Dave,
My books "Forecast Scheduling" are really good; they treat a project schedule as a 'valid, dynamic and robust model of the project to continuously forecast it. You can find these books at: www.ProjectProCorp.com
Thanks!
Eric Uyttewaal, the author
Member for
18 years 6 months
Member for18 years6 months
Submitted by Mujahid Akhtar on Wed, 2008-07-02 10:56
1. in View, Tables, More tables, prepare a resource table with all the necessary fields
2. in Files, Save as, select MS Excel worksheet, then click next until you are prompted to select data; check the Resources box, then select the table you have created
to baseline your project:
1. Tools, Tracking, Save baseline (or something close);
select the specific baseline you want (usualy "Baseline")
2. Display the Tracking Gantt
Alexandre
Member for
18 years
Member for18 years
Submitted by Dave Turnbull on Wed, 2008-06-25 13:48
Its Project Stand alone. I was looking at the way you could export the resources to excel (which I did manually) and the way project lets you baseline the project and give you the planned percentage expected on that day and at that current point in the project.
I am used to taking the information from project and manually putting it into excel to produce S curves.
I would like to know more about how project lets to track progress etc.
I can recommend the books I write, there are 4 all together. You may download book data sheets and sample chapters from my website. They may be purchased from my website in four currencies. My books may be ordered from any bookshop and are also available from:
Member for
7 years 10 monthsDave, My books "Forecast
Dave,
My books "Forecast Scheduling" are really good; they treat a project schedule as a 'valid, dynamic and robust model of the project to continuously forecast it. You can find these books at: www.ProjectProCorp.com
Thanks!
Eric Uyttewaal, the author
Member for
18 years 6 monthsRE: Microsoft Project Book
Email me at chintoojee at yahoo.com, I have "step by Step Guide for MS project 2003 & 2007" also, MS Project Bible.
Chintoo
Member for
22 years 9 monthsRE: Microsoft Project Book
Dave,
to export resources from MS Project to MS Excel:
1. in View, Tables, More tables, prepare a resource table with all the necessary fields
2. in Files, Save as, select MS Excel worksheet, then click next until you are prompted to select data; check the Resources box, then select the table you have created
to baseline your project:
1. Tools, Tracking, Save baseline (or something close);
select the specific baseline you want (usualy "Baseline")
2. Display the Tracking Gantt
Alexandre
Member for
18 yearsRE: Microsoft Project Book
Its Project Stand alone. I was looking at the way you could export the resources to excel (which I did manually) and the way project lets you baseline the project and give you the planned percentage expected on that day and at that current point in the project.
I am used to taking the information from project and manually putting it into excel to produce S curves.
I would like to know more about how project lets to track progress etc.
Thanks for your help
Member for
24 years 6 monthsRE: Microsoft Project Book
I can recommend the books I write, there are 4 all together. You may download book data sheets and sample chapters from my website. They may be purchased from my website in four currencies. My books may be ordered from any bookshop and are also available from:
www.amazon.com
www.eastwoodharrisbooks.com
www.booksurge.com
www.bn.com
www.amazon.co.uk
www.compman.co.uk
Paul E Harris
Eastwood Harris Pty Ltd, Melbourne, Australia
Planning and Scheduling Training Manual & Book Publishers, Consulting and Training
www.eh.com.au
Member for
18 years 3 monthsRE: Microsoft Project Book
Project standalone or Project Server?
What sort of topics are you interested in?