(07) Reducing Project Time Flashcards
Reasons for Reducing Project Duration.
- Customer Requirements.
- Contract Commitments.
- Time-to-market pressures.
- Incentives (e.g., bonuses for early completion).
- Overhead and goodwill costs.
- Pressure to move resources to other projects.
Options when resources are NOT constrained.
- Adding Resources, but there are limits, savings not necessarily proportional.
- Outsourcing project work, also frees up resources.
- Scheduling overtime, but has limits, productivity may drop off, using people familiar with the project.
- Have full time core team, more productive than part-time people.
- Build an interim solution.
Options when resources are constrained.
- Rearrange the order/logic of the project plan to increase the number of critical items in parallel (review soft logic).
- Reducing the project scope, or phase the project so the initial delivery is a ‘cut down’ version.
- Renegotiate quality.
Other approaches to accelerating a project.
- Improving the productivity of existing project resources.
- E.g., eliminating bureaucratic procedures.
- Changing the working method employed for the activity.
- E.g., altering the technology and types of resources employed.
- Increasing the resources.
- Crashing.
- Decreasing the activity times as far as possible (time-cost trade off).
Determining the activities to shorten.
Look for critical activities (on the critical path) that can be shortened, with smallest increase in direct cost per time.
Project Costs.
- Direct Costs.
- Indirect Costs.
- Optimal time-cost trade-off.
Direct Costs.
- Costs that can be assigned directly to a specific work package or project activity.
- Labour, materials, equipment, subcontractors, etc.
- Crashing activities increases direct costs.
Indirect Costs
- Costs that cannot be associated with any particular work package or project activity.
- Administration, consultants, interest, insurance, etc.
- Crashing activities may reduce indirect costs.
Optimal time-cost trade-off (step 1)
Prepare a network.
Optimal time-cost trade-off (step 2)
- For each activity, list..
- Normal cost (NC) and normal time (NT).
- Crash cost (CC) and crash time (CT).
Optimal time-cost trade-off (step 3)
- Compute the crash cost/time period (slope).
- Slope = (CC-NC)/(NT-CT).
Optimal time-cost trade-off (step 4)
- Find the critical path(s) and determine total normal (direct) cost.
Optimal time-cost trade-off (step 5)
- Shorten the critical path at the least cost by one period at a time.
- If there is only one critical path, then select the activity that can still be crashed and has the smallest crash cost/period.
- If there are more than one critical path, then select one activity from each critical path that can still be crashed and has the smallest crash cost/period.
Optimal time-cost trade-off (step 6)
- Update all activity times, if the desired duration or minimum cost schedule has been reached, then stop, else go to step 4.
The total crash cost/period of all selected activities should be the smallest.
What if Cost is the Issue? Then, you should..
- Reduce project scope.
- Have owner take on more responsibility.
- Outsourcing project activities or even the entire project.
- Brainstorm cost savings options.