unfortunately, no; MS Project does not provide such a scheduling report as Primavera where out of sequence, open ended activities a.s.o. would be high-lighted
to easily (?) retrieve out of sequence activities (activity B with a FS link to activity A started before A is being finished), it needs a VBA script, as a filter cannot select an activity because of its predecessor
Alexandre
Member for
15 years 1 month
Member for15 years2 months
Submitted by James Braghini on Fri, 2012-08-17 15:13
Considering my Italian background, great suggestions. Will take under advisement.
From what you are saying, MP does not allow or provides a way to provide a list of out of sequence activities like Primavera log does. Is that correct?
James B.
Member for
20 years 7 months
Member for20 years7 months
Submitted by Stephen Devaux on Thu, 2012-08-16 15:02
But of course one has to assume that all project team members have been properly instructed on the right way to deal with potential schedule improvements:
1. Take the suggestion to the planner (ECP, or engineering change proposal);
2. Have its overall implications analyzed;
3. Implement the work and schedule change (ECO, or engineering change order).
If the team has NOT been properly instructed, then the project manager has been guilty of a grievous omission and should:
1. Shoot himself;
2. Bury himself.
In that order, of course.
Go, England! (Does the weather ever do anything but rain? In Barbados, we'd never allow that during an important cricket match!)
Before executing your procedure perhaps the judge and jury should check that the guilty person was aware that what he was doing was a capital offence rather than a neater way of getting the job done.
Does MP stand for Military Police?
Best regards
Mike Testro
Member for
20 years 7 months
Member for20 years7 months
Submitted by Stephen Devaux on Wed, 2012-08-15 15:13
Dig a hole two metres deep, two metres long and one metre wide.
Call the person who did the out-of-sequence work without first ensuring with the planner/PM that the OOS work was not going to be a big problem, and then changing the working schedule.
Shoot the person.
Pour quicklime on the body.
Bury the body in the hole.
Explain to them why they should never do out-of-sequence work without first clearing it.
Apologize for not doing #6 before doing #1 through #5.
Member for
22 years 9 monthsHi James,unfortunately, no;
Hi James,
unfortunately, no; MS Project does not provide such a scheduling report as Primavera where out of sequence, open ended activities a.s.o. would be high-lighted
to easily (?) retrieve out of sequence activities (activity B with a FS link to activity A started before A is being finished), it needs a VBA script, as a filter cannot select an activity because of its predecessor
Alexandre
Member for
15 years 1 monthConsidering my Italian
Considering my Italian background, great suggestions. Will take under advisement.
From what you are saying, MP does not allow or provides a way to provide a list of out of sequence activities like Primavera log does. Is that correct?
James B.
Member for
20 years 7 monthsHi, Mike!But of course one
Hi, Mike!
But of course one has to assume that all project team members have been properly instructed on the right way to deal with potential schedule improvements:
1. Take the suggestion to the planner (ECP, or engineering change proposal);
2. Have its overall implications analyzed;
3. Implement the work and schedule change (ECO, or engineering change order).
If the team has NOT been properly instructed, then the project manager has been guilty of a grievous omission and should:
1. Shoot himself;
2. Bury himself.
In that order, of course.
Go, England! (Does the weather ever do anything but rain? In Barbados, we'd never allow that during an important cricket match!)
Fraternally in project management,
Steve the Bajan
Member for
19 years 10 monthsHi Stephen Before
Hi Stephen
Before executing your procedure perhaps the judge and jury should check that the guilty person was aware that what he was doing was a capital offence rather than a neater way of getting the job done.
Does MP stand for Military Police?
Best regards
Mike Testro
Member for
20 years 7 monthsYes, in MSP or in any other
Yes, in MSP or in any other software:
Hope that helps.
Fraternally in project management,
Steve the Bajan