Title: OPSM 301 Operations Management
1OPSM 301 Operations Management
Koç University
- Class 9
- Project Management
- PERT and project crashing
Zeynep Aksin zaksin_at_ku.edu.tr
2Announcements
- Change in syllabus plan as follows
- Will swap last session on project management with
decision trees - Last session of project management will be after
the bayram on 8/11 - Class will be held in the lab (TBA)
- Second group assignment will be due
- We will have quiz 2 on Project Management
- Decision Trees will be on 1/11
- Quiz 3 on 10/11 Thursday
3Example
Suppose you are an advertising manager
responsible for the launch of a new media
advertising campaign. The campaign (project) has
the following activities Activity Predecessors
Time A. Media bids none 2 wks B. Ad
concept none 6 C. Pilot layouts B 3 D.
Select media A 8 E. Client approval A,C 6 F.
Pre-production B 8 G. Final production E,F 5 H
. Launch campaign D,G 0
4CPM with Three Activity Time Estimates
5Some CPM/PERT Assumptions
- Project control should focus on the critical path
- The activity times in PERT follow the beta
distribution, with the variance of the project
assumed to equal the sum of the variances along
the critical path
6Beta Distribution Assumption
Assume a Beta distribution
density
activity duration
7Beta Distribution Assumption
density
activity duration
m
a
b
8Expected Time and Variance
a 4m b 6
Expected Time
(b - a)2 36
Variance
9Expected Times
1021 32
7 21
C, 14
E, 11
0 7
32 36
21 32
7 21
H, 4
A, 7
0 7
7 12
32 36
12 19
36 54
0 0
D, 5
F, 7
Start 0
I, 18
25 32
20 25
0 0
36 54
0 5.33
5.33 16.33
B 5.33
G, 11
19.67 25
25 36
11Expected Completion Time 54 Days
C, 14
E, 11
H, 4
A, 7
D, 5
F, 7
Start 0
I, 18
B 5.33
G, 11
12What is the probability of finishing this project
in less than 53 days? We need the variance also!
D53
13Sum the variance along the critical path
14Pr(t lt D)
t
TE 54
D53
p(z lt -.156) .436, or 43.6
There is a 43.6 probability that this project
will be completed in less than 53 weeks.
15PERT Probability Example
- Youre a project planner for General Dynamics. A
submarine project has an expected completion time
of 40 weeks, with a standard deviation of 5
weeks. What is the probability of finishing the
sub in 50 weeks or less?
16Converting to Standardized Variable
-
-
X
T
50
40
Z
2
0
.
s
5
Normal Distribution
Standardized Normal Distribution
s
1
s
5
Z
40
50
X
m
T
Z
0
2.0
z
17Obtaining the Probability
Standardized Normal Probability Table (Portion)
Z
.00
.01
.02
s
1
0.0
.50000
.50399
.50798
Z
.97725
.97725
.97784
.97831
2.0
m
Z
0
2.0
.98214
.98257
.98300
2.1
z
Probabilities in body
18Variability of Completion Time for Noncritical
Paths
- Variability of times for activities on
noncritical paths must be considered when finding
the probability of finishing in a specified time. - Variation in noncritical activity may cause
change in critical path.
19Time-Cost Models
- Basic Assumption Relationship between activity
completion time and project cost - Time Cost Models Determine the optimum point in
time-cost tradeoffs - Activity direct costs
- Project indirect costs
- Activity completion times
20Project Costs vs. Project Duration
21Cost Analysis
- We assume a linear relation between activity
duration and activity cost - Regulate activity durations to minimize the total
project cost
22Cost Analysis
- We require two time estimates and two associated
cost estimates - Normal Time Time required if a usual amount of
resources are applied to the activity. - Normal Cost Cost of completing an activity in
normal time. - Crash Time Least time that an activity can be
performed in if all available resources are
applied to it. - Crash Cost Cost of completing an activity in
crash time. - Incremental Cost
- I (Crash Cost - Normal Cost)/(Normal Time -
Crash Time) - ICost of reducing duration of an acitivity by 1
unit of time
23Crash and Normal Times and Costs for Activity B
24Steps for Solution
- 1. Perform PERT analysis using normal times and
calculate I for all critical activities - 2. Pick the activity (critical) with the smallest
I and shorten its duration as much as possible.
That is, until - a. Duration reaches crash time
- b. Another path becomes critical
- 3. If duration of the project cannot be reduced
any more, then stop otherwise return to the
second step - The above process results in the modified crash
program.
25Example
NT,CT
NT
4,2
CC,NC
B
(normal time, crash time)
4
8
4
5
4,2
9
2,1
D
0
4
11
50,30
9
4
2
9
4
0
11
5, 2
C
4
9
70,10
100,10
4
5
9
(crash cost, normal cost)
65,50
26Solution Procedure
- Crash the activity with smallest I (least cost)
- Check if critical path changed at each step
- Continue crashing until satisfied or not possible
- Total Cost Indirect cost direct cost,
- Minimum Cost schedule is the one that has minimum
total cost
27Advantages of PERT/CPM
- Especially useful when scheduling and controlling
large projects. - Straightforward concept and not mathematically
complex. - Graphical networks aid perception of
relationships among project activities. - Critical path slack time analyses help pinpoint
activities that need to be closely watched. - Project documentation and graphics point out who
is responsible for various activities. - Applicable to a wide variety of projects.
- Useful in monitoring schedules and costs.
28Limitations of PERT/CPM
- Assumes clearly defined, independent, stable
activities - Specified precedence relationships
- Activity times (PERT) follow beta distribution
- Subjective time estimates
- Over-emphasis on critical path