PMP Exam Tip: The Project Schedule
From the Certification Insider Blog
by Cornelius Fichtner
Cornelius Fichtner help you with your PMP Exam Prep (https://www.project-management-prepcast.com) as well as earn free PDUs (www.pm-podcast.com/pdu). Passing the PMP Exam is tough, but keeping your PMP Certification alive is just as challenging. Preparing for the exam requires an in-depth study of the PMBOK Guide and dedicated study discipline. And once you are PMP certified, then you are required to earn 60 Professional Development Units (PDUs) every 3 years to keep your certification alive. Let me help you make this journey easier with tips and tricks on how to prepare for and pass the exam as well as efficiently earning your PDUs once you are certified.
Recent Posts
Episode 549: How to Bring Clarity to Chaotic Projects
Episode 548: From Project Delivery to Value: How Project Managers Create Real Business Impact
Episode 546: The Real Reason Project Requirements Keep Changing
Episode 544: The Four Pillars of Project Success
Episode 543: Catch Project Trouble Early and Protect Your Delivery
Categories
AGILE,
Agile,
Agile,
Agile Projects,
Annual Plan and Portfolio,
Artificial Intelligence,
Audit,
Best PMP Exam Simulators,
Business Analysis,
Business Analysis,
Business Analysis Practitioner,
Business Management,
CAPM,
Career Development,
CCRS,
Change Management,
Communication Management,
Communications Management,
Earning PDUs,
Education,
Emotional Intelligence Tools,
Entrepreneur,
Free PDUs,
Interpersonal Skills,
Knowledge Areas,
Knowledge Management,
Leadership,
Lessons Learned,
Lessons Learned Management,
Management,
meeting management,
Millennial Project Managers,
Multiple Projects,
NASA,
Opportunity Cost,
PDU,
PDU Podcast,
PDUs,
PDUs: Business Acumen,
PDUs: Not Applicable,
PDUs: Power Skills,
PDUs: Ways of Working,
PgMP®,
Planning,
PM Exam Simulator,
PM Formulas,
PM Podcast,
PM PrepCast,
PMBOK,
PMBOk 8,
PMBOK Guide,
PMBOK® Guide,
PMI,
PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP)® Exam,
PMI Audit,
PMI Educational Foundation,
PMI Global Congress,
PMI Talent Triangle,
PMI Talent Triangle/PDUs: Not Acceptable,
PMI-ACP,
PMI-ACP Certified,
PMI-ACP Eligibility,
PMI-ACP Exam,
PMI-ACP Exam Formulas,
PMI-ACP Exam Prep,
PMI-ACP®,
PMO,
PMO,
PMO,
PMP,
pmp,
PMP Audit,
PMP Cerficiation,
PMP Certification,
PMP ebook,
PMP Exam,
PMP exam coach,
PMP Exam Overview,
PMP Exam Prep,
PMP exam prep material,
PMP Exam Prep Video,
PMP exam sample question,
PMP Exam Tip,
PMP Lessons Learned,
PMP Mock Exam Free,
PMP Mock Exam Online,
PMP Re-certification,
PMP sample question,
PMP Study Materials,
PMP training,
PMP®,
podcast,
Portfolio Management,
Positive Leadership,
Power Skills,
Process Groups,
Professional Development Units,
project,
Project Assumptions,
Project Business,
Project Business Management,
Project Integration Management,
Project Leadership,
Project Management,
Project Management Basics,
Project Management Institute,
Project Management Methodology,
Project Management Podcast,
Project Management Principles,
Project management professional,
Project Management Skills,
Project Management Trends,
project manager,
Project Manager Skills,
Project Manager Soft Skills,
Project Managers,
Project Metrics,
Project Planning,
Project Schedule,
Project Sponsorship,
Project Success,
RAM,
RBS,
Resource Breakdown Structure,
Responsibilities,
Responsibility Assignment Matrix,
Risk Management,
Risky Projects,
Roles,
sample PMP exam,
Situational Project Management,
soft skills,
Strategy implementation,
study,
Study Techniques,
Study Tips,
Teams,
Technical Project Management,
The Agile PrepCast,
Virtual Communication,
Work-Life Balance
Date
In project management, a schedule consists of a list of a project's tasks with intended start and finish dates. Tasks are the lowest element in a schedule; they are not further subdivided. Those items are estimated in terms of resource requirements, budget and duration, linked by dependencies and scheduled. Project Scheduling helps identify all of the tasks that are required to complete a project on time. It adds dependencies between tasks so that if one task slips, the tasks related to it slip.
[On a side note: As we mentioned in last weeks tip, in many organizations the terms "project management plan" and "project schedule" are often used interchangeably. If this is the case in your organization, then please make sure that you understand that for the PMP Exam, these are two distinctly different documents. Please refer back to last week's tip for the discussion of the project management plan.]
Before a project schedule can be created, a project manager will typically have a work breakdown structure (WBS), an effort estimate for each task, and a resource list with availability for each resource. If these are not yet available, it may be possible to create something that looks like a schedule, but it will essentially be a work of fiction. They can be created using various estimation methods. A good best practice is to include the people who will perform the actual work in the estimation process. The reason for this is that a schedule itself is an estimate: each date in the schedule is estimated, and if those dates do not have the buy-in of the people who are going to do the work, the schedule will be inaccurate.
In many industries, such as engineering and construction, the development and maintenance of the project schedule is the responsibility of a full time scheduler or team of schedulers, depending on the size of the project. And though the techniques of scheduling are well developed, they are inconsistently applied throughout industry. Standardization and promotion of scheduling best practices are being pursued by the Association for the Advancement of Cost Engineering (AACE), the Project Management Institute (PMI). In some large corporations, scheduling, as well as cost, estimating, and risk management are organized under the department of project controls.
The PMBOK Guide 4th Edtion says the following about the Project Schedule: As a minimum, the project schedule includes a planned start date and planned finish date for each activity. Develop Schedule is the process of analyzing activity sequences. durations, resource requirements, and schedule constraints to create the project schedule.
Read more about Project Schedule in the PMBOK Guide 4th Edtion from 6.5.3 to 6.5.4
Posted on: August 05, 2012 09:42 AM |
Permalink
Comments (0)
Please login or join to subscribe to this item
Please Login/Register to leave a comment.
|
"Nobody can make you feel inferior without your consent."
- Eleanor Roosevelt
|