The Gantt chart and the usage nowadays
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==Benefits== | ==Benefits== | ||
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+ | The greater benefits of the Gantt chart are the following: | ||
+ | * For the proper organization of activities. To construct a successful Gantt chart, initially it is required to be properly organized. This means that all the activities must be categorized, in order to record how long it takes for each activity, what is the start and the end time and who is responsible for each activity. By establishing correctly a Gantt chart, there is a greater probability of success or in other words, there are higher levels of the smooth completion of the project, in the required times. | ||
+ | * Moreover, the Gantt chart helps introducing timeframes. This is because some tasks usually base their start to the finish of another (prerequisite task). For this reason, timelines are constructed to be easily understood and visible the duration of an activity and bars are established in order to be perceived the start and the finish time of each one. | ||
+ | * Another significant advantage is the high visualization the chart offers. Using different kind of colors, tasks can be categorized like those carried out, these in progress and that which will follow in the future. This enables the managers and the team members, taking part in a task, to see, based on the initial calculations, in which condition the current works are and what will follow after the finishing of each task. | ||
+ | In addition to the above advantages, there are some more examples derived from the part of the methodology. These are the following: | ||
+ | * The clear illustration of the length and the sequence of operations | ||
+ | * The easy and quick construction of it | ||
+ | * The ease that even a non-skilled person can understand the information the Gantt chart provides the user. | ||
+ | * It is very simple to understand and easily drawn. | ||
=Annotated bibliography= | =Annotated bibliography= | ||
<references /> | <references /> |
Revision as of 11:46, 21 September 2015
Introduction
This article has been created on behalf of the course 42433 Advanced Engineering Project, Program and Portfolio Management E15 and the assignment that all the students have been enrolled to the course have to deliver before 29/09/2015. The article has been defined and it should follow the following structure:
- Big Idea: In this chapter a description about Gantt chart will be given. More detail, a throwback about this project management tool and the fields that it is used. In addition to that, the theory that this tool is based on will be described and finally how this theory reflects on the use of Gantt chart.
- Application: This is the second chapter of the Wiki article and here it will be explained how to use the Gantt chart. To be more effective the illustration of the methodology, an exercise with the whole solution is going to be provided and explained step by step. Moreover, the usage of the tool nowadays and how it has been changed with the passage of time will be explained while finally a discussion about how Gantt chart is related with other methods will be listed.
- Limitations: This is the final chapter of the Wiki article and here it will be explained the limitations and the drawbacks by using the Gantt chart. However, except these disadvantages, there are lots of benefits by the usage of this chart which are considered relevant to be in the same chapter.
- Annotated bibliography: This is the literature that the article is based on. All the references (3-10) have to be reported and regarding this, a small abstract per reference should be written in order to explain where each of it has contributed for this article to be written.
Contents |
Big Idea
Throwback
The first form of the Gantt chart was invented in 1890 and the man behind it was Karol Adamiecki. Adamiecki was not widely known for his contribution to the Gantt chart because his work was published in Polish. However, 15 years later it was the turn of Henry Gantt to develop a new version of this chart which took his name. The popularity of the new type of chart was so intensive in western countries that any other chart similar to this, tended to be associated with Henry Gantt by taking also his name. The main reason of why this chart was so well known is because of its use during the World War I by the United States.
Methodology
The Gantt chart provides a graphical representation of a project that helps the design, the coordination and the specialization of works on a project. A Gantt chart is constructed with a horizontal axis representing the total time span of the project, which is divided into intervals (days, weeks, or months) and a vertical axis representing the tasks that make up the project. The usage of Gantt chart makes necessary the development of a plan. It is very easy to be used because no special design skills are required to be designed and this was one of the reasons that became widely accepted. Designing a project on a chart, helps the involvers easily notice what are their responsibilities of each one of them and in addition to that, when to start the job they are assigned to work and when to have to finish it. The layout is easy to read by all involved on it and not only to its creator. The Gantt chart shows what has been done on a project based on the initial design and at what stage is the execution. Moreover, it records the progress of the project based on time. Even if something is not in parallel with the initial timetable but there are delays, the chart can show which activity is scheduled fault [1] .
