Title: Petersen General Contractors Case 8-1
1Petersen General ContractorsCase 8-1
- Chapter 8
- PERT, CPM, Resource Allocation and GERT
- On-line MS Project Tutorials
- http//webcampus.stthomas.edu/s3c/Software/Project
/ProjectEC_1a.html
2Team Alternative
- Form teams of five or fewer
- Identify the task of each team member
- Rate the contribution of each member
Teams 2,3,and 4
Team 1
3Real World Considerations
- Other concurrent projects (size of total
commitments) - Coordinating with other companies (structure)
- Have you ever built a TV Tower? (technology)
- What is the basis for the estimators estimate?
- Is company experience still valid?
- Is 15 for contingencies still appropriate?
Technology
Thankfully this is not the real world.
4Tasks with MS Project
- Team One
- Manage the other teams
- Do a post mortem
- Identify the benefits of a team approach
- Identify the issues encountered
- Characterize your team
- Team Two - At normal rate
- In how many days can the job be completed?
- What bid will yield a 10 pre tax profit?
- To reduce risk, what are the key tasks to watch?
- Team Three - At the fastest time
- In how many days can the job be completed
- What bid will yield a 10 pre tax profit?
- To reduce risk, what are the key tasks to watch?
- Team four -
- If cost is not a consideration, what else can be
done to shorten the project? - Address real world issues
5Deliverablesshort written reposts
- Team One - Reality of managing this project
- Teams Two and Three - MS Project based
appropriate network diagrams for each time
scenario identifying - Key events
- Dependencies
- Cost estimates for each time scenario
- Team Four
- Using team one and two's analysis, provide a list
of alternatives for - Shortening the project if cost is not an object
- Further reducing costs
- Address the real world issues
6FAQs
- Yes, you will work in teams
- Yes, this is a project within a project
-
-
- Others?
7Petersen General ContractorsCase 8-1
8At a Normal Rate
j 35
e 85
h 38
i 8
v 35
k 8
cc 5
f 120
g 42
a 5
b 6
d 30
bb 8
15 aa
c 8
t 3
m 14
p 11
q 12
r 15
s 42
u 19
ee 5
n 34
1 29
0 9
3 w
12 x
- Time
- The critical path, a a-f-h-i-v-k-cc-ee 224 days
- Next longest path is a-b-c-l-n-m-p-q-r-s-u-ee
200 days
15 y
9 z
3 dd
9At a Normal Rate
500 Direct cost are 50
- Costs
- Total direct costs 364,050
- Direct labor 206,280
- Direct material 157,770
- Indirect costs _at_ 65 of direct cost
600,682.50 - Contingency _at_ 15 of direct plus indirect cost
690,784.87 - Bid with 10 profit 759,863.35
10Shortest Possible Timesame path new time
j 35
29
e 85
h 38
i 8
v 35
k 8
cc 5
f 120
25
4
25
g 42
3
4
a 5
b 6
d 30
bb 8
15 aa
c 8
t 3
m 14
p 11
q 12
r 15
s 42
u 19
ee 5
n 34
1 29
30
14
0 9
3 w
12 x
15 y
9 z
3 dd
- Time
- The critical path, a a-f-h-i-v-k-cc-ee 191 days
- Second critical path is a-b-c-l-n-m-p-q-r-s-u-ee
191 days
11Shortest Possible Timesame path new time, new
cost
Time is money
- Costs
- Total direct costs 383,813.20
- Direct labor 226,043.20
- Activities on the critical path increase
16,320 - Activities on the second critical path 3443.20
- Direct material 157,770
- Indirect costs and contingency 728,285.54
- Bid with 10 profit 801,114.10
- (plus 41,250.25 for 35 days)
12What to Supervise More Carefully
- Near critical paths
- Areas of new technology or technique
- New staff
- High risk items
- Any high visibility items
- Others
Glass, china and reputation are easily broken And
never well mended. Ben Franklin
13If Shortest is Still Too Long
- Sub contract sub assemblies
- Buy a tower and transport it
- Others?
- Think out of the box
Some Leading Authors
14Idea-Based Leadership
Yes No
- Ensure the presence and respect for idea
practitioners - Set forth an idea strategy in a idea-friendly
culture - Be open to ideas and the people who suggest them
- Reward the practitioners
- Signal the importance of ideas
Source Whats the Bid Idea Thomas Davenport, and
Laurence Prusak with H. James Wilson
How does your organization rate and why
15Breaking Through to Innovation
- Technology arrangement of objects, ideas and
people to accomplish a goal - Technology brokering exploiting existing
technologies to create new ones - Innovation is not breaking free of the past it
is harnessing the past in new ways
Your perspective and knowledge
Others perspective and knowledge
Source How Breakthroughs Happen Andrew Hargadon
16The Balancing Act
Actionable Dogma
New Ideas
Deep
Depth
Networking
Jack of all trades Master of none
Shallow
Source How Breakthroughs Happen Andrew Hargadon
Inside
Outside
Breath
"Knowledge" is both the raw material for
innovation and "comfort" that inhibit seeking
new opportunities outside of your comfort zone.
