PLANNERS GOLDEN RULES

Member for

20 years 9 months

1)Analyze the activities always with quantities and resources required.

10)Finally use the common sense to finalize the planning



Ajith

Member for

16 years 4 months

That, Rafael, is High-level political "planning" in Mexico:



"We will build the biggest and better project of doing good for our citizens in just our six years of government. VOTE US!"



Its advantage is, it mets to perfection the rule of "one activity without predecessors and one activity without succesors". The same as saying: "The project should have one start and one finish" in order to get a correct critical path.

Member for

21 years 8 months

Micromanagers you all, the schedule should have only one activity.

Member for

16 years 4 months

The schedule should have only one activity without succesors and one activity without predecessors.

Member for

16 years 11 months

My golden rule is



"If you are failing to plan, then you are planning to fail"

Member for

16 years 11 months

well said it happens in many case

Member for

24 years 5 months

Educate the Project Manager or else you become useless to him.

Member for

16 years 11 months

Proper planning logic flow through a general common sense in otherwords golden mind

Member for

16 years 3 months

Anyone how got the gold,



makes the rule



Thank you,

Scarlett

Member for

17 years 1 month

A FOOL with a TOOL will always be a FOOL



Mina Arsal

Member for

18 years 7 months

Planning is as easy as ABC. ALWAY - BE - CLEAR.



kris

Member for

23 years 6 months

There you go again Clive…



Making me wonder if I have used the correct word (Italian being my mother tongue of course). I just checked the dictionary to make sure and it wasn’t until the fourth definition that I came close to what I mean…



#1: pour or rush back

#2: feed through the beak by regurgitating previously swallowed food; of some birds

#3: eject the contents of the stomach through the mouth

#4: repeat after memorization



See… I can’t resist it, there I go again, regurgitating what I have just found out on WordNet. You are right, there is little hope for me.



Admitting I am a planner is also difficult – my dyslexia got the better of me, I thought I was signing up to be a plumber and now it’s too late.



D x

Member for

23 years 6 months

I don’t know if you have noticed Clive but I never have an original thought of my own. I just reguritate what others have said, what I have been taught and the inspiration I gleen from Charlie.



So, in the P word, I was merely extending what others before me had said. But if you really want to know what I consider proper planning to be it is, of course, exactly the type of planning I do!



David

Member for

20 years 3 months

Hello David,



Please explain your usage of the word "PROPER".



please not the common oxford dictionary or whatever dictionay.



i want to know your soul when you use "PROPER"



Regards,



Charlie

Member for

19 years 1 month

let’s apply some originality and preciseness in here..



i lost the numbering, where are we???



9.0001) A corrupted Plan Corrupts a Planner!



9.0002) A corrupted Planner Corrupts a Project Manager!



9.0003) A corrupted Project Manager Corrupts a Project!



9.0004) A corrupted Project was Planned by a Corrupt Customer!



a planner always escapes!

Member for

23 years 6 months

Nice one Andrew... but what I think you were looking for is:



I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by

Douglas Adams

English humorist & science fiction novelist (1952 – 2001)



Sorry for being pedantic but I was researching quotations like that for a forecasting paper I am writing. My favourite, I found in ‘The Analysis of Time Series: An Inroduction’ by Chris Chatfield (although he cites it as Anonymous):



Forecasting is the art of saying what will happen, and then explaining why it didn’t!



You might also like these (they are also classed as Anon):



The first 90% of the job takes 90% of the time, the next 10% takes the other 90%



The only person to get things done by Friday was Robinson Crusoe



And, as Andrew Pearce recently reminded us:



The Critical Path: The shortest route to the nearest pub



And finally, slightly off topic:



I’ve been on a calendar but I have never been on time

Marilyn Monroe

American actress and some-time calendar girl (1926-1962)



Time is on my side, yes it is

Norman Mead

performed by Mick Jagger/The Rolling Stones (released 26 September 1964)

Member for

23 years 6 months

The P word thing made me smile… Wikipedia, the font of all knowledge (sic) has a nice article about the Five or Seven Ps:



The 6 Ps is a British Army adage:

Proper Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance

It is sometimes seen as the 7 Ps:

Prior Planning and Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance

Another version of the 7 Ps is:

Proper Prior Planning Prevents Piss Poor Performance

Or even euphemistically as the 5 Ps:

Proper Planning Prevents Poor Performance

Its corollary:

Piss Poor Planning makes for Poor Performance



My contribution, if you want to use 7 Ps but are worried about the mild expletive try:

Prior Planning and Preparation Prevents Painfully Poor Performance



Maybe this should be a separate thread, ‘the P word’, to see how long we can make a legible chain!



David

Member for

18 years 8 months

9. Never set unrealistic deadlines - The noise scares you when they woosh past.

Member for

20 years 7 months

Timeliness starts with timelines, but deadlines lead to deadliness.

Member for

24 years 8 months

7. 5-P Rule:

PROPER PLANNING PREVENTS POOR PERFORMANCE

Member for

18 years 7 months

6. Plan the work, and work the plan...

Member for

19 years 6 months

5. Top Management don’t care about Gantt chart, always prepare your reports in excel & powerpoint.

Member for

19 years 1 month

3. Disseminate information before it’s too late.

4. Never hide the "real score" or polish your schedule just to make it cool!