From: Jason on 12 Jan 2010 09:56 Is there a way where MS Project calaculates Planned or base percentage complete of work to be done, which can then be used to compare actuals percentages of work completed. To determine whether the actual percentage of works completed is progressing as scheduled??
From: Jim Aksel on 12 Jan 2010 17:42 Hi Janson - Go to my blog and read the paper about "What %Complete Should I be?" You need to consider a couple of things. Just becuase someone logs an hour of work, does not mean they have produced an hour or value for that work (the task could be easier or harder than you originally estimated). You are hinting at something called Earned Value (you can read about it in the help). In order to properly track a schedule, you need to know three things: 1. What I planned to due (Plan Value - or scheduled effort) 2. The number of hours billed to the task (Actual Costs) 3. The value received for that work actually performed (Earned Value). For example, I bid 32 hours to paint 4 walls in a room (8 hours for each wall). If I give you a bill Wednesday morning for 12 hours of work you may accuse me of being behind schedule (it should be 16 hours right?). But suppose I told you that I have completed two walls already. Now I am on schedule, but under cost. Or suppose I came to you Tuesday AM and said, I put in only 6 hours yesterday but got two walls done. Now I am ahead of schedule and under cost. In reality, I am going to come to you Wednesday AM and say, here is my bill for 20 hours and I have 1 wall done (behind schedule and over cost). See? -- If this post was helpful, please consider rating it. Jim Aksel, MVP Check out my blog for more information: http://www.msprojectblog.com "Jason" wrote: > Is there a way where MS Project calaculates Planned or base percentage > complete of work to be done, which can then be used to compare actuals > percentages of work completed. To determine whether the actual percentage of > works completed is progressing as scheduled??
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