Project Management Ross L. Fink. Definition of Project  A project is a specific, finite task to be accomplished.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
WBS: Lowest level OBS: Lowest level
Advertisements

Chapter 17 Project Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin
1 1 Slide © 2006 Thomson South-Western. All Rights Reserved. Slides prepared by JOHN LOUCKS St. Edwards University.
Chapter 13 Project Scheduling: PERT/CPM
Chapter 9 Project Scheduling: PERT/CPM
1 1 Slide © 2008 Thomson South-Western. All Rights Reserved Slides by JOHN LOUCKS St. Edwards University.
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 Outline What is project mean? Examples of projects…
Operations Management Session 27: Project Management.
1 Lecture by Junaid Arshad Department of Engineering Management Abridged and adapted by A. M. Al-Araki, sept WBS: Lowest level OBS: Lowest level.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT CPM/PERT V P B Chakravarthi. K Abhijeet Kumar.
© 2004 by Prentice Hall, Inc., Upper Saddle River, N.J Operations Management Project Management Chapter 3 - Heizer.
Gantt Chart Graph or bar chart with a bar for each project activity that shows passage of time Provides visual display of project schedule Slack amount.
1 Project Scheduling CP - Chapter 10 Lecture 3. 2 Project Management  How is it different?  Limited time frame  Narrow focus, specific objectives 
1 1 Slide © 2004 Thomson/South-Western Chapter 12 Project Scheduling: PERT/CPM n Project Scheduling with Known Activity Times n Project Scheduling with.
Project Scheduling Prof. Jiang Zhibin Dept. of IE, SJTU.
1 1 Slide © 2000 South-Western College Publishing/ITP Slides Prepared by JOHN LOUCKS.
MGMT 483 Week 8 Scheduling.
1 1 Slide © 2009 South-Western, a part of Cengage Learning Slides by John Loucks St. Edward’s University.
Chapter 17 Project Management 1Saba Bahouth – UCO.
1 Operations Management Lesson 5 Project Management.
1 1 Slide © 2008 Thomson South-Western. All Rights Reserved Slides by JOHN LOUCKS St. Edward’s University.
Chapter 10 Project Scheduling: PERT/CPM
1 Slide © 2005 Thomson/South-Western Chapter 10 Project Scheduling: PERT/CPM Project Scheduling with Known Activity Times Project Scheduling with Known.
Projects: Critical Paths Dr. Ron Lembke Operations Management.
Copyright 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Chapter 8 Scheduling.
BA 333 Operations Management
Roberta Russell & Bernard W. Taylor, III
Project Management Chapter 13 OPS 370. Projects Project Management Five Phases 1. Initiation 2. Planning 3. Execution 4. Control 5. Closure.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT Outline What is project mean? Examples of projects… Project Planning and Control Project Life Cycle Gantt Chart PERT/CPM.
Operations Management Project Management
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Project Management Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter.
Project Management Project 01 – OFF CLASS. 3 Project Management Project – series of related jobs usually directed toward some major output and requiring.
ENGM91 ACTIVITY PLANNING Unit 2
Project Management Chapter Unique, one-time operations designed to accomplish a specific set of objectives in a limited time frame. Build A A.
PROJECT SCHEDULING By Deepika chaudhary. Project Scheduling Scheduling means estimation of time and resources required to complete activities and organise.
A project can be considered as consisting of several phases: Client’s needs;Work breakdown Doing or delegating;Deliver; Objectives;SpecificationsMonitoring;Wrap.
To Accompany Russell and Taylor, Operations Management, 4th Edition,  2003 Prentice-Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 17 Project Management Part.
1 Project Planning, Scheduling and Control Project – a set of partially ordered, interrelated activities that must be completed to achieve a goal.
Project Management Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill.
Work Systems and the Methods, Measurement, and Management of Work by Mikell P. Groover, ISBN ©2007 Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle.
1 1 Project Scheduling PERT/CPM Networks. 2 2 Originated by H.L.Gantt in 1918 GANTT CHART Advantages - Gantt charts are quite commonly used. They provide.
1 1 © 2003 Thomson  /South-Western Slide Slides Prepared by JOHN S. LOUCKS St. Edward’s University.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT Outline What is project mean? Examples of projects… Project Planning and Control Project Life Cycle Gantt Chart PERT/CPM.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT Outline What is project mean? Examples of projects… Project Planning and Control Project Life Cycle Gantt Chart PERT/CPM.
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.
Richard Fisher 1 The University of Texas at Dallas Project Management Richard Fisher The University of Texas at Dallas.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT Outline What is project mean? Examples of projects…
Chapter 7 – PERT, CPM and Critical Chain Operations Management by R. Dan Reid & Nada R. Sanders 4th Edition © Wiley 2010.
Operations Management Project Management
OPSM 301 Operations Management Class 18: Project Management: Introduction and CPM Koç University Zeynep Aksin
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Project Management Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter.
Scheduling Scheduling : is the process of converting a project action plan into an operating time table. Why scheduling ? To answer the following questions:
Project Management Project Controlling
PROJECT MANAGEMENT.
Project Management: PERT/CPM
Chapter 17 Project Management McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Project Management (PERT/CPM) PREPARED BY CH. AVINASH
Learning Objectives When you complete this chapter, you should be able to : Identify or Define: Work breakdown structure Critical path AOA and AON Networks.
Project Management for Business
Projects: Critical Paths
PROJECT MANAGEMENT WITH CPM/PERT.
PLANNING ENGINEERING AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Chapter 16 – Project Management
Slides Prepared by JOHN LOUCKS
Project Management CPM/PERT Professor Ahmadi.
PROJECT MANAGEMENT CPM/PERT V P B Chakravarthi. K Abhijeet Kumar.
Presentation transcript:

