Chapter 9: Reducing Project Duration

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7 Schedule Control
Advertisements

Spring 2008, King Saud University Time-Cost-Trade-off Dr. Khalid Al-Gahtani 1 Reasons to Reduce Project Durations: 1.To realize incentive pay 2.To fit.
Project Management 6e..
Project Management for Maximum Effectiveness
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.
Operations Management
Reducing Project Duration
SCHEDULE COMPRESSION In real practice – how would you compress your Schedule?
Reducing Project Duration: Project Crashing
Estimating Project Times and Costs
Reducing Project Duration
■ Project duration can be reduced by assigning more resources to project activities. ■ However, doing this increases project cost. ■ Decision is based.
Time-Cost Trade-Off (Time Reduction = Time Compression = Time Shortening) 4/17/ :55 AM.
OPER 576 Project Management Reducing Project Duration or Project Crashing Greg Magnan, Ph.D. May 20, 2004.
Quiz#1 Chapter 5: Estimating Project Times and Cost
Operations Management Contemporary Concepts and Cases Chapter Fourteen Project Planning and Scheduling Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
7-1 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Education (Australia) Pty Ltd Pearson, Larson, Gray, Project Management in Practice, 1e CHAPTER 7 Project Time Management.
Analyzing Cost-Time Trade-Offs There are always cost-time trade-offs in project management. – You can completing a project early by hiring more workers.
Copyright 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Beni Asllani University of Tennessee at Chattanooga Project Management Operations Management - 5 th Edition Chapter.
Scheduling Resources and Costs CHAPTER EIGHT PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All Rights Reserved.
Time/Cost Trade-off Analysis
Chapter 9: Reducing Project Duration
McGraw-Hill/Irwin© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Estimating Project Times and Costs Chapter 5.
Time-Cost Trade-Off (Time Reduction = Time Compression) (Time Shortening) Time-Cost Trade-Off (Time Reduction = Time Compression) (Time Shortening)
8-1 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Project Management Chapter 8.
Estimating projects Estimating  The process of forecasting or approximating the time and cost of completing project deliverables  The task of balancing.
Scheduling Resources and Cost
Human Resources n How do we compete with everybody else who needs resources? n Where do we find people when we can’t hire new employees? n What does time.
8-1 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Project Management Chapter 8.
Reducing Project Duration CHAPTER NINE Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Reducing Project Duration CHAPTER NINE Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Estimating Project Times and Costs CHAPTER FIVE Student Version Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 10/27/07 SJSU - Bus. 286 David Bentley (Gray & Larson)1 Chapter 5 – Estimating.
1 Finishing Projects Fast James R. Burns Professor of Operations Management and Information Technology Texas Tech University.
1 6. T IME -C OST O PTIMIZATION Objective: The optimization of project duration and cost by an appropriate crashing of activities. Summary: 6.1 Finding.
 Delay in project implementation invariably results in cost- overrun.  Delayed project implementation means delay in getting return on investments made.
TOPIC-6- TIME-COST TRADE OFF
Chapter 7 Schedule Control. 22 Learning Objectives  Perform the steps in the project control process  Determine the effects of actual schedule performance.
5 Ir. Haery Sihombing/IP Pensyarah Pelawat Fakulti Kejuruteraan Pembuatan Universiti Teknologi Malaysia Melaka Project Management Estimating Project Times.
Microsoft Project 2010 ® Tutorial 4: Assigning Resources and Costs.
Project Planning & Scheduling What is a “project”? Objectives and tradeoffs Planning and Control in Projects Scheduling Methods Constant-Time Networks.
3/18/ :47 AM 1 Time-Cost Trade-Off (Time Reduction = Time Compression = Time Shortening)
1 Finishing Projects Fast James R. Burns Professor of Operations Management and Information Technology Texas Tech University.
1 Finishing Projects Fast James R. Burns Professor of Operations Management and Information Technology Texas Tech University.
Develop Schedule is the Process of analyzing activity sequences, durations, resource requirements, and schedule constraints to create the project schedule.
University Of Palestine Faculty Of Applied Engineering & Urban Planning Civil Engineering Department PROJECT MANAGEMENT Scheduling Resources and Costs.
Time-Cost Trade-off Models
Project Management 6e..
Reducing Project Duration
CE 366 PROJECT MANAGEMENT AND ECONOMICS Robert G. Batson, Ph.D., P.E. Professor of Construction Engineering The University of Alabama
Project Management.
Project Management Chapter Topics
Project Planning & Scheduling
Project Management -- Scheduling Resources and Costs
Project Management -- Reducing Project Duration
Reducing Project Duration
Engineering Project Management
Project Planning & Scheduling
Project scheduling Chapter 10 Copyright ©2016 Pearson Education, Inc.
Project Management Operations -- Prof. Juran.
Lecture 6: Time-Cost Trade-Offs
Finishing Projects Fast
Manajemen Industri Teknologi informasi
Reducing Project Duration
Where We Are Now. Where We Are Now Rationale for Reducing Project Duration Time Is Money: Cost-Time Tradeoffs Reducing the time of a critical activity.
Where We Are Now. Where We Are Now Rationale for Reducing Project Duration Time Is Money: Cost-Time Tradeoffs Reducing the time of a critical activity.
Where We Are Now. Where We Are Now Rationale for Reducing Project Duration Time Is Money: Cost-Time Tradeoffs Reducing the time of a critical activity.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9: Reducing Project Duration AP/ADMS 3353 Lecture 9 Chapter 9: Reducing Project Duration

