Planners and Planning Engineers

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Philip Jonker 👤 Member for 21 years 7 months

Hi Oscar,



Only been married three times, but the plans on the last wedding was the most successful, and the marraige as well. Had it on my own veranda with only minimal guests, the good people in my life, and it was on time, within budget, and real quality, all the things a succesfull project needs



Regards



Philip

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Oscar Wilde 👤 Member for 20 years 8 months

Based on the Charlie logic we are all planners if we are married cos we planned our wedding on this basis as at least 90% of the world gets married the world is full of planners and some of us who are particuarly bad husbands wives become double or triple planners

Philip planning a wedding is just a little bit less difficult than planning a journey in space??? Have sent my CV to NASA as been married 5 times so must be suitably experienced to plan the next space shuttle docking. Actually also have some experience of docking too

LOL

Oscar

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Edgar Ariete 👤 Member for 20 years 10 months

Hi Clive,



Is it possible? Would you mind analyzing the risk?



Best regards,



Edgar

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Edgar Ariete 👤 Member for 20 years 10 months

Hi Everyone,



Planning Planet & an ice cold beer are life’s little rewards that makes you forget you’re just fired from work or even your wife I guess.



Here, you will find real views from real people disguised as Planners. Though some views are intoxicating, it is sometimes motivating.



cheers





p.s. anybody from north korea who uses Cobra & maybe kind enough to share his views???

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Philip Jonker 👤 Member for 21 years 7 months

Hi Guys,

As a a matter of interest, I attended a workshop on projects some 12 years ago, which related projects to the various factors involved, ie cost, time, quality and complexity, and the most complex projects was no 1 a space journey, and no 2 a wedding.This sounds like a joke, but it is actually true, just study the factors, and the amount of trouble you can get into if you got a wedding wrong, at least for a space project, you can give some excuses.



Regards

J
James Griffiths 👤 Member for 20 years

If I were you, I wouldn’t contemplate planning a wedding. We’d probably come to the conclusion that, for the time and cost, getting married is not an economically viable project. Perhaps better to "outsource" the required services to an independent provider.



James :-)

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Gordon Blair 👤 Member for 20 years 10 months

I think I might take up wedding planning, sounds like a great idea... thanks Charlie

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Charleston-Joseph Orbe 👤 Member for 20 years 10 months

Hi Msnulsl,



Almost all homo sapiens plan. This was recorded in the history of mankind. The brain of the homo sapiens plans to survive the harsh reality of life. In this regard, homo sapiens are planner.



The latest addition of planners are the wedding planners. I heard they made big bucks and they don’t even have to be engineers.



There are some industry, construction for one, that client want planning engineers to do the planning. The advantage of planners being engineers is the educational training related to mathematics sub subject theory of probability, contracts, construction method and project management.



The engineer can present a mathematical model of the project, can present "what if scenarios" that involve engineering computation, etc.



In conclusion, in addition to the basic homo sapiens planning mindset, a planner with an engineering background (engineer) can elevate planning exercise to its pinacle by his/her ability to apply his knowledge of mathematics, his/her knowledge and understanding of project management, etc, etc ...



Cheers,



charlie

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Henk van der Heide 👤 Member for 21 years 10 months

I think its a big advantage when you’ve done the proces your self as a planning engineer.

Because then you’re less depending on the (poor) information u usualy get to make the planning.

And you can defend your planning in a better way.

For me i’ve done construction work myself in the field and now i’m planning it. it makes a big difference because the people who have to work wit it can ask the questions and you’re capable to give the good answers



Never the les i dont think its absolutely neccecary, but as told it gives you a big advantage.





Kind Regard



Henk

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Raza Abbas Naqvi 👤 Member for 20 years 7 months

Dear Friends;Hope you all doing well. If anyone can please tell me abt. any training course on PLANNING & SCHEDULING OF MAINTENANCE JOBS WITH SAP.OR PLANNING & SCHEDULING OF SHUTDOWN???????

If anyone has taken this course from anywhere or can recommend at any place around the globe then i’ll be really thankful.

Plz. use my email: [email protected]

Take care all.

waiting for ur response

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Gordon Blair 👤 Member for 20 years 10 months

Having seen this from ’both sides of the fence’, as it were (having planned both within, and outside my discipline), perhaps I can help.



Firstly, and most importantly, you must be able to plan. Not manipulate software, or produce reports, these are just things that you do while planning; you must have the right methodical approach and mindset to understand the implications of what you are doing with the software.



You must be prepared to listen, particularly if you are outside your field. You may produce an all singing, all dancing plan that is a beauty to behold... but if it is unachievable, or bears little resemblance to the manner in which the work will be completed, it is less use than a book in the Whitehouse Library.



If you can do all of the above, and a little more besides, you will be able to offer a degree of Planning support to your Project.



What you will not be able to provide is the more Qualitative side to the job, advising on the feasability and discipline related implications of various courses of action. This CAN be picked up by the Senior Engineer in post, but you’ll be a far happier and more secure and confident Planer if you can do a degree of this yourself.



In summary, yes, you can plan for a project for which you hold no formal qualification, but your value will be limited to quantitive support by your lack of experience. But beware the engineer who has learnt the software, but not how to Plan.

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manulal inasu 👤 Member for 20 years 7 months

Let it be " some one who is professionaly qualified in a related field of engineering. for eg a civil engineering graduate in construction industry."

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