Ms 01
Ms 01
Ms 01
Step by Step
Cindy Lewis
Carl Chatfield
Timothy Johnson
Microsoft Project 2019 Step by Step
Published with the authorization of Microsoft Corporation by:
Pearson Education, Inc.
ISBN-13: 978-1-5093-0742-5
ISBN-10: 1-5093-0742-7
01 19
Trademarks
Microsoft and the trademarks listed at http://www.microsoft.com on the
“Trademarks” webpage are trademarks of the Microsoft group of companies.
All other marks are property of their respective owners.
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Publisher
Mark Taub
Acquisitions Editor
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Development Editor
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Managing Editor
Sandra Schroeder
Copy Editor
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Indexer
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Proofreader
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Technical Editor
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Editorial Assistant
Cindy Teeters
Cover Designer
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Compositor
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Contents at a Glance
Part 5: Appendixes
Glossary
Index
About the authors
Contents
Author Acknowledgments
Introduction
Who this book is for
The Step by Step approach
Download the practice files
E-book edition
Adapt procedure steps
How to get support & provide feedback
Errata & book support
Stay in touch
5 Set up resources
Practice files
Set up work resources
Enter the maximum capacity for work resources
Enter work resource pay rates
Adjust working time in a resource calendar
Set up cost resources
Document resources by using notes
Skills review
Practice tasks
Set up work resources
Enter the maximum capacity for work resources
Enter work resource pay rates
Adjust working time in a resource calendar
Set up cost resources
Document resources by using notes
18 Customize Project
Practice files
Share custom elements between plans
Record and run macros
Edit macros
Customize the ribbon and Quick Access Toolbar
Skills review
Practice tasks
Share custom elements between plans
Record and run macros
Edit macros
Customize the ribbon and Quick Access Toolbar
Part 5: Appendixes
Glossary
Index
About the authors
Author Acknowledgments
Thank you to the many people who supported me while writing this book. I
thank my technical editor, Christine Flora, for her insightful thoughts and
technical expertise. I thank James Mills, Jr., for his expertise as a co-author of
Chapter 21 and his great collaboration. A special thank you to my husband,
my family, and my friends who supported me during this process. Thank you
also out to the amazing editorial team who ensured the book’s quality.
—Cindy Lewis
Introduction
Welcome! This Step by Step book has been designed so that you can read it
from the beginning to learn about Microsoft Project 2019 and then build your
skills as you learn to perform increasingly specialized procedures.
Alternatively, if you prefer, you can jump in wherever you need ready
guidance for performing tasks. The how-to steps are delivered crisply and
concisely—just the facts. You’ll also find informative, full-color graphics
that support the instructional content.
Important
Project 2019 is not available from the book’s website. Be sure to install
that program before you work through the procedures and practice tasks
in this book.
You can open the files that are supplied for the practice tasks and save the
finished versions of each file. If you later want to repeat practice tasks, you
can download the original practice files again.
The following table lists the practice files for this book.
SimpleAssignControlWork.mpp
SimpleAssignCostResource.mpp
SimpleAssignWorkResource.mpp
SimpleTrackBaseline.mpp
ViewTaskPath.mpp
10: Fine-tune task details Ch10 FineTuneTasks.mpp
FineTuneResources.mpp
TrackTimephasedWork.mpp
TrackWork.mpp
UpdateBaseline.mpp
CustomizeProjectB.mpp
ShareInformation.mpp
ConsolidatePlansB.mpp
ShareResourcesA.mpp
ShareResourcesB.mpp
GenerateReports.mpp
ProductBacklog.mpp
RecordProgress.mpp
TemplateReset.mpp
WorkingSprint.mpp
Ebook edition
If you’re reading the ebook edition of this book, you can do the following:
You can purchase and download the ebook edition from the Microsoft Press
Store at https://www.microsoftpressstore.com/store/microsoft-project-2019-
step-by-step-9781509307425.
1. On the Task tab, in the View group, click the Gantt Chart button.
If the command is in a list, our instructions use this format:
1. On the View tab, in the Data group, click the Filter arrow and then, in
the Filter list, click Summary Tasks.
