Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

SCHEDULE COMPRESSION In real practice – how would you compress your Schedule?

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "SCHEDULE COMPRESSION In real practice – how would you compress your Schedule?"— Presentation transcript:

1 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION In real practice – how would you compress your Schedule?

2 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION How to compress your Schedule? 1.Identify significant critical and near critical Activities remaining to be completed 2.Meet with Superintendent, Foremen, Subs to discuss Schedule compression options

3 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION How to compress your Schedule? 3.Target critical Activities for acceleration that will shorten Schedule 4.Authorize OT or extra shifts and additional $$$ expenditures 5.Intensively manage the targeted Activities

4 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION How to compress your Schedule?  Collaborative Effort  Almost always less efficient and more expensive Activity Time-Cost Curve Project Time-Cost Curve

5 Activity Time-Cost Curve

6 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Time-Cost Curve  Crashing the Schedule  Step-by-Step Process – One Activity at a Time  Shorten Total Project Duration until you achieve the new allotted time

7 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  Looks the same as Activity Cost Curve  What does this Graph Represent?

8 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What does this Graph Represent?  There is an optimum Total Project Cost – that is a summation of: 1. Direct Costs 2. Indirect Costs 3. Market Profit Losses (Owner)

9 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What are Market Profit Losses?

10 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What are Market Profit Losses?  Income (Revenues) that the Owner does not earn since the facility is not available for their use.  Hospital can be > $1 million/day  Walmart store > $100,000/day  Reflected in contract as LDs

11 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What do the Indirect Costs represent?

12 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What do Indirect Costs represent? 1. Field Office Overhead (FOOH) 2. Home Office Overhead (HOOH) 3. Liquidated Damages (LD’s)  If you can shorten the Job – these costs reduce linearly

13 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What would be the opposite of an Indirect Cost?

14 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What would be the opposite of an Indirect Cost?  An incentive bonus for finishing early.

15 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What are the Direct Costs and why are those costs parabolic rather than linear?

16 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What are the Direct Costs?  The Actual costs of getting the Job done – labor, equipment, materials, and supplies

17 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  Why are the Direct Costs parabolic rather than linear?  The Project Direct Costs are the summation of all the individual Activity Costs (which are parabolic shaped curves)

18 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  When you sum the Direct + Indirect + LDs/MPLs (- Bonuses) = Total Project Cost

19 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What is the Total Project Cost curve stating when you analyze it?

20 SCHEDULE COMPRESSION Project Costs/Duration Relationship  What is the Total Project Cost curve stating when you analyze it?  There is an optimum point-in-time when you can complete the project at a minimum cost


Download ppt "SCHEDULE COMPRESSION In real practice – how would you compress your Schedule?"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google