran 16

Types of Critical Path Methods CPM with a Single Time Estimate Used when activity times are known with certainty Used to determine timing estimates for the project, each activity in the project, and slack time for activities Time-Cost Models Used when cost trade-off information is a major consideration in planning Used to determine the least cost in reducing total project time CPM with Three Activity Time Estimates Used when activity times are uncertain Used to obtain the same information as the Single Time Estimate model and probability information Operations -- Prof. Juran 15

CPM with Single Time Estimate Activity Identification Activity Sequencing and Network Construction Determine the critical path From the critical path all of the project and activity timing information can be obtained Operations -- Prof. Juran 15

House-Building Example Operations -- Prof. Juran

Managerial Problems Find the minimum number of days needed to build the house. Find the “critical path”. Find the least expensive way to finish the house in a certain amount of time. Study the possible effects of randomness in the activity times. Operations -- Prof. Juran

Activity-on-Arc Network F 6 1 3 4 A 5 G 3 E 4 Start 5 End C 10 B 8 D 5 2 Operations -- Prof. Juran

Method 1: “By Hand” Operations -- Prof. Juran

Procedure Draw network Forward pass to find earliest times Backward pass to find latest times Analysis: Critical Path, Slack Times Extensions (really hard!): Crashing PERT Operations -- Prof. Juran

CPM Jargon Every network of this type has at least one critical path, consisting of a set of critical activities. In this example, there are two critical paths: A-B-C-G and A-B-E-F-G. 1 Start 4 3 2 A 5 B 8 C 10 E D G F 6 End Operations -- Prof. Juran

Conclusions The project will take 26 days to complete. The only activity that is not critical is the electrical wiring (Activity D). Operations -- Prof. Juran

Time-Cost Models Basic Assumption: Relationship between activity completion time and project cost Time Cost Models: Determine the optimum point in time-cost tradeoffs Activity direct costs Project indirect costs Activity completion times Operations -- Prof. Juran 32

Crashing Parameters What is the least expensive way to finish this project in 20 days? (This is hard!) Operations -- Prof. Juran

CPM with Three Activity Time Estimates Operations -- Prof. Juran

Expected Time Calculations Operations -- Prof. Juran

Expected Time Calculations Note: the expected time of an activity is not necessarily equal to the most likely time (although that is true in this problem). Operations -- Prof. Juran

1 Start 4 3 2 A 5 B 8 C 10 E D G F 6 End The sum of the critical path expected times is the expected duration of the whole project (in this case, 26 days). Operations -- Prof. Juran

What is the probability of finishing this project in less than 25 days? Operations -- Prof. Juran

Operations -- Prof. Juran