Project Schedule Management Flashcards
Activity List
The primary output of breaking down the WBS work packages.
Alternative Analysis
The identification of more than one solution that considers roles, materials, tools, and approaches to the project work.
Analogous Estimating
A somewhat unreliable estimating approach that relies on historical information to predict what current activity
durations should be. Analogous estimating is more reliable, however, than team member recollections. Also known as top-down estimating and is a form of expert judgment.
Bottom-Up Estimating
The most accurate time-and-cost estimating approach a project manager can use. This estimating approach starts at “the bottom” of the project and considers every activity, its predecessor and successor activities, and the exact amount of resources needed to complete each activity.
Control Account
A WBS entry that considers the time, cost, and scope measurements for that deliverable within the WBS. The
estimated performance is compared against the actual performance to measure overall performance for the
deliverables within that control account. The specifics of a control account are documented in a control account plan.
Control Threshold
A predetermined range of acceptable variances (e.g. +/–10 percent off schedule). Should the variance exceed the threshold, then project control processes and corrected actions will be enacted.
Crashing
A schedule compression approach that adds more resources to activities on the critical path to complete the project earlier. When crashing a project, costs
are added because the associated labor and sometimes resources (such as faster equipment) cause costs to increase.
Critical Path
The path in the project network diagram that cannot be delayed, otherwise the project completion date will be late. There can be more than one critical path. Activities in the critical path have no float.
Discretionary Dependencies
These dependencies are the preferred order of activities. Project managers should use these relationships at their discretion and should document the logic behind the decision. Discretionary dependencies allow activities to happen in a preferred order because of best practices, conditions unique to the project work, or external events. Also known as
preferential or soft logic.
Early Finish
The earliest a project activity can finish. Used in the forward pass procedure to discover the critical path and the project float.
Early Start
The earliest a project activity can begin. Used in the forward pass procedure to discover the critical path and the project float.
External Dependencies
Dependencies outside of the project’s control (e.g. the delivery of equipment from a vendor, the deliverable
of another project, or the decision of a committee, lawsuit, or expected new law).
Fast Tracking
A schedule compression method that changes the relationship of activities. With fast tracking, activities that would normally be done in sequence are allowed to be done in parallel or with some overlap. Fast tracking can be accomplished by changing the relation of activities from FS to SS or even FF, or by adding lead time to downstream activities. However, fast tracking does add risk to the project.
Finish-to-Finish
An activity relationship type that requires the current activity to be finished before its successor can finish.
Finish-to-Start
An activity relationship type that requires the current activity to be finished before its successor can start.
Fragnet
A representation of a project network diagram that is often used for outsourced portions of a project, repetitive work within a project, or a subproject. Also
called a subnet.
Free Float
The total time a single activity can be delayed without affecting the early start of its immediately following
successor activities.
Hard Logic
Logic that describes activities that must happen in a particular order (e.g. the dirt must be excavated before the foundation can be built, the foundation must be in place before the framing can begin). Also known as a
mandatory dependency.