The key with the progress of advance of your project is feedback which you obtain your resources about their progress and then to write this information in your project. If you
are using Microsoft Office Project Server, you can set up Microsoft Project Professional to automatically request progress updates from the
team. Employees and other resources receive a timesheet-style form to
fill out and submit; then after review, you can update your project
automatically.
Note
If you are not using Project Server, you have to collect and enter the information manually. |
Understanding the Fields Used in Updating the Project Schedule
As you begin building your schedule, you enter
information into the appropriate fields: Actual Start Date, Actual
Finish Date, Actual Task Duration, %Complete, %Work Complete, and so
forth. Plus, as you include resources, Project calculates amounts of
work, overtime work, and cost for these resources. Project recalculates
your resource workload as you work with and change task conditions such
as the starting date or duration during the planning phase. You can
plan that you are going to start on a specific date, that it is going
to take a specific amount of time, and that you will be finished on
that date, but this is just guesswork until the tasks within the
project are completed. Tracking is entering your results into the
“Actual” assignment fields, such as Actual Start, Actual Finish, Actual
Work, and Actual Cost. The various task and assignment data fields are
interrelated, so you need to understand those relationships before you
enter tracking data.
The term “tracking” is what happens as you manually
enter task and assignment actual data or if you use the Project Update
control on the Project tab. For example, when you enter the Actual
Start date, Project replaces the planned start with your new entry.
This might now affect successor tasks, if you start early or late, and
Project calculates the changes your actual start date makes to the
schedule.
Two things happen in Project when you enter an actual start date:
The entry you made in the Actual Start field
is copied into the (scheduled) Start field, and Project recalculates
the schedule for any successor tasks. Any other dates that are affected
are highlighted with the change highlighting color control within the
menu sequence Format, Text Styles, Changed Cells Background Color. This
helps you to see if you need to make any changes down the road to the
schedule, based on your early or late start.
Microsoft
Project sets the Start field as fixed, meaning that it cannot be
recalculated. So after you enter the Actual Start date, Microsoft
Project will not change the value. However, you can manually edit that
date if conditions require a change.
The same type of reaction occurs when you enter an
Actual Finish date, except that Microsoft Project also marks the
%Complete schedule field as 100% complete for the affected tasks. You
should be aware that Project also updates other fields, such as Actual
Duration, Actual Work, and so forth when you enter the Actual Finish
date. Now your baseline is the only record of your originally scheduled
project, so you can compare actual data to baseline data variances to
see what went right and what did not.
There are several different ways of entering the
actual values into your project. The following methods are listed in
order from least exact to most precise, assuming that all data provided
is valid. The method you choose depends on your need for precision and
the expectations for reporting and lessons learned analysis:
Update the %Complete task field to a
fraction between zero and 100% without worrying about any of the actual
schedule dates, work, cost, and so forth. Although this is the fastest
technique to update tasks, it is also the least accurate because this
method assumes actual task activities occurred exactly as planned. This
method gives you no information about how well you estimated or any
information for future comparisons.
Record
when a task is started and finished, but do not include how much actual
work or actual cost was involved. Microsoft Project assumes the work,
cost, and other planned data occurred as originally planned when you
enter actual date information. This will at least give you some idea
for planning completion dates in the future.
Record
when a task starts, and then periodically enter estimates, such as
Remaining Work and Remaining Duration, when you enter %Complete. This
will help you spot tasks that are not making headway as planned and
help you make adjustments to get things back on track.
Ask
resources how much actual work they did during each time period and
enter it. This method allows the most information about progress and
performance, but also takes up the most time because the data must be
entered manually.
Use Microsoft Office
Project Server to request timesheet reports, and then have Microsoft
Project Professional automatically update the fields from the data
submitted. This takes much less time and is the one of the best ways to
track your schedule progress.
Tip
Project uses the term
%Complete to mean the percentage complete along the start through
finish timeline—that is, duration. You should use the phrase “%
Duration Complete” whenever you consider the meaning of the %Complete
field. You might also want to search the Internet
for timesheet entry tools that enable your team members to provide
actual work information. Some tools enable the project manager to post
actual work, cost, and so on into task data fields. Microsoft Office
Project Server provides very robust schedule tracking and reporting
functionality. |
Remember that when you enter data in
Project, other fields might be modified by the scheduling engine, so it
is important that you understand the potential impact of the method you
choose for project status updates. Which method you choose depends on
your need for precise information and how much time you can spend
tracking your progress. No matter which way you choose to do it, you
need to understand how the various fields interact so you should
experiment with various methods and techniques before establishing a
general schedule updating policy within your organization.