A Measurable Plan
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Please consider working on a baseline (you want it measurable from the start). You got incomplete data (concept).
As you go along the line, you will be adding details (levels). Is there a way to maintain the weightings for a certain level while adding details?
Planning is not a wild guess, but estimating can be. When the scope is planned at a high level, there is more room for error.
It is possible (and common in my experience) for the detailed (measurable) plan to reflect a different projection than the preliminary high level planning.
Sure you can use a top down approach. However, I believe this leads to compromises that may or may not be realistic. I prefer to plan/estimate the tasks for the detail (measureable) level schedule independently of any pre-existing high level (concept) schedule.
Bernard Ertl
InterPlan Systems
I dont understand your first paragraph. Are you saying that planning is just a wild guess? (until now?)
I supposed you are working on integration (electronically). Cant you do it from the start (concept) rolling down to details? Or is it always details first?
I believe it is a big mistake to try and plan work to fit expectations. This is one reason that we split the planning and scheduling into separate functions in our ATC Professional system (ie. you dont schedule the tasks as you define/estimate them).
IMO, the detailed, measurable schedule should be planned and estimated independently of any high level commitments. Only then do you have a basis for understanding if the high level commitment is reasonable, or as mentioned in answer to question #3 previously, decisions need to be made.
Bernard Ertl
InterPlan Systems
Yes, you can always roll it up (if you started from the highest level), but what if you started from level one (1) that is not measurable?
I mean rolling to the smallest possible detail. Taking into consideration that details come in not at the same time.
IMO, a measurable plan is one where tasks are clearly defined, and measurable. This means that anyone should be able to determine the progress/status for each task as defined.
For upper management to see the big picture, no. For detailed analysis against a measurable plan, yes.
If you commit to a baseline before planning it effectively, and the later plans show it to be unfeasible, management will need to make a decision (modify scope or accept change to baseline) or failure may be predetermined.
What do you mean by "integrating plan levels"? Shouldnt all levels be based off of the same schedule (just rolled up/summarized appropriately)?
Bernard Ertl
InterPlan Systems