Application
Usage
The Gantt chart is a very significant tool for the study period of a project. In particular, it can be used in planning the future operations in a project, in the availability of the resources and for managing the progress of a project in terms of the date of completion. Therefore, the most important use is to monitor the progress of a project. By its usage, all the activities can be controlled and at any time, necessary actions can be taken in case of some activity is away from its temporal context. To design a chart Gantt, the first thing required, is to list all the project activities and the corresponding duration time of them. Then follows the marking of all the activities on a graph form, all activities are designed and finally the analysis is presented. On the horizontal axis of the graph, the time is placed in appropriate divisions that fit the needs and the duration of the project, while on the vertical axis, the titles of the project activities are placed. Usually, the placement order is like, upwards these which start earlier and downwards those which start later, without this being a fast rule. The placement of the activities may be random or following other criteria without these affecting the correctness of the chart. The actions are described either with their codes or by using code numbers mentioning specific tasks. On the main part of the diagram, the bars of time are placed for each operation and in horizontal provision. The length of each task is proportional to the duration of time which is required for the completion. Each bar begins from the point where the horizontal axis corresponds to the time of initiation of this action. Gantt was the man who expanded using the chart in order to visualize the process of the works. He mapped a new rod along the first one representing the scheduled task (programming line). The second bar (progress bar) shows the portion of the work that has already been performed. The position of the progress bar, relatively to the programming line, indicates the completion rate of the work and the residual duration until the completion. This is achieved by a vertical line, indicating the time when the project progress control is made.
Example
In order to understand how the theory is applied to practice, it is appropriate to cite a virtual example of project of the Technical University of Denmark. This example does not have any relationship with any events or similarities of reality.
Exercise
The Organization and Management Department of the Technical University of Denmark organizes one-day conference on the "Electronic commerce". The organizing committee has set out what needs to be done and the challenge is to identify how many days are needed for the preparation of the conference. Also keen to establish a program of the event, which will help it to carry out its target within accepted timeframes and simultaneously will allow it to control all intermediary activities. The table below shows the immediately foregoing activities required for the organization of the workshop.
Solution
To manage the timing of the project and in order the critical path to be calculated, the applied method is PERT/CPM. The results of calculations appear in the following table.
It is observed that the activities B, C, D, H J and L are critical and they combine the critical path. These activities must be completed as they initially planned, otherwise the organizing of the workshop will be delayed. The sum of the length of the activities of the critical path is 53 days no matter how much is the earlier or the slower time of expiry of the critical activity L. Therefore, the organizing committee should start the preparations at least 53 days before the scheduled day of the event, so they can carry out all the necessary activities.
In the underneath figure is given the Gantt chart for this project. The duration is in days.
On the following table it is described the earliest start of each activity. However, there are tasks which can be delayed without affecting the whole process of the project. This figure is lying below. The duration is in days.
Finally, in order to be understood the difference between the earlier and the slower starting time, a figure with four different colours is given. Black colour is for the earlier start of a task, red colour is for the latest start, orange colour is when the ending of the earlier start matches with the beginning of the slower start of an activity, while the green colour is the critical path where the activity cannot be delayed. This snapshot is given beneath. The duration is in days.
Usage Nowadays
Nevertheless the Gantt chart withstood the test during the passage of time. Changes were made and weaknesses improved. Milestones were added showing specific points in time (mainly six months) during which, tasks have to be completed and indexes showing when this activity had started and when it ended. Over on solid rods, signs are placed indicating the importance of each task (critical controls, revisions). In this case, the units of time are placed by dates. The relations of interdependence of individual operations may be displayed with arrows connecting rods (operations) making by that the Gantt chart a network. However, there are lots of times that it is simpler to have separately the Gantt chart from the relationship network of the project.
Software
Technology is changing at a very fast pace and graphs which were displayed manually in sheets of paper before, have been replaced by programs nowadays. Such programs are the followings:
Using this kind of software, users' lives have been facilitated and in principal, they can save time and control better the outcome of a plan. In the past, it was very time consuming for managers to draw a project and the whole processes of it, mainly because of the changes happened during this, since the project should be drawn from the beginning.