If differences between your display settings and ours cause a button to appear
differently on your screen than it does in this book, you can easily adapt the
steps to locate the command. First click the specified tab and then locate the
specified group. If a group has been collapsed into a group list or under a
group button, click the list or button to display the group’s commands. If you
can’t immediately identify the button you want, point to likely candidates to
display their names in ScreenTips.
Multistep procedural instructions use this format:
1. On the View tab, in the Resource Views group, click the Resource
Sheet button to display the Resource Sheet view.
2. On the View tab, in the Data group, click the Tables button and then
click Cost.
The instructions in this book assume that you’re interacting with onscreen
elements on your computer by clicking (with a mouse, touchpad, or other
hardware device). If you’re using a different method—for example, if your
computer has a touchscreen interface and you’re tapping the screen (with
your finger or a stylus)—substitute the applicable tapping action when you
interact with a user interface element.
Instructions in this book refer to Project user interface elements that you click
or tap on the screen as buttons and refer to physical buttons that you press on
a keyboard as keys, to conform to the standard terminology used in
documentation for these products.
When the instructions tell you to enter information, you can do so by typing
on a connected external keyboard, tapping an onscreen keyboard, or even
speaking aloud, depending on your computer setup and your personal
preferences.
How to get support & provide feedback
The following sections provide information on errata, book support,
feedback, and contact information.
Stay in touch
Let’s keep the conversation going! We’re on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/MicrosoftPress.
Part 1: Get started with Microsoft
Project
In this chapter
Meet the Project program
Meet the Project family
See the new features in Project 2019
Review features in earlier versions
Take a project manager’s perspective
Let’s get started!
Practice files
This chapter has no practice tasks.
Thank you for adding this book to your Microsoft Project 2019 skills
development plan. This book is designed to be a learning and reference
resource. Most of the chapters that follow include hands-on activities in
Project.
This chapter does not involve hands-on work in Project. Instead, read it to
better understand how Project and project management fit with your personal
skills development goals. This chapter introduces you to Project and the field
of project management.
Create plans at the level of detail that’s right for your project. You can
work with summary data initially and then shift to a more detailed
approach when needed.
Control what tasks Project can schedule automatically and which ones
you want to schedule manually.
Manage tasks, resources, work, and costs at whatever level of detail is
appropriate for your project’s needs.
Work with your plan’s data in a variety of views and reports.
Track and manage your plan throughout the life of the project.
Collaborate and share data with others in your organization.
Use resource pools, consolidated projects, and cross-project links to
extend your project-management focus across multiple projects.
Tip
For more information on using Project with the Microsoft SharePoint
and PPM solutions, see Appendix C, “Collaborate: Project, SharePoint,
and PWA.” To learn more about Project Online and Microsoft 365
subscription offerings, go to https://products.office.com/project.
This book focuses on the features in the Project Standard and Project
Professional desktop programs. When a feature that is unique to Project
Professional appears, we give instructions for users of both Project Standard
and Project Professional. If you are a subscriber, follow the book as written
and refer to the Project Professional instructions when unique features are
pointed out.
Tip
If you are a Project subscriber, you might have new or modified features
beyond the ones in the previous list. Your organization determines the
features available to you.
If you’re upgrading to Project 2019 from a previous version, you’re probably
most interested in the differences between the old and new versions and how
they affect you. The following sections list new features that Project 2016,
Project 2013, and Project 2010 introduced. Depending on the version of
Project you are upgrading from, some of these previously new features might
be new to you as well.
Timeline view updates You can display multiple timeline bars with
custom date ranges. For more information, see “Format a timeline
view” in Chapter 16.
Tell Me This is a help and feature search text box on the ribbon. Use it
to quickly find a Project feature (or to find help content about that
feature). For more information, see Chapter 2, “Take a guided tour.”
New themes To change the visual style of Project, you can apply one
of the new Office themes. You do so on the General page of the
Project Options dialog box (available from the File tab).
Good project management does not guarantee the success of every project,
but poor project management often leads to failure.
A core principle of this book’s instructional strategy is that success with
Project is built on success with basic project - management practice.
