Planning and Scheduling Procedures
Planning and Scheduling Procedures
Planning and Scheduling Procedures
A. PLANNING DEFINITIONS:
1. Planning: The breakdown of work into its component events, and the
sequencing, resourcing, and strategy of those events.
2. Scheduling: Detailed assignment of logic, duration & start/finish dates to
project activities, within the overall plan.
3. Schedule/ Programme: Pictorial or tabular representation of the time-phased
events or activities required to execute the project. May be based on a critical path
network (CPN).
4. Critical Path Network (CPN): A representation of activities and/or events with
their inter-relationships and dependencies.
5. Milestone: An event selected for its importance in the project and/or
activity/deliverable.
6. Precedence Network: A network diagram in which the nodes symbolize the project
activities.
7. Productivity/Efficiency: Ratio of hours earned versus hours expended.
8. Performance Measurement Baselines: The original project quality, HSE, budget &
contract duration objectives set by management at commencement.
9. PBS Project Breakdown Structures: Defines a hierarchical structure by which the
work is to be done – can include structures for work, cost, contract, organization,
risk, resources, etc.
B. PROGRESS MEASUREMENT:
The planner/scheduler is responsible for ensuring that the various progress measurements
used throughout the project is a fair representation of the actual project progress. As a
minimum, the following should be provided:
C. RESOURCE PLANNING
The planner/scheduler is also responsible for providing information to assist with the
management of resources required to execute the work. These tasks include but are not
limited to:
At the earliest possible stage, using the best available data, by assessing the scope of
services and material quantities to provide management with an overall resource
overview of the project.
From the project approved budgets, assess the quantities of major resources required,
issue discipline resource manpower requirements to the project manager and lead discipline
engineers and determine if the supply may be a limiting factor.
INTERACTIVE PLANNING:
At various stages in each project, interactive planning sessions may be held with the client
and the project team (including, where relevant, sub-contractors, vendors, and construction
contractors) to obtain buy-in to the agreed schedule by all parties.
This is designed to facilitate the production of an integrated project schedule that highlights
the key constraints, and major issues which impact successful execution.
Alignment with key execution strategies is essential. The main tool is a time-phased wall-
mounted bar chart which should be readily accessible to all parties involved in the project
and can form the basis of the detailed schedules as well as recording key risks, assumptions,
and opportunities.
TYPES OF SCHEDULE
The planner/scheduler must produce documents that help coordinate, inform, and optimize
the schedule of a project.
This can only be achieved if such documents are well thought out, agreed with the project
manager and discipline leads, and issued in a timely fashion.
Each project should be examined and, along with the project manager, a determination
made as to which types of schedules will be appropriate. The schedules to be utilized shall
be stated in the project procedures.
Upon receipt of instructions to proceed with the project, and before the first issue of the
agreed on project schedule, the project will be controlled with an advanced 30-day or 60-
day project initiation action list/start-up schedule to ensure that early activities are
identified and acted upon to protect the overall schedule.
Purpose: generally used to summarise the overall project performance for project
management and client information purposes.
Typical applications: proposals at the planning stages of a major project, small studies,
engineering projects with a low level of complexity, few activities, and short duration, as a
monthly summary of Level II and III schedules.
The contents of the schedule shall identify contract milestones, significant engineering,
procurement, construction, and operations milestones, and other significant milestones
and/or constraints. Normally restricted to one bar per discipline.
Purpose: to inform all disciplines as to the status and progress of individual work packages,
and critical path issues.
Typical Applications: on all complex engineering-only projects and all EPC projects. Also on
smaller projects where elements of the schedule are extremely critical and, hence, need to
be managed at this level.
- The contents of the schedule are detailed into controllable and identifiable work
activities which can be “rolled up” to Level II. The schedule should identify key issue
activities for deliverable types. The schedule will normally be generated from a
precedence logic network with a critical path identified.
- Layout/Format ‘S’ Curves will be generated (per discipline) to monitor scheduled vs.
actual progress. On the other hand, manpower histograms will be produced to
identify individual discipline manning requirements.
- Summary WBS Report document will be produced to provide an overview of the
project status. It will contain the original work-hour budget, unapproved change
notices, approved change notices, the current budget, work hours expended, %
achieved, productivity achieved, productivity to go, forecast work hours to complete,
and forecast work hours at completion.
- Display summary information on the project notice board.
Typical Analysis: The schedule should be analyzed for the top 5 critical paths and the current
critical activities highlighted to the team. The logic and durations within these critical paths
should be continually addressed to ensure schedule robustness.
Forecast man hours/productivity and resourcing levels should be analyzed for consistency.
Trend analysis: on key parameters e.g. material deliveries to site, pipe work productivity,
schedule float usage, etc.
Timing/Frequency: updated continuously, to be issued weekly by the 5th working day
after the close-out date.
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AUDITS / RECORDS
It is expected that as part of the quality system to maintain ISO accreditation, the project
will be audited against this procedure on an annual basis. Non-conformances raised will be
closed out by the project planner & planning manager. The planning manager may require
specific audits more frequently.
The project's detailed schedule is a quality record. Baseline data, schedule updates, key
changes to scope and methodology should all be recorded and kept within the filing and
document record system for subsequent contract requirements, post-project close out &
reporting. The project close-out procedure requires an analysis of the key project
parameters for subsequent use on further projects and cost & schedule database upkeep of
metrics & benchmark data.
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