@@Mrs-Project As a planner I've utilized so you can keep going videos and can you explain with detailed videos resource using/ resource levelling/overallocated/resource limit. Thank you take care.
GREAT VIDEO!!! But now that I have a quantifiable number, I still need a way to qualify whether we are in "caution vs. panic" schedule mode. Can you give a range for the index values below 1 and above 1, or at the very least, a rule of thumb?
Think of it like a grading system. 1=perfect ... >1=you're performing better than planned... 0.94 -->0.99 = A = you're doing good, but not perfect. You can recover easily. 0.84 --> 0.93 = B = you're doing okay. Recovery to get back on schedule will take some big efforts. 0.73 --> 0.83 = C = you're not doing good and need to evaluate a new plan for success. The further you go away from 1, the worse it gets.
Thank you Lindsay, this is very useful video series concerning DCMA-14. Have nice day.
Thank you so much! I hope you have a great day, as well!
@@Mrs-Project As a planner I've utilized so you can keep going videos and can you explain with detailed videos resource using/ resource levelling/overallocated/resource limit. Thank you take care.
@@salihdogan4950 great idea! I will do that.
GREAT VIDEO!!! But now that I have a quantifiable number, I still need a way to qualify whether we are in "caution vs. panic" schedule mode. Can you give a range for the index values below 1 and above 1, or at the very least, a rule of thumb?
Think of it like a grading system.
1=perfect ...
>1=you're performing better than planned...
0.94 -->0.99 = A = you're doing good, but not perfect. You can recover easily.
0.84 --> 0.93 = B = you're doing okay. Recovery to get back on schedule will take some big efforts.
0.73 --> 0.83 = C = you're not doing good and need to evaluate a new plan for success.
The further you go away from 1, the worse it gets.