Although Project is a feature-rich program, mastery of its features alone is no
guarantee of success in project - management. For this reason, this book
includes material about project management best practices. See, for example,
the following:
In this chapter
Explore the Project user interface
Manage files and set options in the Backstage view
Work with schedule details in views
Use reports to check a plan’s status
Practice files
For this chapter, use the TakeGuidedTour practice file from the
Project2019SBS\Ch02 folder. For practice file download instructions, see the
introduction of this book.
This chapter leads you on a quick tour of Project 2019 and highlights the
essential features that make it such a powerful program. You get an
introductory look at many of the Project features and conventions that you’ll
work with throughout this book.
This chapter guides you through procedures related to managing files and
setting options in the Backstage view, working with schedule details in
views, and using reports to check a plan’s status.
Tip
If the Start screen does not appear when you start Project, do the
following: On the File tab, click Options. In the Project Options dialog
box, click General; then under Start Up Options, click Show the Start
Screen When This Application Starts.
As Figure 2-2 shows, you create a new plan by clicking the Blank Project
option on the Start screen. Doing so creates the new plan in the main Project
interface.
FIGURE 2-2 You can see the major parts of the Project interface here;
note the label of the active view along the left edge.
Tip
Some items you see on your screen, such as commands on the ribbon in
the Project window, might differ from what this book shows. This might
depend on your screen resolution and any previous customizations made
to Project on your computer.
The active view (or report) is displayed in the main Project window.
Project can display a single view or multiple views in separate panes.
A multiple-view display is called a split view or combination view.
The view label (or report label) appears along the left edge of the
active view. Project includes dozens of views, so this is a handy
reminder of your currently active view.
The status bar displays important details such as the scheduling mode
of new tasks (manual or automatic) and whether a filter has been
applied to the active view.
You use view shortcuts to quickly switch between recently used views
and reports.
The Zoom Slider zooms the active view or report in or out.
Shortcut menus (also called context menus or right-click menus) and
Mini Toolbars appear when you right-click most items in a view or
report. See Figure 2-4 for an example of a shortcut menu.
FIGURE 2-4 Right-click a task’s name or other value to see available
shortcut menu commands and the Mini Toolbar.
Tip
When you’re not sure what actions you can perform with something you
see in Project, right-click the item as shown in Figure 2-5 to see what
commands are available for that item.
FIGURE 2-5 Right-clicking another item, such as a Gantt bar,
displays different available commands and a different Mini Toolbar.
The File tab takes you to the Backstage view, discussed in the next
section.
The Task tab includes commands for adding, formatting, and
organizing tasks.
With the Resource tab, you add resources to a plan, assign them to
tasks, and manage their workloads.
The Report tab contains commands you use to view reports and
compare two plans.
The Project tab contains commands that usually apply to the entire
plan, such as the command for setting the plan’s working time.
The View tab controls what you see in the Project window and how
that information is displayed.
Tool tabs include the Format tab, the Design tab, and the Layout tab,
among others. A tool tab appears when a certain kind of information is
displayed in the active view or report, or when a certain kind of item is
selected. For example, when a task view such as the Gantt Chart view
is displayed, the commands on the Format tool tab apply to tasks and
Gantt chart items, such as Gantt bars. The current context of the
Format tab is shown above the tab label—Gantt Chart Tools, for
example.
Tip
You can double-click a tab label to collapse or expand the ribbon. You
can also view a collapsed tab by clicking the tab label and then selecting
the command you want.
Let’s look more closely at the tabs shown on the ribbon in Figure 2-6.
As with all tabs on the ribbon, the Task tab contains many commands, all
organized into groups. The Task tab includes the View, Clipboard, and Font
groups, among others.
As Figure 2-7 shows, if you enabled touch input (by clicking the button on
the Quick Access Toolbar in the upper-left corner of the Project window), the
commands on the ribbon appear larger and some lack text labels.
FIGURE 2-7 Turning on touch input makes the commands on the ribbon
easier to tap.
If you’re familiar with Office programs such as Microsoft Word and Excel,
you should have no trouble navigating in the Project user interface.