Project Management Ross L. Fink

Definition of Project  A project is a specific, finite task to be accomplished.

Brief History  Modern Project Management can be traced to the “Manhattan” project.  Early project management dealt with large complex projects or R&D (weapons systems)  Today -- Project management is more important than ever.

Importance of Project Management Today  More customization in manufacturing  Shorter product life cycles  Use in service organizations  Nonprofit sector

Why Project Management?  Better control  Better customer relations  Shorter development time  Lower costs  Higher quality and reliability  Higher profits  Better interdepartmental coordination  Better worker morale

Characteristics of a Project  One-time focus  Specific purpose and desired results  Identifiable start and finish  Time fence (or due-date) for completion  Involvement of cross-functional work team  Limited set of resources  Logical sequence of events  A clear client (user, customer) of results

Project Management Tools  Major tools developed in the 1950s  PERT - Program Evaluation and Review Technique - Polaris Missile (NAVY)  CPM - Critical Path Method (CPM) - DuPont and Remington Rand - Maintenance of Chemical Plant

Project Performance Objectives  PCT Objectives  “Good, Fast, Cheap” Performance Cost Time

Reason for Project Failures  Unrealistic expectations  Poor project leadership  Poor project planning

The Project Manager is Responsible to  Superiors  Team  Customer or Sponsor of project

A Project Manager Needs to:  Communicate -  Importance of project  Role others play in project  Importance of their contribution  With customers  Understand project dimensions -  Technical  Cultural  Political

Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)  Breaks the Program (or Project) into smaller and smaller units of work. The following are common levels of work:  Program  Project  Task  Subtask  Work Package

Why Use WBS  Provides a logical means of identifying the activities of a project  Provides structure to the project plan  Different levels of WBS can be used for control by different individuals

Types of WBS  Outcome (things)  Task  Task-outcome

WBS Procedure  Simply ask “What will have to be done in order to _________ “  Don’t worry about sequencing at this point

Stopping Rules For WBS  Level of detail is too great to be useful  Control to smallest time unit used for control  Typically, no more than 5 to 6 levels is appropriate  For large project, no more than 20

PERT Diagrams  PERT (or Network) diagrams showing the relationship between activities  There are more than one way of constructing these networks, we will use what is called activities-on-the-node (AON) or activities-in-the-box. This is the same as MS Project

PERT Diagram Notation  Box or circle (node) represents the activity  Arrow (arc) represents the relationship between activities

Example ActivityImmediate Predecessor A-- BA CA DB,C EC

PERT Diagram

Modeling Time  Simple model assumes times are deterministic (constant)  More elaborate models allow stochastic representation (most common being one that uses 3 time estimates)

Example

Example - Maximum Time  Sequential  Sum of all task times  In our example: 21 periods

Finding time  ES and EF go forward through PERT diagram (ES + Time= EF)  LS and LF go backwards through PERT diagram (LF - Time = LS)  Slack is LS - ES or LF - EF

PERT Diagram

PERT Diagram with Times

Critical Path  A-C-E  Significance--critical path determines project completion time

Example in MS Project