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Project Management: LECTURE 5:resources Allocation

This document discusses resource allocation and project management. It covers how projects compete for limited resources like funding, staff, materials and time. It also discusses expediting projects by crashing activities through applying additional resources like staff, equipment or overtime. Crashing has costs and could impact quality, staff morale or other projects. The document also discusses resource loading, which is scheduling resources across projects and analyzing resource requirements over time.

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Saqib Shah
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views

Project Management: LECTURE 5:resources Allocation

This document discusses resource allocation and project management. It covers how projects compete for limited resources like funding, staff, materials and time. It also discusses expediting projects by crashing activities through applying additional resources like staff, equipment or overtime. Crashing has costs and could impact quality, staff morale or other projects. The document also discusses resource loading, which is scheduling resources across projects and analyzing resource requirements over time.

Uploaded by

Saqib Shah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PROJECT MANAGEMENT

LECTURE 5:Resources Allocation


Projects compete for available resources:
 Funding
 Staffing
 Materials
 Time Constraints

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Expediting a project
 Projects sometimes need to be expedited:
 Customer demands
 Opportunities become available
 Delay in part of project result in need to expedite other parts

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Resource Allocation
 Resource allocation permits efficient use of physical assets
 Within a project, or across multiple projects
 Drives both the identification of resources, and timing of their
application
 There are generally two conditions:
 “Normal”
 “Crashed”

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Normal and Crashing
 Normal: Most likely task duration, like “m” in Chapter 8
 Crash: Expedite an activity, by applying additional resources
 Specialized or additional equipment
 More people (e.g., borrowed staff, temps)
 More hours (e.g., overtime, weekends)

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No Free Lunch: Crashing Creates a Ripple Effect

 Crashing buys time, but nothing comes free


 Potential cost areas
 Additional equipment/material
 Extra labor
 Negative effects on other projects
 Reduced morale, from excessive hours/shifts
 Lower quality, from the pressure of time, inexperienced
and tired staff
• “If you want it bad, you’ll get it bad . . .”.

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When Trying to Crash a Project …
 The critical path method
 Fast-tracking a project
 Project expediting in practice
 Opportunities before the project begins
 Opportunities when the project is underway

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Critical Path Method

 Normal duration estimates


 Normal costs
 Crash duration estimates
 Second estimate based on additional resources to expedite the task
 Crash costs
 Crash cost per day
 Each one of these options expedite the process, but at a cost
 Notes on crashing
 Important to make sure resources required to crash the project are
available
 Technology may be used to crash an activity
• Example above with backhoe
 May have to expedite tasks not on critical path to make resources
available to other projects
 Some tasks cannot be crashed

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The Resource Allocation Problem
 Most scheduling procedures do not address the issues of resource
utilization and availability
 Scheduling procedures tend to focus on time rather than physical
resources
 Time itself is always a critical resource in project management
 It is unique because it can neither be inventoried nor renewed

Chapter 9-5 91-1


The Resource Allocation Problem

 Schedules should be evaluated:


 in terms of meeting project milestones
 in terms of the timing and use of scarce resources
 Measure of the project manager’s success: skill with which the trade-offs
among:
 Performance
 Time
 Cost

Chapter 9-6 101-1


The Resource Allocation Problem
 The extreme points of the relationship between time use and resource
use are these:
 Time Limited: The project must be finished by a certain time, using as
few resources as possible. But it is time, not resource usage, that is
critical
 Resource Limited:The project must be finished as soon as possible, but
without exceeding some specific level of resource usage or some
general resource constraint

Chapter 9-7 111-1


The Resource Allocation Problem
 If all three variables - time, cost, specifications - are fixed, the system is
“overdetermined”
 In this case, the project manager has lost all flexibility to perform the
trade-offs necessary to successful completion of projects
 A system-constrained task requires a fixed amount of time and known
quantities of resources

Chapter 9-8 121-1


Resource Loading
 Describes the amounts of individual resources an existing schedule
requires during specific time periods
 The loads (requirements) of each resource type are listed as a
function of time period
 Gives a general understanding of the demands a project or set of
projects will make on a firm’s resources

Chapter 9-9 131-1


Compute Cost per Day of Crashing a Project

 Compute cost/time slope for each expeditable activity

 Slope = crash cost – normal cost


crash time – normal time

141-1
Example

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Another Approach to Expediting: Fast-
tracking/Concurrency
 Different terms for similar concept
 “Fast-tracking” (construction), “Concurrent engineering”
(manufacturing)
 Both refer to overlapping project phases
 E.g., design/build, or build/test

201-1
Fast-tracking/Concurrency

 Pros:
 Can shorten project duration
 Can reduce product development cycles
 Can help meet clients’ demands
 Cons:
 Can increase cost through redesigns,
excessive changes, rework, out-of-
sequence installation, and more

211-1
Project Expediting in Practice

 The manager may know ahead of time that this project is time-
critical and needs to be finished as early as possible
 Project manager may find out during the project that it needs to be
finished earlier
 Something delays the project and time needs to be made up
 Opportunities Before the Project Begins
 Most projects have one time estimate
 Many projects have a project “buffer”
 A project time contingency may be added as well
 Can monitor key activities closely
 May order long-lead time items early

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Opportunities When the Project is Underway

 Focus on critical path


 Use contingency time
 Pull resources from less critical activities
 Move buffers to more critical activities
 May skip less critical steps
 May postpone activities involving non-core members
 Move activities to post-project stage
 May run activities in parallel or use weekends
 Pressuring team to work faster
 Get additional resources for overtime or additional people
 May reduce scope
 May wait and see

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Resource Loading
 Refers to the amounts of specific resources that are scheduled for use on specific
activities or projects at specific time
 It is usually presented in the form of a list or table

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Resource Loading Issues
 Most project management software assumes that any
resource assigned to an activity will work on that activity
100 percent of the time available
 This can be resolved by allocating a specific percentage of time to
the project
 It is easy to over utilize humane resources
 Overtime is expensive
 Easy to overload those who perform best

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