Manage files and set options in the Backstage view
The Backstage view, available from the File tab and shown in Figure 2-9,
contains customization and sharing options that apply to the entire plan, in
addition to the essential commands for file management such as Open, New,
Print, and Save.
FIGURE 2-9 The options in the Backstage view are organized on tabs
that appear along the left edge of the window.
Here you can see a brief list of the pages in the Backstage view. In most
cases, you can click the tab name to see more options:
The Info page gives you access to the Organizer, a feature that shares
customized elements such as views between plans; for more on the
Organizer, see Chapter 18. The Info page also displays information
about the active plan, including its start and finish date, statistics, and
advanced properties. You’ll work with advanced properties in Chapter
3, “Start a new plan.” If you’re using Project Professional with the
Project Web App, you can also manage Project Web App accounts
here.
The New page displays options for creating a new plan, either from
scratch or based on a template.
Open, Save, Save As, and Close are standard file-management
commands.
The Print page includes options for printing a plan, in addition to the
print preview. You’ll work with printing options in Chapter 7,
“Format and share your plan,” and in Chapter 16, “Format and print
views: In-depth techniques.”
The Share page includes options for Microsoft SharePoint
synchronization and covers attaching a plan to an email message.
The Export page includes options for generating a copy of the plan in
PDF or XML Paper Specification (XPS) format, as well as other
options for exporting content. You’ll work with these features in
Chapter 19, “Share information with other programs.”
The Account page displays connected services and information about
Project, such as version information. With a Microsoft account, you
can use services such as Microsoft OneDrive file storage and roaming
personal settings. When you are signed in, your user information
appears in the upper-right corner of the Project window.
Clicking Options opens the Project Options dialog box. This dialog
box itself contains several pages through which you can adjust a wide
range of default settings and behaviors in Project, such as whether you
want to see the Start screen when Project starts.
When you first start Project and are on the New page of the Backstage
view, you can press the Esc key to open a new blank plan.
You can pin recently opened plans to the Recent Projects list on the
Open page. Right-click a plan name and, in the shortcut menu that
appears, click Pin to List.
You can pin recently opened folders to the Recent Folders list on the
Open page. Right-click a folder name and, in the shortcut menu that
appears, click Pin to List.
You can pin favorite templates to the New page by pointing to the
template and clicking the pin that appears in the lower-right corner of
the template preview.
Tip
Only templates with a sample plan can be pinned.
If you are working offline, you can see templates only from your local
computer.
To exit the Backstage view, click the arrow button in the upper-left
corner of any Backstage page. This takes you back to the plan. You
can also press the Esc key.
To see available templates, click the File tab and then click
New. Templates also appear on the Project Start screen.
In addition, Project can generate a new file based on an existing
file from Project or from another program. For more
information, see Chapter 19.
You can also create templates from your plans to use later or to
share. One common concern with sharing plans is that they
might contain sensitive information, such as resource pay rates.
When you create a template from a plan, you have the option to
clear such information, in addition to schedule progress,
without affecting the original plan.
Click the template you want to create a new plan based on that
template.
To open a plan
To save a plan
2. Select the location and folder where you want to save the plan.
3. In the Save As dialog box, enter a file name and then click Save.
5. Navigate to the folder where you want to create the new template.
6. In the File Name box, enter the template file name that you want and
then click Save.
7. When the Save As Template dialog box opens, select the types of
information, such as resource pay rates, that you want to remove from
the template.
8. Click Save.
FIGURE 2-11 You can set up multiple timeline bars in the Timeline
view.
When you click in the Timeline view, the label above the Format tool tab
changes from Gantt Chart Tools to Timeline Tools as Figure 2-12 shows.
In this case, the commands displayed on the Format tab are specific to the
Timeline view. As you display or select different views, reports, or specific
items in Project, the label above the Format tab changes accordingly.
Next we examine sheet views. The Resource Sheet view shown in Figure 2-
13 displays details about resources in a row-and-column format (called a
table), with one resource per row. Another sheet view, called the Task Sheet
view, lists the task details. Most views in Project have many different tables
available, so you can focus on the type of data that most interests you.
