Book description
Microsoft Office Project for Mere Mortals® strips away the mysteries of Microsoft Office Project, giving you practical skills, methodologies, and best practices for building schedules and budgets that work.
Using the clear, concise, and friendly style that’s a hallmark of the For Mere Mortals® series, Jansen provides step-by-step instructions for every feature you really need to master, whether you’re using Project 2007, 2003, or 2002. You’ll learn why Project works as it does, so you can make the best possible decisions about how to use it. Realistic exercises offer extensive hands-on practice, and a start-to-finish case study covers the entire project lifecycle. Jansen shows you how to:
• Scope projects using work breakdown structures and task outlines
• Define projects rapidly with Microsoft Project templates
• Work with milestones, deadline dates, and task information
• Manage resource sharing across multiple projects
• Calculate accurate budgets
• Avoid common scheduling errors and oversights
• Tighten critical paths to reduce work overload and resource overallocation
• Use baselining to track variances, adjust projects “on-the-fly,” and become a more effective scheduler
• Uncover potential problems, identify alternatives, and avoid crises
• Discover little-known tips and tricks for better formatting and printing
• Use Project to close projects successfully, and learn from your experience
Whatever your title, organization, or project, this book will help you get powerful results with Microsoft Office Project—quickly, efficiently, and painlessly. The CD-ROM contains a searchable electronic version of the book and Microsoft Project (.MPP) files (available for Project 2002 and above) of the book’s step-by-step scheduling practices and case studies.
Praise for Microsoft Office Project for Mere Mortals®
“This book stands out of the ordinary, as it is the first one on Microsoft Office Project I know to be completely driven by project management methods.”
–Jan De Messemaeker, M.S., Microsoft Project Most Valuable Professional
“Patti Jansen’s practice sessions are a great way to become familiar with Microsoft Project and the step-by-step instructions make it easy.”
–Kimberly Amaris, PMP
Patti Jansen, PMP, is a Senior Project Manager at QuantumPM, a leading project management consultancy that works closely with Microsoft. She has more than 10 years of senior project management experience, and is a well-known Microsoft Project and PMI instructor. She was a technical contributor to PMP: Project Management Professional Study Guide, Deluxe Edition, PMP: Project Management Professional Workbook, and PMP: Project Management Professional Certification Kit.
Foreword xvii
Preface xix
Acknowledgments xxvii
About the Author xxix
CHAPTER 1 Introducing Microsoft Office Project 1
CHAPTER 2 Revealing the Secrets of Microsoft Project 23
CHAPTER 3 Building Your Schedule: Scoping Your Project 87
CHAPTER 4 Understanding Task Information 137
CHAPTER 5 Sequencing the Work: Creating the Critical Path 195
CHAPTER 6 Understanding Resources and Their Effects on Tasks 235
CHAPTER 7 Using Project to Enter Cost Estimates 301
CHAPTER 8 Polishing Your Schedule 347
CHAPTER 9 Reviewing Work Overload and the Critical Path 389
CHAPTER 10 Baselining: The Key to Tracking Your Schedule 431
CHAPTER 11 Tracking Your Schedule 451
CHAPTER 12 Closing Down Your Schedule: The End Is Only the Beginning 521
CHAPTER 13 Project Mysteries Resolved! 535
APPENDIX Answers to Review Questions 573
Glossary 591
Index 601
Table of contents
- Copyright
- Praise for Microsoft Office Project for Mere Mortals®
- Addison-Wesley presents the For Mere Mortals® Series
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- 1. Introducing Microsoft Office Project
-
2. Revealing the Secrets of Microsoft Project
- Recognizing the Underlying Rules of Project
- Understanding the Project Data Structure
- Using Primary Project Data Fields
- Project Behavior and Definitions
- Navigating Project and Some Quick Tips
- The Major Project Views
- What Are Project Tables?
- Practice: Navigating and Using Project Views
- Summary
- Review Questions
-
3. Building Your Schedule: Scoping Your Project
- The First Steps in Planning a Project Schedule
- Building a Task List: Creating a Work Breakdown Structure Outside of the Tool
- Naming and Saving Your Project
- Set Project Information and the Calendar
- Building the Work Breakdown Structure in the Tool: Outlining—Summary and Subtasks
- Using Project Templates
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Practice: Setting up the Schedule
- Summary
- Case Study: Starting the Schedule
- Review Questions
-
4. Understanding Task Information
- Reviewing Task Information
- Important Task Information
- Understanding Duration and Work Fields on Tasks
- What Are Task Types and Why Should I Care?
