Hi all,
There're two points to ask
First project control engineer can be planning engineer or not
Second salary ranges and as a career path which is better
Member for
16 years 5 months
Member for16 years5 months
Submitted by Wilfredo Barbacena on Fri, 2010-10-15 20:55
It all depends on how big the company's organization and project, in smaller company they tend to combine the roles interactively from planning to control while in bigger one's thay have a department for project control and planning department.
During my stint in Nigeria with offshore/subsea engineering and fabrication work we have a planning department which tends to cover from tender to monitoring the project status as based on the plan or baseline schedules and alerts or notify the team if there is any slippage or anything that can delay the schedule. While the project control tends to lean more on cost, i.e. resources, equipment, tools, materials, production productivity, and etc. and the two works closely with contracts, estimating, engineering, accounts, and operation group.
Regards,
WSB
Member for
17 years 3 months
Member for17 years3 months
Submitted by Samer Zawaydeh on Sat, 2010-03-27 04:18
For small projects, usually people do more than one role, hence their might not be ANY difference.
On big projects, you have a lot of work to do, and one person can not do all the work. Hence, the work is divided between people and they have different titles.
Planning is done primarily at the stage before the Schedule is made. So if you are a Planning Engineer, you will spend time trying to form the plan to complete the project. Ultimately, making sure that the WBS contains all the information in the Contract Documents necessary to complete the deliverables.
Project Controls Engineer is in Charge of the Monitory and Control of the project at different levels. Starting from the Crew, Supervisor, Engineers, Project Manager, Upper Managment, Administration and Finance. At each stage you need to be able to have an input and output format to be able to control the process that each station is contributing to the overall success of the project.
Member for
8 years 9 monthsHi all, There're two points
Hi all,
There're two points to ask
First project control engineer can be planning engineer or not
Second salary ranges and as a career path which is better
Member for
16 years 5 monthsHi Salman, It all depends on
Hi Salman,
It all depends on how big the company's organization and project, in smaller company they tend to combine the roles interactively from planning to control while in bigger one's thay have a department for project control and planning department.
During my stint in Nigeria with offshore/subsea engineering and fabrication work we have a planning department which tends to cover from tender to monitoring the project status as based on the plan or baseline schedules and alerts or notify the team if there is any slippage or anything that can delay the schedule. While the project control tends to lean more on cost, i.e. resources, equipment, tools, materials, production productivity, and etc. and the two works closely with contracts, estimating, engineering, accounts, and operation group.
Regards,
WSB
Member for
17 years 3 monthsRE: Project Controls Engineer vs Planning Engineer
Dear Salman,
For small projects, usually people do more than one role, hence their might not be ANY difference.
On big projects, you have a lot of work to do, and one person can not do all the work. Hence, the work is divided between people and they have different titles.
Planning is done primarily at the stage before the Schedule is made. So if you are a Planning Engineer, you will spend time trying to form the plan to complete the project. Ultimately, making sure that the WBS contains all the information in the Contract Documents necessary to complete the deliverables.
Project Controls Engineer is in Charge of the Monitory and Control of the project at different levels. Starting from the Crew, Supervisor, Engineers, Project Manager, Upper Managment, Administration and Finance. At each stage you need to be able to have an input and output format to be able to control the process that each station is contributing to the overall success of the project.
With kind regards,
Samer