Remove Critical Chain Remove Monitoring Remove Reference
article thumbnail

Bubble Graph: Critical Chain Fever Chart Re-Imagined

Epicflow Blog

Let’s examine the way Epicflow’s team has made a classical critical chain (CC) tool called “Fever chart” more powerful with Bubble Graph. . A “fever chart” term is closely related to the Critical Chain Project Management (CCPM) from the Theory of Constraints (TOC). References: Goldratt, E.M. What’s Fever Chart?

article thumbnail

Project Management Framework Types, Key Elements & Best Practices

ProjectManager.com

Popular ones include PRINCE2, CCPM (critical chain project management), scrum (primarily used in development environments) and the waterfall methodology. Management: The management phase is where you’ll monitor, review and report all updates—particularly at each milestone—to key stakeholders. Project Control Cycle.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Summary and review Goldratt’s Rules of flow

Henny Portman

Eli Goldratt once stated that he would eventually replace Critical Chain Project Management. This refers to the amount of work being managed. Monitoring local efficiencies. Monitor buffer consumption versus project completion, and take corrective actions if necessary. Dosage control is another form of managing WIP.

article thumbnail

What Is Resource Leveling in Project Management?

Teamweek

Knowing how to monitor and manage project resources can make or break that project. Resource leveling vs resource smoothing Resource smoothing is a resource management technique that uses free and total float to adjust task schedules without changing the project’s critical path.

article thumbnail

Death March Projects Explored

Alan Parker Blog

Introduction to Death March Project In project management , the term “Death March” refers to projects that are almost destined to fail from the outset. Critical chain scheduling can help identify and manage the challenges of Death March projects by optimizing resource allocation and timelines.

article thumbnail

Creating a Risk Register: All You Need to Know

Epicflow Blog

red, yellow/orange, green) for visual reference. It’s usually a person responsible for monitoring the risk triggers and/or the one who is expected to deploy a risk response plan. [3]. Proper risk management is impossible without regular monitoring of a project’s “health”. References. It can be marked with colors (e.g.,

Risk 52
article thumbnail

Becoming a Successful Project Manager: 5 Tips to Achieve Professional Goals and Objectives

Epicflow Blog

Successful project implementation is impossible without regular monitoring and control. Read more: Bubble Graph: Critical Chain Fever Chart Re-Imagined. As we’ve mentioned earlier, in addition to monitoring the state of projects, it’s even more important to keep track of resources’ progress. See the coherent picture.