What is the S-Curve, and how do calculate the work progress..

Member for

5 years 9 months

Hi all,

I'w working on a shutdown schedule and want to generate S curve by WBS level. I created a layout for each WBS level and generate my curve. But the problem here is : I have 16 WBS levels and it will cost me a lot of time to print one by one.

Is there a solution to print all the curves in one shot ? one file ?

Thanks for your feedback.

Member for

21 years 8 months

Morne Beeslaar warning on productivity rates being at best a guess cannot be overlooked.  No way can you overlook the reliability of the source data you uses when creating the S-curves.

·       You need to track production rates.

·       Easier to track if using Unit Costing capable financial/accounting software.  The mere tracking of budgeted amounts is not good enough.

·       https://www.foundationsoft.com/unit-cost-production-reporting/

·       Easier to model if using scheduling software that correctly model production rates in easy to understand implementation instead of missing this important value .

·        https://www.slideshare.net/davilara11/enhanced-resource-planning

There are a variety of S-curves that are applicable to project management applications, including: Man Hours versus Time S-curve, Costs versus Time S-curve, Baseline S-curve, Actual S-curve, Target S-curve, Value and Percentage S-curves.

·       Some important S-curves any scheduler shall understand are missing:

·       The Probabilities of Success curve.

·       http://www.goodplan.ca/2011/02/s-curve-of-success.html

·       EVM S-curves.

·       https://josephzaarour.wordpress.com/tag/earned-value/

Also is missing the misconceptions and pitfalls of some S-curves that shall be included in any reference to S-curves for it to be complete.

·       Earned Value Management as a tool for Project Control

·       The Great Divorce: Cost Loaded Schedule Updating

Member for

9 years 8 months

Good information and theoretically sound.

 

Problem in South Africa is that contractors are notoriously poor at just producing a level 3 schedule never mind getting cost or resource loading done to produce manhour schedules. Productivity rates are at best a guess.

 

Thanks for a great article though.

Member for

10 years 5 months

hi

we can not display the pictures

Member for

10 years 5 months

Hi, It is a good article but I can not see the pictures,

how can i disply them?

 

 

tnx.

Member for

12 years 11 months

good article but pictures are not displaying.

Member for

16 years 7 months

Hi,

 

where I can get pictures , that would be easier to understand

Member for

14 years 7 months

It is a good article, but unfortunately, the picture in it can not display normally.