FIGURE 2-13 A sheet view contains a table that organizes information
into rows and columns.
The Resource Sheet view doesn’t tell you much about the tasks to which
resources might be assigned. To see that type of information, you need a
different view.
The Resource Usage view shown in Figure 2-14 groups the tasks to which
each resource is assigned and shows you the work assignments per resource
on a timescale, such as daily or weekly.
FIGURE 2-14 Usage views organize assignments per task or per
resource and present the assignment details against a timescale.
As with the Gantt Chart timescale, you can adjust this timescale by using the
Timescale command on the View tab or the Zoom Slider on the status bar in
the lowerright corner of the Project window. In usage views, you can also
switch to a different table to focus on the type of information that you’re
most interested in.
Another usage view, the Task Usage view, flips the data around to display all
the resources assigned to each task. You’ll work with usage views in Chapter
6, “Assign resources to tasks,” and you’ll analyze your plan starting in
Chapter 9, “Fine-tune task scheduling.”
In Figure 2-15, you can see that a handy split view is the Task Form
combined with a Gantt chart or other view.
FIGURE 2-15 In a split view such as this one, details about the item
selected in the top portion of the view are displayed in the bottom portion
of the view.
In this type of split view, the Gantt chart is the top portion of the view and
the Task Form is the bottom portion. Details about the selected task in the
Gantt Chart view appear in the Task Form. You can also edit values directly
in the Task Form. You will work with the Task Form further in Chapter 6 and
with the similar Resource Form in Chapter 5, “Set up resources.”
Tip
On all split views, the item selected on the top portion of the view
controls the information displayed on the bottom portion of the view.
The top view is the primary view and the bottom view is the secondary
view. If this is not the desired result, use one view instead.
Project has many other views as well. Keep in mind that, in all views in
Project, you are looking at different aspects of the same set of details about a
plan. Even a simple plan can contain too much data to display at one time;
use views to help you focus on the specific details you want.
1. On the View tab, in either the Task Views or Resource Views group,
do one of the following:
If the button for the view you want is shown, click it.
If the button for the view you want is not shown, click Other
Views and then click the view you want.
If the view you want is not listed on the Other Views menu, click
More Views, click the view you want, and then click Apply.
In views with a timescale, such as the Gantt chart, this action adjusts the
timescale. In other views, it changes how much detail is displayed.
On the View tab, in the Zoom group, click the Zoom command
and then click the zoom level you want.
This action applies only to views that include tables (such as the Gantt chart),
not to views that lack tables (such as the Calendar view).
1. On the View tab, in the Data group, click Tables.
If the table you want is not listed, click More Tables, click the
table you want, and then click Apply.
2. In the Details box, click the view you want to load into the bottom pane
of the split view.
1. On the View tab, in the Split View group, select or clear the Timeline
check box.
As Figure 2-17 shows, when you click a table or chart in a report, the Field
List pane appears on the right side of the window.
FIGURE 2-17 Use the Field List to control what data appears in the
selected chart or table in a report.
You use the Field List pane to determine what data to include in the table or
chart. You’ll customize reports in Chapter 7 and in Chapter 17, “Format
reports: In-depth techniques.”
The tool tabs change when a report is displayed or when an item in a report is
selected. Because a report can include a variety of items, such as charts and
tables, Project includes tool tabs both for the overall report and for the
specific types of items within the report.
The Report Tools Design tab displayed in Figure 2-18 includes commands
you can use to control the overall design of a report.
FIGURE 2-18 When a report is displayed, the Report Tools Design tab
is available.
When you are working with a table in a report, the Table Tools Design tab
displayed in Figure 2-19 is available.
The Table Tools Layout tab displayed in Figure 2-20 is available when you
are working with a table in a report.
FIGURE 2-20 Under the Table Tools heading, most commands on the
Design tab apply to the entire table, whereas most commands on the
Layout tab apply to the selected cells, rows, or columns.
As with views, you can display a report and a view in a split-view layout,
which is shown in Figure 2-21.
