Title: Measuring Productivity in the Construction Industry
1Measuring Productivity in the Construction
Industry
Canadian Construction Association 87th Annual
Conference Cancun, Mexico March 7, 2005
2Why Measure Productivity?
3What is Labour Productivity?
- Productivity Output / Input
- (e.g. Earned hours / Worked hours)
- Or the reciprocal
- Productivity Input / Output
- (e.g. Manhours per unit produced)
-
4Hypothetical Tender
- Labour 40
- Materials 40
- General Conditions
- Indirect Costs 10
- Overhead 5
- Profit 5
- Total 100
-
- Largest cost component
- Most volatile
- Most critical to control
5Hypothetical Tender
- Labour 40 45
- Materials 40
- General Conditions
- Indirect Costs 10
- Overhead 5
- Profit 5
- Total 100
-
A 12.5 overrun in the labour component
6Hypothetical Tender
- Labour 45
- Materials 40
- General Conditions
- Indirect Costs 10
- Overhead 5
- Profit 0
- Total 100
-
Wipes out all profit!
7Factors Affecting ProductivityMCA - Labour
Estimating Manual - 1986
8Common Factors Impacting Labour Productivity
9Common Causes of Labour Overruns
- Internal
- Poor planning management of work
- Rework errors
- Bad estimate
- Lack of training
- Morale problems
- Staff turnover
- Material equipment availability
10Common Causes of Labour Overruns
- External
- Overtime
- Changes
- Crowding
- Trade Stacking
- Weather
- Site Access
These factors seldom occur in
isolation
11Quantifying Productivity Losses
12Crew OvermanningU.S Army Corps of Engineers,
Modification Impact Evaluation Guide, 1979
13Effect of Congestion (Crowding) on Labour
EfficiencyU.S. Army Corp of Engineers
"Modification Impact Evaluation Guide" - July 1979
14Effects of OvertimeUS Army Corps of Engineers -
1979
15Summary of Overtime Curves
16Impact Due to Change Orders
17Productivity Effect of Temperature and Relative
Humidity
18Information To Manage By
19Work Breakdown Structure
20Output Earned Manhours
21Input Worked Manhours This Period
22Input vs. Output
23Job Tracking
24Performance Index
25Recovering Productivity Losses Through Claims
26Three Basic Approaches
- 1. Total Cost Claim
- 2. Industry Charts
- 3. Measured Mile
27Differential Productivity Calculation
28Calculation of Loss of Productivity
Total Actual Manhours 419,201
MHs Would-Have-Been Manhours 300,793
MHs (857,262 sq. ft./2.85 sq.ft./MH) Loss of
Productivity 118,408 MHs or
28.25
29Why Measure Productivity?
- You cant correct a problem if you dont know it
exists - By the time the job is over, youve lost the
money - You will have current information to manage and
control your project - You should correct losses arising from internal
problems - You may be able to recover losses arising from
external causes