CH 9 Monitoring and Control
CH 9 Monitoring and Control
9.1 Introduction
Once the project is underway, attention must be focused on ensuring progress. i.e.
Monitoring what is happening
Comparison of actual achievement against the schedule
Revision of plans and schedules to bring project to target
Once the initial project plan has been published, project control is a continual process of
monitoring progress against that plan. If there is a mismatch between the planned
outcomes and the actual ones, either replanning is needed to bring the project back on
target or the target will have to be revised.
Responsibility
The overall responsibility for ensuing satisfactory progress on a project is the role of the
project steering committee or project board. Day to day responsibility is with the Project
manager.
The Reporting structure for medium and large projects is shown below.
Reporting can be
Oral (or) written
Formal (or) informal – Informal reporting must be complemented by
formal reporting procedures
Regular (or) Ad hoc
Assessing progress
Progress assessment is made on the basis of information gathered and collated at regular
intervals or when specific events occur. This information will be objective and tangible.
Progress assessment relies on the judgment of the team members who are carrying out the
project activities
Setting checkpoints
It is essential to set a series of checkpoints in the initial activity plan. The checkpoints
may be i. Regular ii. Tied to specific event / other deliverable
Taking snap-shots
The frequency of information about progress depends on the size and degree of risk of
the project or part of the project under their control
Example: Team leaders need daily report, PM need weekly or monthly reports
(Higher the level, less frequent and less detailed the reporting)
Project-level progress reviews take place at particular points during the life of the project
called review points or control points
Managers will try to break long activities into controllable tasks of 1 or 2 week’s
duration. It will still be necessary to gather information about partially completed
activities and forecast how much work is left to be completed. It is difficult to make such
forecasts accurately. If there is a series of products, partial completion of activities is
easier to estimate. Counting the no. of record specifications or screen layouts produced
can provide a reasonable measure of progress.
Many organizations use standard accounting systems with weekly timesheets to charge
staff time to individual jobs. The staff time booked to a project indicates the work carried
out and the charges to the project. However it does not tell the project manager what has
been produced or whether tasks are on schedule.
Fig 9.3 shows the report that requests information about likely slippage of completion
dates as well as estimates of completeness.
Disadv.: Asking for estimated completion times and reconsideration of the dates will
deflect the attention of the originally scheduled dates.
Risk Reporting
One way of overcoming the objections to partial completion reporting is to avoid asking
for estimated completion dates but ask for the team members’ estimates of the likelihood
of meeting the planned target date.
The method of doing this is ‘Traffic light method’
Identify the key (first level) elements for assessment in a piece of work
Break these key elements into constituent elements (second level)
Assess each of the second level elements on the scale
Green – on target
Amber – not on target but recoverable
Red – not on target and recoverable only with difficulty
Review all the second level assessments to arrive at first level assessments
Review first and second level assessments to produce an overall assessment
Following the completion of assessment forms for all the activities, the PM uses these as
a basis for evaluating the overall status of the project.
Activity that is amber / Red requires further consideration and leads to revision of
project schedule.
Non-critical activities are likely to be considered as a problem if they are
classified as red, especially if their entire float is likely to be consumed.
Example:
9.4 Visualizing progress
Gantt chart
Devised by Henry Gantt (1861 – 1919) an industrial engineer interested in the efficient
organization of work. This is one of the simplest and oldest techniques for tracking
project progress. It is an activity bar chart indicating scheduled activity dates and
durations frequently augmented with activity floats. The reported progress is recorded on
a chart (by shading activity bars) and a ‘Today cursor” gives an immediate visual
indication of which activities are ahead and which are behind schedule.
A Gantt chart lays out the A Gantt chart allows you to see how
order in which tasks need to remedial action may bring the project back
be carried out. on course.
It is similar to Gantt chart. It provides more striking visual indication of those activities
that are not progressing to schedule.
The more the slip line bends, the greater the variation from the plan.
Additional slip lines are added at intervals and as they build up, the PM will know
whether the project is improving or not.
A very jagged slip indicates a need for rescheduling.
Ball charts
In a ball chart, a circle indicates the start and completion points of activities. The circles
initially have original scheduled dates. Whenever revisions are made, these are added as
second dates in the appropriate circles until an activity is actually started or completed,
when the relevant date replaces the revised estimate. Circles therefore contain only 2
dates, the original and most recent target dates. (or) the original and actual dates.
When the actual start or finish date for an activity is later than the target date, the circle is
coloured red.
When the schedule is on time or earlier than target, the circle is coloured green
This visible record can encourage competitiveness between teams.
This chart is easy to maintain – change only color. In others, the entire chart must be
redrawn
The Timeline
They do not show the slippage of the project completion date through the life of the
project.
The timeline chart is a method of recording and displaying the way in which targets have
changed throughout the duration of the project.
Referring to Fig. 9.8
2 activities are finished by week 6.
Useful both during the execution of a project and as a part of the post-implementation
review.
Based on assigning a ‘value’ to each task or work package based on the original
expenditure forecasts. The assigned value is the original budgeted cost for the item and is
known as the baseline budget or budgeted cost of work scheduled (BCWS). A task that
has not yet started is assigned 0, but when it is finished it is assigned with a value.
The total point credited to a project at any point is called the earned value or budgeted
cost of work performed (BCWP). This can be represented as a value or as a percentage of
BCWS.
The 50/50 technique 50% of its value at the start – 100% when completed
This method gives a false sense of security by over-valuing the reporting of
activity starts
From the earned value chart we can derive the following details
Budget variance
BV= ACWP – BCWS
Schedule variance
SV= BCWP – BCWS
Cost variance
CV= BCWP – ACWP
Performance ratios
cost performance index CPI = BCWP / ACWP
schedule performance index SPI = BCWP / BCWS
A value greater than 1 indicates that work is completed better than planned
A value < 1 means that work is costing more and proceeding slowly
Earned value analysis has not gained universal acceptance due to attitude that a half-built
software does not have any value. But the method is used to tracking the achievements in
a project – measured in terms of budgeted costs of completed tasks or products