🎤  Charles Paul ‎        |  ðŸ“…  October 10, 2023   |  ðŸ•’  11 AM Eastern Time US


Areas Covered in the Session :

  • What is the purpose of the network diagram?
  • Why is the network diagram important?
  • What are predecessor and successor tasks?
  • How is the network diagram constructed?
  • What is slack time and how is it calculated?
  • What are the earliest start and finish dates?
  • What are the latest start and finished dates?
  • How is the diagram optimized?
  • What is the critical path and why is it important?
  • What is fast tracking?
  • Creating the schedule plan for the project.
  • Defining who has authority over the schedule.
  • Identifying start and end dates for project activities and tasks.
  • Determining task dependencies.
  • Sequencing activities and tasks chronologically to create a project calendar.
  • Estimating needed resources and resource availability.
  • Determining duration of activities and tasks.
  • Building project schedule.
  • Monitoring and control throughout the project life cycle.

Description:

Building and optimizing the project schedule rests squarely on the accuracy of each planning step that leads to the creation of that schedule.  The first step is building an effective Work Breakdown Structure which was covered in the previous module. The second step is determining the project task interrelationships and dependencies by developing the network diagram.  You cannot build an effective schedule without knowing this essential information.

The network diagram is one of the most important tools prepared by the project manager. The diagram is a flowchart that depicts all the tasks that must be performed to complete the project. Those tasks are arranged based upon their interdependencies. These interdependencies whether independent or dependent are critical to identifying the critical path through the project, determining the optimum project strategy for completion, the span time for each task, and the resource requirements required to execute the plan. In other words, other than the Work Breakdown Structure, the network diagram is the most important project strategy document available to the project manager. The creation of this document is essential to the control and success of project execution and is invaluable to translating task duration estimates for each of these tasks into an actual calendar schedule.

Once the network diagram has been completed, you are then able to develop the actual project schedule. Building a detailed and well-crafted schedule is crucial to completing projects on time and on budget. Scheduling allows management to identify, optimize and effectively apply the tradeoffs between the elements of the triple constraint – time, cost, and quality/scope.

Project performance is reported against those elements or baselines iteratively across the life of the project allowing the project manager to exercise effective project control.  Without a good schedule, that iterative process is ineffective, potentially affecting project performance.  You have to plan, and you have to schedule if you want to avoid those awkward embarrassing discussions with stakeholders and senior management as to why the project is not tracking to plan or worse yet, is failing miserably.

Who Should Attend:

Any member of a cross functional project team:

  • Engineers
  • Marketing Associates
  • Product Managers
  • Program Managers
  • Contract Managers
  • Project Managers
  • Research & Development Associates, Managers, and Directors
  • Manufacturing Managers
  • Technicians
  • Anyone that participates in or has the potential to manage team-based cross-functional projects.

This course crosses all industries and functions it is however particularly suited for the health sciences and other regulated industries where much project-based work is accomplished. The types of industries that are targeted include:

  • Medical device manufacturers
  • Pharmaceutical and Biotech organizations
  • Cosmetic and foods manufacturers
  • All other industries


Read more