Construction Scheduling. Let Durations Help You.

How can you use the Activity Duration value to help you manage your schedule?

Simple, just look at all the columns and do some math in your head.

When your contractor develops the project baseline schedule, they develop the Original Duration for each activity. How they develop the durations is a subject for another post. But let’s assume they have used historical data, input from subcontractors, calculated productivity and quantities, or some method of developing an accurate value for the each Activity’s Original Duration.

Most Schedule Presentations (Gantt Chart pdf’s) have the activity names, dates, a percent complete and a duration for each activity shown in columns. Then there are the magical bars to the right. Sometimes there are even relationship (logic) lines drawn from activity to activity so you know what drives what, right? Can you actually read it? Doubtful…. Anyway, let’s focus on the duration columns.

If you’re looking at a Schedule Presentation from a Primavera P6 schedule, there are options for which duration columns you can see. Almost everyone uses the Original Duration column. Most of us use the Remaining duration column. That’s all we need to know, correct?

Not really, there is a column that shows the At Completion Duration. This is not seen in presentations that often, probably because we want more room for the magic bars and lines… But this is an important column to be able to see when reviewing a Schedule Presentation pdf.

If you have an Original Duration of 5 days (Work Days or Calendar Days depends on the Calendar. This is a subject for another post), and a Remaining Duration of 3 days and the percent complete (whether it is Physical, Duration, Activity, Performance, or Cost or another type is a subject for another post), is 50%, things are looking good, right?

Not always. If you look at the At Completion Duration, you may find that while the Original Duration is 5 and the Remaining duration is 3. But the At Completion Duration could be 35 or any other value if the activity finish date is riding the Data Date. This can happen depending on the settings used to manage the schedule. Unless you actually look at the dates and do some calculations in your head while reviewing the schedule, when you don’t have the At Completion duration column to use, you may not see the slippage.

Ask your contractor to display the At Completion Duration column for their Progress Meeting Look Ahead Schedules and any other pdf submission. It’s worth the trade off with the magic bars and lines!

Knowing what was planned, what is remaining and what the time impact of activity progress slippage is can save you some trouble.

I know many of you can offer additional comments and recommendations. I welcome your comments and input. My goal, as always, is to help our industry and help the projects we support….

I’d love to hear what you think!

Please visit https://conschmanservices.com to learn more about Construction and Schedule Management Services, LLC

Please visit my LinkedIn account to learn more about me.

Please visit my “The Blue Book” ProView.

Paul Epperson CCM, PMP, PSP, PMI-SP