Copyright © R. Varkki George, 1996

Using Microsoft Project to manage projects

Project management is an important part of a planner's responsibilities. For the most part, planners manage projects in an informal way: they have a deadline to meet, and they monitor progress of the project intuitively. However, sophisticated tools are available for managing projects more formally. These instructions introduce you to Microsoft Project, software that helps to plan and track projects. You will walk through instructions for project planning with Project, and then for project tracking. Since time is limited, you will only work with a subset of the features available with Project.

In managing projects, there are essentially two steps: project planning, and project tracking. Projects consist of several tasks, each of a certain duration, that are to be carried out in a certain sequence. Project planning happens at the start of a project; at this stage the planner identifies the tasks involved, estimates task duration, and guesses at task sequence. As the project progresses, some of this may change: task sequences may have to be altered, and tasks may take longer or shorter than originally planned. Project tracking involves recording these various changes, and making appropriate changes to the proposed schedule; tracking must take places throughout the life of the project.

Initial Steps

To launch Project, double-click on the Microsoft Project icon. (Macintosh users will find this on URBAN-SERVER1 in the MAC_APPS volume; PC users will find this in the .)

When the Welcome! message box is displayed, click on the button next to Start a New Project.

The various parts of the Project screen are as follows:

To change the relative sizes of each of these parts of the screen, drag their boundaries to the new location. To increase the height of the Gantt Chart, drag the lower boundary of the Chart. To change the size of portions within each part (for instance, the width of the Name column in the Task Table), drag the bounding element of that portion. To change the width of the Name column in the Task Table, drag the vertical line on the right side of the column to a new location.

Several options for Project functioning and appearance can be controlled using the Tools|Options... menu item. For this exercise, I suggest you change the following settings in the way Project functions. In the Options dialog box, choose the Schedule tab, and set the different options like this:

Choose the File|Summary Info... dialog box, and in the resulting dialog box choose the Project tab. In the Start Date field, type 3/4/96 (the scheduled start of the imaginary project we will be scheduling in this tutorial). For the examples in this tutorial to work, you should also set "today's date" to fit with the rest of the dates used. In the Current Date field, type 3/1/96.

Project Planning

Project planning involves identifying the tasks involved, their durations, and the relationships among the tasks. Microsoft Project then automatically computes the total project duration and other related information.

To enter information about a task, click on an empty cell in the Task Table, type in the name of the task, and press enter. The task name appears in the cell, and a default duration of one day is assigned. To change the default duration, click on the cell in question, type in the correct duration, and press enter.

Project Tracking

To track projects in Microsoft Project, a distinction is drawn between planned, actual, and scheduled information about tasks. Planned task dates (start, finish, duration) are those that are assigned in the initial schedule that is created. As the project progresses, actual dates are recorded; these may or may not be different from the planned dates. In response to changing circumstances, the project may have to be rescheduled; this new information is recorded as scheduled dates. The three different types of information make it possible to keep track of how a project is progressing vis-à-vis the initial plan.

Since we will be mimicking a future tracking session, the first step is to set the current date. Choose the File|Summary Info... menu item. Next to the Current Date, type in the date when the tracking is taking place. (For this exercise, set the current date to 4/1/96.)

Next, enter the actual completion data for tasks that are already complete or under way. To do this, click on each task that is complete, and select Tools|Tracking|Update Tasks... In the Update Task dialog box, type the percentage of work completed or the actual finish date.