Rationale for Reducing Project Duration Time Is Money: Cost-Time Tradeoffs Reducing the time of a critical activity usually incurs additional direct costs. Cost-time solutions focus on reducing (crashing) activities on the critical path to shorten overall duration of the project. Reasons for imposed project duration dates: Customer requirements and contract commitments Time-to-market pressures Incentive contracts (bonuses for early completion) Unforeseen delays Overhead and goodwill costs Pressure to move resources to other projects

Options for Accelerating Project Completion Adding Resources Outsourcing Project Work Scheduling Overtime Establishing a Core Project Team Do It Twice—Fast and Correctly Fast-Tracking Critical-Chain Reducing Project Scope Compromise Quality

Explanation of Project Costs Project Indirect Costs Costs that cannot be associated with any particular work package or project activity Supervision, administration, consultants, and interest Costs that vary (increase) with time Reducing project time directly reduces indirect costs. Direct Costs Normal costs that can be assigned directly to a specific work package or project activity Labor, materials, equipment, and subcontractors Crashing activities increases direct costs

Reducing Project Duration to Reduce Project Cost Identifying direct costs to reduce project time Compute total costs for specific durations and compare to benefits of reducing project time. Search critical activities for lowest direct-cost activities to shorten project duration. Gather information about direct and indirect costs of specific project durations.

Project Cost—Duration Graph FIGURE 9.1

Constructing a Project Cost—Duration Graph Find total direct costs for selected project durations. Find total indirect costs for selected project durations. Sum direct and indirect costs for these selected project durations. Compare additional cost alternatives for benefits.

Constructing a Project Cost—Duration Graph Determining Activities to Shorten Shorten the activities with the smallest increase in cost per unit of time. Assumptions: The cost relationship is linear. Normal time assumes low-cost, efficient methods to complete the activity. Crash time represents a limit—the greatest time reduction possible under realistic conditions. Slope represents a constant cost per unit of time. All accelerations must occur within the normal and crash times.

Activity Graph FIGURE 9.2

Cost—Duration Trade-off Example FIGURE 9.3 (cont’d)

Cost—Duration Trade-off Example FIGURE 9.3

Cost—Duration Trade-off Example (cont’d) FIGURE 9.3 (cont’d)

Cost—Duration Trade-off Example (cont’d) FIGURE 9.4 (cont’d)

Cost—Duration Trade-off Example (cont’d) FIGURE 9.4 (cont’d)

Cost—Duration Trade-off Example (cont’d) FIGURE 9.4 (cont’d)

Summary Costs by Duration FIGURE 9.5

Project Cost—Duration Graph FIGURE 9.6

Practical Considerations Using the project cost—duration graph Crash times Linearity assumption Choice of activities to crash revisited Time reduction decisions and sensitivity

What if Cost, Not Time Is the Issue? Commonly Used Options for Cutting Costs Reduce project scope Have owner take on more responsibility Outsourcing project activities or even the entire project Brainstorming cost savings options