By Planned Start, I assume you mean the dates in the Start column relating to the scheduled dates the tasks are due / planned to begin?
These dates are determined by MS Project based on a combination of calendar (project or task), precedence (task dependencies) or constraints (ASAP etc).
The Early Start date are determined by backward and forward passes (ES / EF / LS / LF), taking into account Float (Slack in MS Project). Depending on whether the project is scheduled from the Start Date or a known Finish Date (most are scheduled from the Start Date) the Early Start will be the same as the Planned / Scheduled Start.
When updating / progressing a schedule you can also use Actual Start, but that’s another story for another time...
Member for
19 years 9 monthsRE: Planned Strat / Early Start
thanks Kosa
Member for
17 years 9 monthsRE: Planned Strat / Early Start
Hi Shahzad,
By Planned Start, I assume you mean the dates in the Start column relating to the scheduled dates the tasks are due / planned to begin?
These dates are determined by MS Project based on a combination of calendar (project or task), precedence (task dependencies) or constraints (ASAP etc).
The Early Start date are determined by backward and forward passes (ES / EF / LS / LF), taking into account Float (Slack in MS Project). Depending on whether the project is scheduled from the Start Date or a known Finish Date (most are scheduled from the Start Date) the Early Start will be the same as the Planned / Scheduled Start.
When updating / progressing a schedule you can also use Actual Start, but that’s another story for another time...
Regards,
Darren