To display a report
1. On the Report tab, in the View Reports group, click the report
category and then click the specific report you want.
On the View tab, in the Split View group, click Details. In the
Details box, click the view you want to display in the bottom pane
of the split view.
Skills review
In this chapter, you learned how to
Practice tasks
The TakeGuidedTour practice file for these tasks is located in the
Project2019SBS\Ch02 folder.
Important
If you are running Project Professional, Project Online Professional, or
Project Online Premium, make sure your Project desktop client is not
connected to Project Web App and is instead set to Computer mode. For
more information, see Appendix C, “Collaborate: Project, SharePoint,
and PWA.”
3. Zoom in several times with the Zoom Slider and observe the changes to
the timescale.
4. Right-click any task name and observe the Mini Toolbar and context
menu.
4. In the File Name box, enter a unique name for the practice file and then
click Save.
In this chapter
Create a new plan and set its start date
Set nonworking days in the project calendar
Enter the plan title and other properties
Practice files
No practice files are necessary to complete the practice tasks in this chapter.
A project’s schedule or plan is essentially a model that you construct for
some project aspects that you are anticipating—what you expect will happen,
or what you want to happen. This model focuses on certain key aspects of a
project, such as tasks, resources, time frames, and possible associated costs.
Note that this book refers to the types of documents that Project 2019 works
with as plans, not documents or schedules.
This chapter guides you through procedures related to creating a new plan
and setting its start date, setting nonworking days in a project calendar, and
entering a plan’s title and other properties.
1. In Project, if the File tab is displayed, click it and then click New.
2. In the list of templates, click Blank Project or any other template you
want.
Or
When you create a new plan, Project sets the plan’s start date to the current
date. As Figure 3-1 shows, Project draws a thin green vertical line in the chart
portion of the Gantt Chart view at the current date.
FIGURE 3-1 The current date is shown in the Gantt Chart view; look
for the green vertical line (your current date likely differs).
Tip
Line formatting can be changed to accommodate color blindness. See
Chapter 16, “Format and print views: In-depth techniques,” and its
discussion on gridlines.
Tip
The current date line is drawn at the start of the day.
2. In the Project Information dialog box, in the Start Date box, either
enter the start date you want or click the arrow to select one from the
calendar.
Tip
In the calendar, you can use the left and right arrows to navigate
to any month and then click the date you want, or you can click
Today to quickly choose the current date.
3. Click OK to accept the start date and close the Project Information
dialog box.
2. On the Save As page, navigate to the location where you want to save
the plan.
Tip
You can adjust Project settings related to files. For example, you can set
Project to automatically display the Project Information dialog box each
time you create a new plan. To make this change, click the File tab and
then click Options. In the Project Options dialog box, click Advanced,
and then, under General, select the check box titled Prompt for Project
Info for New Projects. You can also instruct Project to automatically
save the active plan at predefined intervals, such as every 10 minutes. In
the Project Options dialog box, click Save, select the Auto Save Every
check box, and then specify the time interval you want.
Important
If you are using Project Professional instead of Project Standard, be
aware that the Project Information dialog box and some other dialog
boxes may contain additional options related to Project Online or Project
Server. For more information, see Appendix C, “Collaborate: Project,
SharePoint, and PWA.”
The Calendar list contains the three base calendars that are included with
Project:
Only one of the base calendars serves as the project calendar; the Standard
calendar is the default.
Think of the project calendar as your organization’s normal working days
and hours. For example, this might be Monday through Friday, 8:00 A.M.
through 5:00 P.M. (08:00 to 17:00), with a 1-hour lunch break each day.
Your organization or specific resources might have exceptions to this normal
working time, such as public holidays or vacation days (personal holidays).
You’ll address resource vacations in Chapter 5, “Set up resources.”
You customize calendars as shown in Figure 3-3 in the Change Working
Time dialog box, which opens when you click the Change Working Time
button on the Project tab.
Use this dialog box to set normal working schedules and working time
exceptions for individual resources or the entire plan. Other common
examples of working time adjustments include the following:
2. In the Project Information dialog box, in the Calendar box, click the
arrow and then click the calendar you want to use as the project
calendar.
