Seri MS Project: kenapa status late, padahal tanggal belum lewat.

Jangan gemes, dgn ms project,

Konsep project management, setidaknya harus ada kita pelajari, dan jangan pernah membayangkan ms project adalah seperti Excel.

contoh, tanggal masih jauh, tapi statusnya Late-terlambat.

Status late

 

caranya adalah, di menu project, masuk project information:

ubahlah status date dan start date dgn benar.

project Information.PNG

 

setelah diubah sbb:

Project Information_after

 

setelah anda ok in,

bagaimana statusnya sekarang, dari late menjadi future task.

status after tune up

terimakasih

Seri MS Project: Mengubah working time

Liburan sudah tiba, asyikkk,

Jangan lupa ketika memulai project, semua hari libur atau cuti massal, diperhitungkan,

Bagaimana caranya:

 

di menu project, klik change working time:

change working time 1

 

Isi manual libur resmi nasional atau cuti massal,

isi namenya,pilih tanggal mulai  liburnya, di start dan finish, bila hanya libur satu hari, start dan finish datenya sama.

bila anda bekerja di MS Project server, minta admin anda utk mengedit, bila terpaksanya , anda bisa create new calendar.

 

setelah done, jgn lupa, masuk ke resource sheet, ( menu task, klik gantt chart plng kiri)

setelah masuk di resource sheet, ubah, base, calender resource anda ke calender yg telah edit-sesuaikan hr liburnya.

resource sheet

check, di activites project anda, apakah ada task yg masih masuk di hr libur.

 

terimakasih

 

apakah anda frustasi dgn microsoft project?

Michael A. Steinberg, PMP, Senior Project Management Consultant, Project Assistants, Inc. (MPA member, Atlanta, GA)

   How many of you felt frustrated with Microsoft Project not behaving like you expect it to?

1.      It’s not a spreadsheet

This may seem obvious, but it’s worth a mention.  A new user may look at the grid-like layout of the default “Gantt Chart” view and assume that because it looks like a spreadsheet that it also behaves like a spreadsheet.  They quickly discover that the tool automatically performs some scheduling functions, like, for example, changing start and finish dates.   Not understanding how or why it does this, they quickly become intimidated and abandon the tool.  The bottom line:  Project is a scheduling tool.  Scheduling tools will change dates!

  • How many of you felt frustrated with Microsoft Project not behaving like you expect it to?

2.      Know the “Basic Scheduling Formula”

Duration = Work/Units

Understanding of the meaning of these three terms (See Project Help), as well as the formula itself, is key to understanding how Project schedules a task.  To anyone who has changed any of these three parameters on a task, without understanding this formula, the changes that Project makes to the other parameter(s) can sometimes seem totally unexpected or bizarre.

In my experience, not knowing this formula is the biggest cause of frustration that people experience with the tool.   Knowing the formula will not stop Project from doing things that you don’t expect, but it will allow you to know what changes to make so that it will do what you want.

3.      Use Task Types correctly

What will Project do when you change either work, duration or units on a task – that is, which of the others will it change and which will it keep constant?   The Task Type parameter is what tells Project how to behave.  The general rule is:

If work, units or duration is fixed and you change one of the others, Project will recalculate the third, but wont change the one that’s “fixed”.

Even if you don’t set task type explicitly, each task defaults to one of the three – and the system default is “Fixed Units”.  This can cause problems in many cases, because since most technical tasks are driven by the amount of work effort required, they should generally be “fixed work”.

4.      Estimate work, rather than duration

As mentioned in the previous tip, most technical tasks are driven by the amount of work effort, not by duration.  Therefore, it is a good practice to estimate how much heads-down work effort a task is likely to need, and estimate the number (or fractions) of resources (which is the definition  of units), and let the tool calculate duration.

Duration is dependent on many things – not only work effort and assignment units, but calendars, task splits and a number of other factors.  Often, when we estimate duration first, we are really applying the basic scheduling formula (Tip number 2) in our heads. Why not let the tool do the math!

5.      Understand “Effort Driven”

If a task is effort driven, the total task work will remain the same if you add or remove resources.  If you add a resource, the total amount of work effort will be divided among all of the resources, including the new ones, thereby reducing duration.

A good practice when adding resources to a task, even if you do understand this concept, is to explicitly specify the work and units for each assignment, so you remain in control of the division of labor.  Do this in a usage view or the bottom half of a split-screen view.

6.      Don’t assign everyone at 100%

When you assign a resource to a task, the default level of “assignment units” is 100%.  This means that the resource will be assigned full time on that task for its entire duration!  Is that what you always want?  Probably not, but it is easy to fall into that trap.  This will result in a serious distortion of their true allocation.  Be especially careful when people are assigned to concurrent (parallel) tasks.  Be sure not to assign them full time in these cases.

7.      Minimize constraints

Constraints, such as “Start no earlier than”, or “Finish no later than”, are really telling Project not to schedule a particular task.  Sure, there are legitimate uses for them, such as a dependency on a truly external event.  However, the best practice is to estimate each task and its dependencies, and let Project adjust the schedule.  This is called “Dynamic Scheduling”.

Hard (or “inflexible”) constraints such as “Finish no later than”, should be avoided if possible.  Hard constraints can cause scheduling conflicts, where Project may be forced to choose to ignore either a constraint or a dependency – again, a situation where you are tying one hand behind its back.

“What if my sponsor mandates an end date?” you say.  Use deadlines instead.  Deadlines will flag a missed milestone but will not disable scheduling of the task.

