Location: 
                        PMKI > Project
                          Controls and Scheduling > Authorizing &
                        Maintaining the Schedule.  
                      
 
  - Authorizing and baselining the
                        project schedule 
                      - Statusing and updating the project
                        schedule 
                      - Useful External Web-links &
                        Resources. 
                      
Other related sections of the PMKI:
- Schedule Development &
                        Time Analysis 
                      - Reporting &
                        Communicating Controls Information 
                    
 Art:
                          Assurance for high risk projects. High-risk,
                      high reward projects that have the potential to transform
                      an organization require a robust, independent assurance
                      function!
Art:
                          Assurance for high risk projects. High-risk,
                      high reward projects that have the potential to transform
                      an organization require a robust, independent assurance
                      function!
Managing delays and disruptions to a schedule are
                      discussed in: 
                      Assessing
                            Delay and Disruption - Tribunals Beware,
                      and 
                            Delay, Disruption and Acceleration Costs. 
                      
The specific issue of assessing parallel delays in WP1064
                        - Concurrent Delays. 
For more on delay and disruption claims see: Forensic time analysis and reporting.
 Critical
                      path scheduling techniques, supported by efficient
                      scheduling software have long been recognized as a
                      standard component in the overall project management
                      process. So why does project scheduling so often fail to
                      deliver on its promise? One answer to this question is the
                      opportunities missed by many project teams to make their
                      schedules work for them. Simple changes in the way
                      schedules are developed, implemented and managed can
                      deliver major increases in the returns from the investment
                      made in the planning / scheduling processes. The first
                      area of consideration is the various options available to
                      develop and "update" a schedule and how the different
                      information produced can influence the thinking of both
                      project management and project team members. The second
                      area of consideration is the power of the update process
                      in itself to change project team behaviour and attitudes
                      towards the overall success of a project.
Critical
                      path scheduling techniques, supported by efficient
                      scheduling software have long been recognized as a
                      standard component in the overall project management
                      process. So why does project scheduling so often fail to
                      deliver on its promise? One answer to this question is the
                      opportunities missed by many project teams to make their
                      schedules work for them. Simple changes in the way
                      schedules are developed, implemented and managed can
                      deliver major increases in the returns from the investment
                      made in the planning / scheduling processes. The first
                      area of consideration is the various options available to
                      develop and "update" a schedule and how the different
                      information produced can influence the thinking of both
                      project management and project team members. The second
                      area of consideration is the power of the update process
                      in itself to change project team behaviour and attitudes
                      towards the overall success of a project.  
PP: Managing for Success - The power of regular updates. This paper looks at the interaction between the analytical and psychological processes involved in schedule development and control systems to identify ways to deliver major enhancements in the planning / scheduling process (Including how to ask for progress information to obtain the maximum psychological benefit). A number of examples from successful (and less successful) projects are used to highlight the opportunities and techniques that can be used by any project team to significantly enhance their prospects for success. Download the paper.
Blg:
                          Do management techniques such as Scrum, Takt and Lean
                          Construction improve performance?  
                      This post looks at how the Hawthorne Effect and
                      Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle can be used to improve
                      the effectiveness of the schedule in team planning
                      sessions. 
WP: Proactive Project Surveillance. Effective surveillance systems are needed to identify which of an organization's projects are currently candidates for failure, in sufficient time to take action that will change the probability in a favorable way.
Blg: A focus on Work-Flow Little’s Law suggests that any increase in WIP automatically increases lead times! To borrow from Lean: WIP is a waste and needs to be minimized. This post explains why in-progress and part complete work needs to be minimized.
WP: Decision Making.
                      The purpose of statusing the project is to develop the
                      information needed to inform project management decision
                      making, this paper looks at the different types of
                      decision and the options for making a 'good decision'. For
                      more on managing issues and making effective decisions
                      see: Making
                          Decisions.
                          
WP: Schedule Compression. This WP focuses on the techniques and risks associated with schedule compression, including 'fast-tracking' and 'crashing'.
For papers on predicting project completion allowing for uncertainty, see Schedule Risk & Uncertainty.
Advice and guidance on baselining the schedule and the use of statusing and updating to control the schedule is contained in Sections 5.2 and 5.3 of Easy CPM.
 Easy CPM is
                      an easy-to-read, course-in-a-book that provides practical
                      training and guidance to individuals and organizations
                      involved in developing or using CPM schedules based on the
                      Critical Path Method (CPM). It is designed to act as both
                      a reference, and practice guide, for people implementing
                      CPM scheduling after they have learned to use the CPM
                      scheduling software of their choice.
                      Easy CPM is
                      an easy-to-read, course-in-a-book that provides practical
                      training and guidance to individuals and organizations
                      involved in developing or using CPM schedules based on the
                      Critical Path Method (CPM). It is designed to act as both
                      a reference, and practice guide, for people implementing
                      CPM scheduling after they have learned to use the CPM
                      scheduling software of their choice. 
See more, free preview and buy ($35, immediate download).
Access the Guild of Project Controls Body of Knowledge. A suite of process-based documents which define Project Controls (membership required): http://www.planningplanet.com/guild/GPCCAR-modules