Tip
You don’t need to name calendar exceptions, but it’s a good
practice for you or others to identify the reason for the exception.
3. In the Start and Finish fields, enter or select the dates you want.
4. Click OK.
2. Click the Work Weeks tab in the lower portion of the Change
Working Time dialog box.
4. Enter a description and the date range you want to apply to the custom
work week.
5. In the Start and Finish fields, enter or select the date range you want to
apply to the custom work week.
6. Click Details.
7. In the Details dialog box, select the day and time values you want, and
then click OK.
2. On the right side of the Info screen, click Project Information. In the
menu that appears, click Advanced Properties.
3. Enter the properties you want to record (all are optional), and then click
OK.
Skills review
In this chapter, you learned how to
Create a new plan and set its start date
Set nonworking days in the project calendar
Enter the plan title and other properties
Practice tasks
No practice files are necessary to complete the practice tasks in this chapter.
Important
If you are running Project Professional, Project Online Professional, or
Project Online Premium, make sure your Project desktop client is not
connected to Project Web App but is instead set to Computer mode. For
more information, see Appendix C.
2. Review the Gantt Chart view for this plan and, in the timescale, locate
the vertical current date line and the date for the morale event you
created in the previous section.
Notice that the morale event is shaded the same way as other nonworking
time in the timescale.
Tip
If you do not see the shading for nonworking time, check to make sure
you are viewing the timescale by days instead of by weeks or months.
4. Build a task list
In this chapter
Create tasks
Switch task scheduling from manual to automatic
Enter task durations and estimates
Enter milestone tasks
Create summary tasks to outline the plan
Link tasks to create dependencies
Check a plan’s duration and finish date
Document task information
Practice files
For this chapter, use the SimpleBuildTaskList practice file from the
Project2019SBS\Ch04 folder. For practice file download instructions, see the
introduction.
Tasks are the most basic building blocks of any project’s plan. Tasks
represent the work to be done to accomplish the goals of the project. They
describe work in terms of dependencies, duration, and resource requirements.
Project 2019 includes several kinds of tasks: summary tasks, subtasks, and
milestones (all discussed in this chapter). More broadly, what Project calls
tasks are sometimes more generally called activities or work packages.
This chapter guides you through procedures related to creating tasks, entering
task durations, entering milestone tasks, creating summary tasks, linking
tasks to create dependencies, switching task scheduling from manual to
automatic, checking a plan’s duration and finish date, and documenting task
information.
Create tasks
Tasks represent the work to be done to accomplish the goals of the project.
Every task in a plan is given an ID number, but the number does not
necessarily represent the order in which tasks occur.
Every task in Project has one of two scheduling modes that controls how the
task is scheduled: manual (the default) or automatically scheduled. Think of a
manually scheduled task as an initial placeholder you can create at any time
without affecting the rest of the schedule. You might not know more than a
task name to start with, and that’s okay. As you discover or decide more
details about the task, such as when it should occur, you can add those details
to the plan. You’ll work with automatic scheduling in “Switch task
scheduling from manual to automatic,” later in this chapter.
As you might suspect, naming the task is the first step in creating a task. For
this reason, it’s worth developing good practices about how you name tasks
in your plans.
Task names need to be recognizable and should make sense to both the
people who will perform the tasks and other stakeholders who will read the
task names. Consider these guidelines for creating good task names:
Use short verb phrases that describe the work to be done, such as “Edit
manuscript.”
If tasks will be organized into an outline, don’t repeat details from the
summary task name in the subtask name unless doing so adds clarity.
If tasks will have resources assigned to them, don’t include resource
names in the task names.
Keep in mind that you can always edit task names later; don’t worry about
getting them exactly right when you’re initially entering them into a plan. Do
aim to use concise, descriptive phrases that communicate the required work
and make sense to you and others who will perform the work or review the
plan. When necessary, you can also add more details in task notes, described
later in this chapter.
2. Enter your task names and press Enter after each one.
1. Click in the Task Name column where you want to insert the new task.
Project inserts a row for a new task and renumbers the subsequent
tasks. Project names the new task <New Task>.
