Chapter 7
How to Monitor & Control a TPM Project
When you are drowning in numbers, you need a system to separate the wheat from the chaff.
—Anthony Adams, Vice President, Campbell Soup Co.
If two lines on a graph cross, it must be important.
—Ernest F. Cooke, University of Baltimore
You can't monitor and control a project by simply reading reports. You have to walk around and personally validate progress.
—Robert K. Wysocki, PhD, President, EII Publications, LLC
- Understand the reasons for implementing controls on the project
- Track the progress of a project
- Determine an appropriate reporting plan
- Measure and analyze variances from the project plan
- Use Gantt charts to track progress and identify warning signs of schedule problems
- Use burn charts to compare resource consumption against plan
- Construct and interpret milestone trend charts to detect trends in progress
- Use earned value analysis (EVA) to detect trends in schedule and budget progress
- Integrate milestone trend charts and EVA for further trend analysis
- Build and maintain an Issues Log
- Manage project status meetings
- Determine the appropriate corrective actions to restore a project to its planned schedule
- Properly identify corrective measures and problem escalation strategies
The project plan is a system as defined by the scope triangle. As such, it can get out of balance, and a get-well plan must be put in place to restore balance to the system. ...
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