Project Management

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How long to develop and maintain a schedule?

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Margaret Love Senior Instructor| Velociteach Greenville, Sc, United States
I realize that the answer depends on many many things, but do you have a rule of thumb that you use when you are thinking about how long it will take you to develop a detailed project schedule? Examples might be 1 week of schedule development for every 2 months of the project duration or 2 weeks for medium-sized projects and 2 months for big projects. This doesn't have to be exact - just wondering about the different heuristics people use.

Same question for maintaining the schedule once the project is underway - 2 hrs a week? 16 hrs a week?
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Mikhail Belov Project director| VK Moscow, Moscow, Russian Federation
Developing of project management plan at all - can take about 5% of the project time, if project is non-standard.
When it's pretty standart (for example, software integration in lots of different companies) - it's can't take much time. As i said earlier, for software integration for expirenced PM for standart project, it takes about 2-4 hours to create one.

Maintain... It's really hard question, because it depends on lots of factors.
Sometimes u need project management team member, who will maintain it 40 hours a week or more. And sometimes u can do it in 15 mins a week.
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Kevin Drake Perth, Western Australia, Australia
I was involved in managing the Olympic games planning stage, and it took us nearly one year for that. and I planned some projects in one week and execution was 2 -3 weeks.
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Vincent Guerard Coach - Trainer - Speaker - Advisor| Freelance Mont-Royal, Quebec, Canada
Margaret,

Very interesting question. I suspect it would be influenced by industry. Not sure there is an easy way to evaluate, experience.

On a multi-year construction project, the schedule gets limited detail to start and is progressively detail in course of execution. Often adding three-month detail. A team of people is in place to complement, maintain and update.

In aerospace, airplanes are base on a common frame but customize to client needs. I suspect most have a basic template that covers most of the requirement.

Some repeating type of project may take hours to get the first level of detail by using a prepared template to start.
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1 reply by Mikhail Belov
May 17, 2018 9:18 AM
Mikhail Belov
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Vincent, rolling-wave planning i bet pretty good way to plan ;)

While i put my answer to Margaret, for me was next assumption:
time i used to plan at all, and make all plans and first-step plans to start - time i used to develop.
All other time - is time to maintain it, because, looking to the question, for me, adding new details, like new wave it rolling-wave, is time to maintain. You already get most of management plans, u just adding details.

Maybe, i'm not right, but, if we make assumption, that any planning we count - ur absolutely right, but while Margaret asks in view of developing and maintaining, she mean the way to plan to start project work, and all other time to plan - is to maintain.
IMHO.

Sorry for my sometimes bad english :)
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Mikhail Belov Project director| VK Moscow, Moscow, Russian Federation
May 17, 2018 8:58 AM
Replying to Vincent Guerard
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Margaret,

Very interesting question. I suspect it would be influenced by industry. Not sure there is an easy way to evaluate, experience.

On a multi-year construction project, the schedule gets limited detail to start and is progressively detail in course of execution. Often adding three-month detail. A team of people is in place to complement, maintain and update.

In aerospace, airplanes are base on a common frame but customize to client needs. I suspect most have a basic template that covers most of the requirement.

Some repeating type of project may take hours to get the first level of detail by using a prepared template to start.
Vincent, rolling-wave planning i bet pretty good way to plan ;)

While i put my answer to Margaret, for me was next assumption:
time i used to plan at all, and make all plans and first-step plans to start - time i used to develop.
All other time - is time to maintain it, because, looking to the question, for me, adding new details, like new wave it rolling-wave, is time to maintain. You already get most of management plans, u just adding details.

Maybe, i'm not right, but, if we make assumption, that any planning we count - ur absolutely right, but while Margaret asks in view of developing and maintaining, she mean the way to plan to start project work, and all other time to plan - is to maintain.
IMHO.

Sorry for my sometimes bad english :)
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Margaret Love Senior Instructor| Velociteach Greenville, Sc, United States
Thank you all!
Yes, I was asking about the initial development for the first wave. And then I was asking about the time for weekly updates of that first wave. Understandably, elaborating more detail in additional waves will take more time in the future.

My experience (18-36 month IT projects) has been about 5% of total project duration for initial schedule development (not including all the other planning) and then 8-12 hrs per week to manage the schedule. This includes time to gather information, which is the most time-consuming part of it.

I was just wondering if that was ballpark across the board or specific to my projects.

Also, I say "1 hr spent developing and managing a good schedule saves 8 hrs of project delay". But honestly I made that up. :-) Do you think there's any truth in it?
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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
Margaret -

What are you counting as schedule development effort? Is it purely the act of taking your network diagram, resource info and so on and loading it into a scheduling tool or do you include everything from defining the activities (below the WBS work package level) onwards?

Kiron
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1 reply by Margaret Love
May 18, 2018 10:05 AM
Margaret Love
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I was including gathering information, defining activities, sequencing, estimating, assigning resources, leveling the work, developing the initial wave of the schedule - the whole ball of wax up to baselining the first wave of the schedule.
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Sergio Luis Conte Helping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based Organizations Buenos Aires, Argentina
Project management activities take 20% of total project time. From those 20% time to planning is 7%. Obviously it will depend on the environment.
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1 reply by Margaret Love
May 18, 2018 10:05 AM
Margaret Love
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Thank you!
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Margaret Love Senior Instructor| Velociteach Greenville, Sc, United States
May 17, 2018 1:25 PM
Replying to Kiron Bondale
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Margaret -

What are you counting as schedule development effort? Is it purely the act of taking your network diagram, resource info and so on and loading it into a scheduling tool or do you include everything from defining the activities (below the WBS work package level) onwards?

Kiron
I was including gathering information, defining activities, sequencing, estimating, assigning resources, leveling the work, developing the initial wave of the schedule - the whole ball of wax up to baselining the first wave of the schedule.
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1 reply by Kiron Bondale
May 18, 2018 10:24 AM
Kiron Bondale
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A lot depends on the scheduling approach used. For example, if we need a comprehensive end-to-end schedule at the lowest level of detail for a deterministic/waterfall type project, that will take significantly more effort than we'd spend on a project following an adaptive lifecycle or using a rolling wave planning approach.

Kiron
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Margaret Love Senior Instructor| Velociteach Greenville, Sc, United States
May 17, 2018 3:53 PM
Replying to Sergio Luis Conte
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Project management activities take 20% of total project time. From those 20% time to planning is 7%. Obviously it will depend on the environment.
Thank you!
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Kiron Bondale Retired | Mentor| Retired Welland, Ontario, Canada
May 18, 2018 10:05 AM
Replying to Margaret Love
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I was including gathering information, defining activities, sequencing, estimating, assigning resources, leveling the work, developing the initial wave of the schedule - the whole ball of wax up to baselining the first wave of the schedule.
A lot depends on the scheduling approach used. For example, if we need a comprehensive end-to-end schedule at the lowest level of detail for a deterministic/waterfall type project, that will take significantly more effort than we'd spend on a project following an adaptive lifecycle or using a rolling wave planning approach.

Kiron
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