Gantt chart and Scheduling techniques

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Abstract

The abstract should not exceed about 250-300 words. It should consist of the summary of your article, as well as a table of contents with bullet points explaining the content of each section. Please already include key references in the abstract.

The scheduling techniques that are going to be explained in this article are Gantt and CPM - hereby Network Diagram - have they works - have to use them in practice - have they are connected and supplement each other
Goal: to simplify the different scheduling techniques, how to use them and connecting them to each other

Scheduling

A plan can only show the practicability of accomplishing its objectives when the actions and activities in the plan, are put together in a schedule that illustrates when each action or activity will be carried out.

Today there is many different methods and approaches to scheduling. It can either be by computer-based planning tools or done manually [1].
Tools like Gantt chart and Critical Path Method (CPM) are tools often used in the planning process of a project.

Gantt chart

Definition

"A graphic display of schedule-related information. In the typical bar chart, schedule activities or work breakdown structure components are listed down the left side of the chart, dates are shown across the top, and activity durations are shown as date-placed horizontal bars." [2]

When and why use Gantt chart?

Assess how long a plan should take, lay out the order in which tasks need to bed carried out Manage the dependencies between tasks See what should have been achieved at a certain point in the time See how remedial action may bring the plan back on course

How to create a Gantt chart?

There are many ways to create a Gantt chart and in the end, it depends on the project.


How to create a Gantt chart. Received from: [1]
Creating a Gantt chart step by step

Step 1 - Creating the axes: Create a sheet with vertical and horizontal axes. The vertical axis represents the activities, and the horizontal axis represents the timescale. To make the Gantt chart more clear and get and an idea of the total time that needs for each activity, adding the calendar time in timescale is a good idea, see figure 1. [3]

Step 2 - Creating the bars: Create bars representing each activity. The length of the bars should be proportional to the duration time. If there are multiple activities it is a good idea to create a summary or hammock activity, see figure 1. By using hammock activities the project can be summarized in fewer activities, which gives a better overview of the project, but in the same time, you can still go into the level of detail with the activity group in the hammock. The bar of the hammock activity begins when the earliest activity in the group starts and end when the latest activity in the group ends, see figure 1. [3]

Figure 1: How to create a Gantt chart. Reproduced from: [3]


Step 3 - Revise til Gantt chart: Have a look at the Gantt chart again. Are all the important activities there and are they logically placed in the chart? What about the timescale? Are the durations reasonable? Make the necessary changes in the chart. [3]


Critical path method (CPM)

"A schedule network analysis technique used to determine the amount of scheduling flexibility (the amount of float) on various logical network paths in the project schedule network, and to determine the minimum total project duration. Early start and finish dates are calculated by means of a forward pass, using a specified start date. Late start and finish dates are calculated by means of a backward pass, starting from a specified completion date, which sometimes is the project early finish date determined during the forward pass calculation.” [4]

caption

Constructing a Network Diagram

Checklist when creating a Network Diagram
1.
2.
caption

The connection

References

  1. Managing Successful Projects with PRINCE2. (2017). Managing Successful Projects With Prince2. The Stationery Office Ltd.
  2. Guide, A., 2001. Project management body of knowledge (pmbok® guide). In Project Management Institute. (p. 436)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Milosevic, D. Z., & Martinelli, R. J. (2016). Project management toolbox: tools and techniques for the practicing project manager. John Wiley & Sons. [[2]]
  4. Guide, A., 2001. Project management body of knowledge (pmbok® guide). In Project Management Institute. (p. 431)
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