Need
help solving a project problem?
On the previous page, you learned to create a work
breakdown structure. This page explains how to take the work
packages from the WBS and build a logic network diagram that
faithfully captures the relationships among the work packages
discovered in the WBS.
Begin with a solid understanding of the
work breakdown structure. The lowest level of detail in the work
breakdown structure is the work package or activity. Activities are
small pieces of work that have clear accountability (can be assigned
to a person or team) and consume time, resources, and money. If
constructed correctly, the lowest level of the work breakdown
structure contains all the activities needed to complete all project
work. If, during the course of sequencing and scheduling the
activities, you determine that additional activities need to be
defined, be sure to add them into the work breakdown structure.
A network diagram is a graphical display of the sequence in which activities will be performed. The basis of a network diagram is the project’s work breakdown structure. Clearly, not all activities can be performed at the same time. The technique used to determine the logical sequence of work identifies and documents the dependency relationships between activities or work packages.
For specific explanations and examples of how to sequence activities using network diagrams, see Improving Your Project Management Skills.
To identify which work activities may be
completed at the same time and which must be completed in sequence,
you need to determine the relationships or dependencies among the
activities. There are four basic types of dependencies:
Mandatory (Hard) Dependencies. These
are activities that must
happen before another activity can start, usually because it is
physically impossible to do otherwise. For example, in a
construction project, the foundation must be completed before the
walls can be framed. In a training project, you must develop the
training before you can deliver it.
Resource Constraints. Each piece of
equipment, each person, each facility, and every dollar is subject
to availability as to time, place, quantity, and quality.
Administrative or Operational
Dependencies. Sometimes work products must be approved before
subsequent work begins. Frequently, such dependencies bring related
requirements for exceptions, exemptions, appeals, permits,
procedures, and regulations.
Dependencies of Convention. Sometimes
the order of work is merely traditional, doctrinal, or simply a
matter of preference.
All activities in the network diagram must
be linked using one of the following four logical relationships:
Finish-to-Start (FS). Activity A must
finish before activity B can begin.
Start-to-Start (SS). Activity A must
begin before activity B can begin.
Finish-to-Finish (FF). Activity A
must finish before activity B can finish.
Start-to-Finish (SF). Activity A must
begin before activity B can finish.
Of these four relationships, finish-to-start (FS) is the most common and start-to-finish (SF) is the least common.
After determining the ideal sequence of activities, project managers may find that the project schedule doesn’t meet the needs of the customer. One way to accelerate (compress) the schedule is to overlap activities that, ideally, should wait for a finish-to-start relationship. This creates a lead relationship. For example, in a finish-to-start dependency with a ten-day lead, the successor activity can start ten days before the predecessor is finished.
Conversely, a lag relationship defers the start of a successor activity. For example, in a finish-to-start relationship with a ten-day lag, a successor activity cannot start until ten days after the predecessor is complete. Lag can be helpful to schedule a waiting time needed (for example, the curing time needed after pouring concrete).
Project conditions may require that activities
be further defined using indirect constraints such as the following:
Must start on . . . (Activity must start on a
given date.)
Must start before . . . (Activity must start
before a given date.)
Must start after . . . (Activity must start
after a given date.)
Must finish on . . . (Activity must finish on a
given date.)
Must finish before . . . (Activity must finish
before a given date.)
Must finish after . . . (Activity must finish
after a given date.)
To learn more about the concepts discussed on this page, see Improving Your Project Management Skills.
Recommended Books
Improving Your Project Management Skills.
American Management Association.
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