17The Rules
- Never forget the future is already here.
- Analogy trumps invention
- Find your discomfort zone
- Divided we innovate.
- Bridge to your strengths
- Build to your weakness
- Build teams
- As goes the individual, so goes the organization
- Rip, mix and burn
Source How Breakthroughs Happen Andrew Hargadon
18Efficiency Innovation Dichotomy
Innovation
Efficiency
Stay in Business
Todays Business Climate
Source Creating the Innovation Culture Frances
Hribe
19Honoring the Dissenters Foster Innovation
- Dissenters offer new ideas
- Force others to challenge their assumptions
- Dissent can
- Kill wrong or out of date ideas
- Tap into peoples tacit (gut) knowledge
- Break you out of a think rut
Source Creating the Innovation Culture Frances
Hribe
20How to Kill Dissent (Innovation) Without Really
Trying
- Best practices make the status quo better
- Treat everybody equally no one is a valuable
resource who's ideas count - Hire a mini me all run down the same train of
thought - Design a process for innovation oxymoronic?
Source Creating the Innovation Culture Frances
Hribe
21How to Foster Innovation
- Speak last in meetings
- Seek out dissenters view
- Protect the dissenter
- Help dissenter be heard
- Challenge the Status Quo
Minority Repots are a good thing
Source Creating the Innovation Culture Frances
Hribe
2280 /20 and You
- 19th Century Vilfredo Pareto
- A small minority (20) account for a majority
(80) of the wealth
- 20th Century Joseph Juran
- Solving quality problems depends on
differentiation the vital few cause from the
trivial many.
Every job should leverage your 20 genius 80 of
the time
Source Richard Koch 80/20 Individual
23Out of the Box Thinking
- Budgets and Schedules
- Self Interest
- Silos and Turf
- Good Enough
- Problems Looking for a Solution
- If resources were no object
- Walk in the others shoes
- Solutions Looking for a Problem
- Where else would it fit
- Do it the opposite way
Source Why Not Bary Nalebuff and Ian Ayres
24Selling your Ideas
- Elevator pitch
- KISS keep is similar silly
- Know to whom to pitch
- Make it their idea
Source Why Not Bary Nalebuff and Ian Ayres
25The Capability to Innovate
- Process
- People
- Strategy and Customers
- Technology
- Measures and Performance
Source 24/7 Innovation Stephen M. Shapiro
26ProcessThe res
- Rethink
- Reconfigure
- Re-sequence
- Relocate
- Reduce
- Reassign
- Retool
27Phrase Problems in Ways They Can Be Solved
- How to. (H2)
- How might.. (HM)
- In what ways might.(IWWM)
- What might.(WM)
Source Dave Labno Innovation Consultant
Do it globally
28Slides not Used
29What would you do if you werent afraid?
Who Moved My Cheese
Source Spencer Johnson Who Moved My Cheese
30We all approach EC Change Differently
- Sniff Sniffs out the situation and sees early
- Scurry Goes into action immediately
- Hem Does not want to deal with change and stays
in familiar territory - Haw - Sees what he is doing is wrong, laughs at
himself, and finally changes
31Haws Writing on the Wall
- Change happens, they keep moving the cheese
- Anticipate change get ready for the cheese to
move - Monitor change smell the cheese often
- Adapt to change quickly
- Enjoy change savor the adventure
- Be ready to change quickly and enjoy it again.
They keep moving the cheese
32The Johari Window
Hidden
Open
Tell
Known
Know to Self
Ask
Blind
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Known
Known to Others
33Pareto Yesterday and Today
Managerial Capitalism
Individualism
- Corporations created wealth
- Jobs are repetitive labor intensive
- Managers Theory X
- Shareholders consume wealth
- Capital is king
- Centralized planning yields strategic goals
- Economies of scale and mass production
- Mangers are focus of power
- Individuals create wealth
- Few employees creative imagination
- Coaches - Theory Y and Z
- Venture capitalist and entrepreneurs share the
wealth - Creativity is critical element
- Agility contractual relationships
- Mass customization
- Companies reunite ownership and control
Source Richard Koch 80/20 Individual
34Customer Strategies
- Add more value
- Listen
- Serve
- Hire
35Creating a Culture of Innovation
- Envision
- Enable
- Explode
- EmpowerTool
36Technology and Innovation
- Create a virtual enterprise
- Change the rules of the game
- Collaborate across the value chain
- Increase the knowledge of employees
- Launch new businesses
37Getting There
- Alliance Based
- Capability Bases
- Process Dominated
- Process Driven
- Process Sensitive
- Functionally Bound
Stages