3. With <New Task> selected, enter the task name and press Enter.
To delete a task
2. Click in the Task Mode field of the selected task, and then click the
arrow that appears.
2. On the Task tab, in the Tasks group, click the Auto Schedule button.
1. On the Task tab, in the Tasks group, click the Mode button, and then
click Auto Schedule.
Or
1. Click the New Tasks status bar text as shown in Figure 4-2.
To change the default scheduling mode that Project applies to all new
plans
1. On the File tab, click Options. Then in the Project Options dialog
box, click the Schedule tab.
2. In the Scheduling Options for This Project box, click All New
Projects. Then in the New Tasks Created box, click Auto Scheduled.
3. Click OK.
Let’s explore task durations with an example. Assume that a plan has a
project calendar with working time defined as 8:00 A.M. through 5:00 P.M.,
with 1 hour off for lunch breaks Monday through Friday. That schedule
leaves nonworking time defined as evenings (after 5:00 P.M.) and weekends.
If you estimate that a task will take 16 hours of working time, you could enter
its duration as 2d to schedule work during two 8-hour workdays. You should
then expect that starting the task at 8:00 A.M. on a Friday means that it will
not be completed until 5:00 P.M. on the following Monday. No work would
be scheduled over the weekend because Saturday and Sunday have been
defined as nonworking time.
The practice tasks in this chapter use Project’s default values: 8 hours per
day, 40 hours per week, and 20 days per month. In fact, throughout this book,
we use Project’s default settings unless noted otherwise.
See Also
For a refresher on the project calendar, see “Set nonworking
days in the project calendar,” in Chapter 3, “Start a new plan.”
Tip
You can modify how the abbreviations are displayed on the Backstage
view on the Advanced page under Display Options for This Project.
As noted earlier in the “Create tasks” topic, Project handles task scheduling
in two ways. Automatically scheduled tasks always have a duration (1 day,
by default). Manually scheduled tasks, however, do not initially have any
duration. A task’s duration is essential for Project to schedule a task, so it
makes sense that a manually scheduled task, which Project does not schedule,
does not require a duration. Of course, you can enter placeholder duration
values for manually scheduled tasks. You also can enter regular duration
values by using the abbreviations shown in the preceding table—for example,
3d for 3 days. Additionally, you can enter text values, such as Check with
Bob or Sometime next quarter. Such text values are replaced with the default
1-day duration value when you convert a task from manual to automatic
scheduling. Project does not allow you to enter a text value (such as Check
with Bob) for an automatically scheduled task’s duration, start, or finish
values.
Tip
When you create an automatically scheduled task, Project adds a
question mark (?) after the 1-day duration to indicate that the duration is
an estimate. This is a handy reminder that you need to determine the
task’s correct duration at some point. In fact, you can flag any task as
having an estimated duration: Select the task and, on the Task tab, in the
Properties group, click Information and then select the Estimated check
box.
Tip
You can also click the up and down arrows in the cell to enter or change
the value in the Duration field.
Project initially sets all new tasks that have a duration value to start at the
project start date. This is true whether the tasks are manually or automatically
scheduled.
For manually scheduled tasks, you can enter a duration as either a numeric
value, such as 2d, or as placeholder text, such as Check with Marketing team.
For any columns that are too narrow to display the full value, point to the
cell; its full value appears in a ScreenTip.
For both manually and automatically scheduled tasks, Project draws a Gantt
bar in the chart portion of a Gantt chart view. The length of the bar represents
the task’s duration.
1. In the Start and Finish fields for the task, enter or select the start date
and finish date values you want.
Project calculates the Duration value. Note that when the task gets switched
to automatically scheduled, the start and finish values might change based on
predecessor relationships, the project start date, or other scheduling factors.
The duration value, however, is preserved.
1. In the Task Name column, click where you want to insert the
milestone.
Project inserts a new row for the new task and renumbers subsequent
tasks. Project names the new task <New Milestone> and gives it a 0-
day duration.
Tip
To convert a task of any duration to a 0-duration milestone task, set its
Duration value to 0.
Important