Construction Project Management
Planning & Scheduling
Bar Charts
Building a CPM Schedule
Networks & Logic
CPM Scheduling
Logic Relationships & Precedence Networks
Progress Updating

Step 6 – Implementing the Schedule

Implementing a schedule means taking it from the computers screen or paper to action in the field. This is not a simple steps and Dr. Mubarak discusses how a schedule must be sold to stakeholders and the project team.

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Step number 6. Finally to implement that CPM schedule in reality, which means taking it from the computer screen or a print out to action. This is not a simple step. It is actually selling that schedule to all parties. Telling everyone communicating that this is going to be the schedule. This is going to be the plan for our project that we have to follow.

It's also, in this case, we have to adopt a single pair of dates, start or finish for each activity as we will see later on. The computer output will give us two sets of dates, early start and early finish. The second set is late start, late finish. You cannot give these two sets to crews. You have to adopt only one pair of dates. You have to assign roles and responsibilities and you have to get the management commitment and support for this schedule.

In this step of project schedule implementation, the scheduler has to print different reports to different parties. For example, if the schedule of the whole project has over 2000 or 3000 activities and you have a subcontractor who is responsible for only 40 or 50 activities, let's say, landscape or terracotta or electrical, you don't need to give that party the whole schedule with 3000. What you need to give him is his own activities plus any impacting activities, any activities that are either predecessors or successors to his activities.

So we do...

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