Outputs:
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- Project Time Schedule: A detailed guide that outlines each activity’s start and finish dates, ensuring the project remains on track.
- Schedule Formats: Milestone charts, bar charts, and project schedule diagrams are standard formats used to represent the project timeline visually.
- Schedule Baseline: A reference point established through discussions and used throughout the project to monitor progress.
- Schedule Data: This includes milestones, activities, assumptions, constraints, and other relevant data. Additional tools like resource histograms and best/worst-case scenarios can also be part of this data.
- Updates: Lists and estimates may need to be revised based on the finalized schedule.
Tools & Techniques:
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- Schedule Network Analysis: A technique to determine project activities’ early and late start/finish dates.
- Critical Path Method (CPM): Identifies the longest path in the schedule with the least amount of slack.
- Critical Chain Method: Focuses on resource-constrained activities as the primary concern.
- Resource Leveling: Adjusts the schedule based on resource constraints.
- What-if Scenario Analysis: Evaluates potential changes and their impacts on the schedule.
- Leads and Lags: Adjust activities’ start and finish dates to align with dependencies and sequences better.
- Schedule Compression: Techniques like crashing (adding resources) and fast-tracking (overlapping activities) to shorten the project schedule without altering the project scope.
The Develop Schedule Process is a comprehensive approach to ensuring a project remains on track. It involves detailed planning, analysis, and adjustments to ensure the project’s objectives are met within the stipulated time frame. Properly developing and managing a project schedule is essential for completing a project.