One note about constraints:  When you manually key in a start date, you are effectively setting a “Start no earlier than” constraint.  That is why project sometimes ignores a date that you type in.

8.      Avoid estimating Percent Complete

Estimating percent complete is not a best practice for many reasons, not the least of which is its vulnerability to abuse.  A better practice is to ask a resource (or manager) to report actual work and to estimate remaining work, and let the tool calculate percent work complete.  (In fact, when we estimate percent complete, aren’t we really mentally estimating those two amounts and doing the math in our heads?)

Another note:  In Project, the “% Complete” field really means “% duration complete”, as distinguished from the “% work complete” field.  Make sure you understand the difference and which you want to use.

9.      Heed the Planning Wizard

Yes, those annoying messages like “This action will cause a scheduling conflict…” are really your friend.  They warn you of potential problems, like the one described in the previous tip.  Deal with them immediately, because their consequences may become more difficult to trace back to their root causes when they are no longer fresh in your mind.

10.  Leveling is not a magic bullet

As anyone who has used automatic leveling knows, there is really no magic to it.  It simply delays the start (or continuation) of tasks in your schedule until resources are no longer overallocated.  This is not always practical.

The best practice is to use some thought when first assigning resources to tasks.  For example, don’t assign the same person full time to two tasks at the same time.  If you are careful, leveling can work for you.  If you are not, it is sure to make things worse!

11.  Tools do not replace communication

With all of the collaboration tools in the Enterprise Project Management (EPM) environment, like notifications and SharePoint, one might be tempted to think the tool can communicate for us.  Wrong!  Ninety percent of a project manager’s job is interpersonal communication.  EPM tools will facilitate communication and relieve us of some of the more mundane tasks so we can spend more time communicating – but it won’t replace it.

12.  Tool expertise will not make you a perfect project manager

This point expands on the previous tip.  Microsoft Project is a great scheduling tool.  But that’s all it is.  PMI® identifies 47 processes that a project manager performs.  Project really only supports a handful of those processes.  As they say, “a PM tool makes a good manager better faster and a bad manager worse faster.”  Microsoft Project will facilitate some of our more routine scheduling tasks, so that we can devote the bulk of our time truly managing our projects.

Project management is not only schedule.

 

[1] Thanks to Dr. Fred Oettle, Director of Training at Project Assistants, for articulating these concepts in our training.

MS project -What causes overallocation, and manually resolved an over allocation.

MS project -What causes over allocation, and manually resolved an over allocation.

• You can find on MS project : in Tools menu –click Level Resources

• Resource leveling is the process of delaying or splitting a resource’s work on a task to resolve an overallocation.

• The options in the Level Resources dialog box enable you to set parameters about
how you want Project to resolve resource overallocations.

• Project will attempt to resolve such overallocations when you choose to level resources. Depending on the options you choose, this might involve delaying the start date of an assignment or task or splitting the work on the task.

• Resource leveling is a powerful tool, it does a few basic things:
o Delays tasks, splits tasks, and delays resource assignments.

• Resource leveling is a great fine-tuning tool, but it cannot replace your good judgment about resource availability.

Sekilas Microsoft Project server Business intelligence

Microsoft Project server Business intelligence,

Judul nya keren ya :),

Business intelligence seperti yg anda ketahui adalah big data, menemukan emas dlm timbunan data2.

Pernah ke warehouse ?

Yg luas besar berhektar2,
Kontras dgn barang2 besar ribuan dan atau yg kecil ratusan ribu, bgmn cara me manage utk tdk deadstock atau  kita scrap dibuang percuma.

Konsepnya semua data adalh berharga namun bgmn cara mengolah menjadi lbh emas.

Kl term marketing , analisa data, behavor -opinion- user attitude- how they use- compare ,
categorized by segmentasi :needs, user, pattern, buying criteria, lalu create atau enhance product,
Menjadi limpahan revenue derass.

Sama juga diproject,

Didlm portfolio project ada byk project itu mungkin setahun, bgmn bila 5 thn?

Berapa task activities didlmnya?

Berapa resource utilization?
Berapa rata2 task yg paling lama dikerjakan atau yg byk memakai resource.
Brp rata2 waktu yg dibutuhkan utk setiap tahapan projects?

Dr project mandates ke kick off meeting brp rata2 waktu.
Dr bast ke  milestone  AR payment brp waktu.
Apa saja issue atau risk yg sering muncul ?

Perumpamaan seperti menggunakan pivot, anda bisa mengolah data yg bisa berguna utk meningkatkan kualitas dan efisiensi.
Gaji ke 13 dan 14 pegawai negeri belum turun tp harga2 sudah berubah, kondisi cash flow yg terancam akan jadi kontras bila tdk segera dilakukan efisiensi.

Inti dr BI di msp server adlh:

Measurements : day, week, currency dll

Dimensioning: task dlm wbs, wbs dlm project dll.

Attributes: sebagai pendamping utk lbh mendetailkan dimensioning.

Apa yg dihasilkan bisa menjadi bahan top executive, sdh jadi kewajiban kita yg dibawah memberikan panduan data utk arah kebijakan yg lbh tepat real dan cepat.

Reporting tsb juga bisa menjadi lesson learned yg sangat akurat, bukan subjective atau dibuat2. Atau malah kita tdk pernah menggunakan data lesson learned.??

.tenang itu sudah jamak, wkkk.

Msh byk lagi yg blm dibahaas , 🙂