The following video shows how Gantt chart is constructed using the smartsheet.
Discussion
discuss how other project management methods related to Gantt charts (e.g. how it needs a WBS, relationship to network plans, critical path etc.)
Limitations
Drawbacks
The greater disadvantages of the Gant chart are the following:
- First of all, the whole estimations must be completed before the chart is drawn. This can lead in another one drawback which is the difficulty for a proper reflect of two different dates in the same project. This usually occurs when an attempt to record the shorter or slower starting time for work is made. Therefore, any changes will render the chart useless and would require the re-creation from the beginning.
- Gantt charts do not have great intelligence capabilities, so commonly they are used in less complex projects. That is happening because they are insufficient in project planning, because the interdependencies of individual works are not shown. In other words, it is not evident which tasks should be completed to allow the start of execution of a certain work which is linked with the previous one. Moreover it does not show the effect of a delay or acceleration in some phase of the project.
- Another drawback is the difficulty in the adjustment when changes occur in the period of execution of some actions or activities. In addition to that, there is the difficulty of implementing them in projects with a large number of actions, because of the considerable space required by the portrayal.
- It is potentially overly complex. Anyone who has ever worked on projects which looked like the Gantt chart can understand how big sometimes can it shows and therefore how difficult it is to be read. For very large and special projects, companies typically hire skilled and qualified managers in order to construct the diagram according to the experience they have received. However, this strategy is very costly for small businesses as opposed to large ones which may be able to afford this cost.
- A further disadvantage, which could be referred as a subclass of the immediately above drawback, is the presentation of the diagram to a single piece of paper. Usually complex projects need much more sheets to be captured. Nowadays, this is not a drawback because of the technology. Nevertheless, it was a major problem in the past.
- Finally, there is a weakness in the depiction of the interdependencies among the activities of the projects and inability for the presentation of critical action activities for the successful completion of the entire project. This is obvious to notice because the Gantt chart does not highlight the WBS elements with the highest risk of failure or delay the project.
Therefore, the chart does not show the whole picture of the project. It shows the works that they need to be done and the timeframe within each of them must be finished. However, the chart does not show separately the percentage of each of the project and what human resources are required in each work to run smoothly.
However, with the passage of time, several drawbacks have been eliminated, or they are not as significant as they were in the past or, even some of these still exist, it is not so tedious and time consuming to correct a defect during the process of a project. Naturally, technology has contributed to eliminate this kind of issues and drawbacks through the software such as those mentioned in the previous chapter.
Benefits
The greater benefits of the Gantt chart are the following:
- For the proper organization of activities. To construct a successful Gantt chart, initially it is required to be properly organized. This means that all the activities must be categorized, in order to record how long it takes for each activity, what is the start and the end time and who is responsible for each activity. By establishing correctly a Gantt chart, there is a greater probability of success or in other words, there are higher levels of the smooth completion of the project, in the required times.
- Moreover, the Gantt chart helps introducing timeframes. This is because some tasks usually base their start to the finish of another (prerequisite task). For this reason, timelines are constructed to be easily understood and visible the duration of an activity and bars are established in order to be perceived the start and the finish time of each one.
- Another significant advantage is the high visualization the chart offers. Using different kind of colors, tasks can be categorized like those carried out, these in progress and that which will follow in the future. This enables the managers and the team members, taking part in a task, to see, based on the initial calculations, in which condition the current works are and what will follow after the finishing of each task.
In addition to the above advantages, there are some more examples derived from the part of the methodology. These are the following:
- The clear illustration of the length and the sequence of operations
- The easy and quick construction of it
- The ease that even a non-skilled person can understand the information the Gantt chart provides the user.
- It is very simple to understand and easily drawn.
Annotated bibliography
- ↑ https://www.mosaicprojects.com.au/Gantt/TheGanttchartaworkingtoolofmanagement.pdf/Gantt_chart:A_working_tool_of_management|Gantt chart: A working tool of management