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Summary
- Practice: Entering Milestones, Deadline Dates, Task Calendars, and Task Types in Your Schedule
- Case Study: Continue Building the Schedule
- Review Questions
-
5. Sequencing the Work: Creating the Critical Path
- Linking Tasks
- Using Task Relationships and Linking to Sequence the Work
- Using Leads and Lags to Reflect Realistic Scheduling Situations
- Using the Predecessors and Successors Columns Effectively
- Using Task Relationships to Develop the Critical Path
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Summary
- Practice: Linking Tasks, Using Leads and Lags, and Using the Network Diagram
- Case Study: Creating Task Relationships
- Review Questions
-
6. Understanding Resources and Their Effects on Tasks
- Reviewing Resource Information
- Important Resource Information
- Assigning Resources to the Project and to Tasks
- Entering Estimates in Your Schedule
- Leads and Lags
- Reviewing the Critical Path
- Sharing Resources Between Projects or Creating a Resource Pool
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Summary
- Practice: Adding Resources and Estimates to the Schedule
- Case Study: Adding Resources to the Schedule
- Review Questions
-
7. Using Project to Enter Cost Estimates
- Introducing Project Cost Concepts
- Assigning Costs to Resources and Tasks
- Assigning Different Rates to a Resource
- Your Project Budget
- Tips and Recommendations for Dealing with Costs
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Summary
- Practice: Adding Costs to the House-Painting Project
- Case Study: Adding Costs to the Schedule
- Review Questions
-
8. Polishing Your Schedule
- What Errors Will You Look For?
-
The Various Methods for Reviewing Your Schedule
- Formatting Text
- Sorting
- Grouping
- Filtering
- Adding Columns and Using Different Views or Tables
- Using Graphs and Viewing and Printing Reports
- Viewing and Printing Reports
- Reviewing the Schedule
- Using Task Drivers (Project 2007)
- Using Change Highlighting and Undo (for Project 2007)
- Using a Special Audit View
- Final Thoughts on Reviewing Your Schedule
- Checks to Review Your Schedule
- Adding to or Changing the Schedule
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Summary
- Practice: Looking for Errors
- Case Study: Reviewing the Schedule
- Review Questions
-
9. Reviewing Work Overload and the Critical Path
- Understanding How Overallocation Happens
- Ways to Review Overallocation
- Leveling Your Project Manually
- Leveling Your Project Using Automated Leveling
- Reviewing the Critical Path
- One Last Look at Your Schedule
- The Project Schedule Building Methodology So Far
- Summary
- Practice: Reviewing Overallocation and the Critical Path
- Case Study: Leveling and the Critical Path
- Review Questions
- 10. Baselining: The Key to Tracking Your Schedule
-
11. Tracking Your Schedule
- Why You Should Track
- Fields for Tracking Progress
- Tracking Costs
- Using Status to Understand Your Project’s Progress
- Methods for Entering Status
- Duration-Based or Effort-Based Tracking
- Reporting
- Introducing Earned Value
- Printing in Project
- The Project Schedule Tracking Methodology
- Summary
- Practice: Tracking and Reporting on Your Schedule
- Case Study: Tracking the Schedule
- Review Questions
- 12. Closing Down Your Schedule: The End Is Only the Beginning
-
13. Project Mysteries Resolved!
-
Additional Tips and Tricks
- Formatting Gantt Chart Bars
- Formatting Text for Particular Kinds of Tasks
-
Project Guide
- Defining the Project Calendar
- Tracking the Project
- Status for Progress Information
- Reporting and Tracking
- Toolbars
- Hovering over Fields
- Double-Clicking and Right-Clicking
- Keyboard Shortcuts
- Smart Tags (Preference Indicators)
- Using Your Mouse to Change the Gantt Chart
- Moving Columns in Tables Around if You Don’t Like Their Order
- Creating Custom Fields Containing Values, Formulas, and Indicators
- Underlying Project Behavior Settings: The Options Dialog Box
- Using the Methodology from This Book
- Getting More Information
- Summary
- Review Questions
-
Additional Tips and Tricks
- Answers to Review Questions
- Glossary
Product information
- Title: Microsoft Office Project for Mere Mortals®: Solving the Mysteries of Microsoft Office Project
- Author(s):
- Release date: July 2007
- Publisher(s): Addison-Wesley Professional
- ISBN: 9780321423429
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