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Project Planning“No plan survives the first contact with the enemy” - Sun Tzu in The Art of WarPlanning is one of the main secrets to successful project implementation.
To do this in practice, you need to focus on the project and draw up a complete list of the activities and tasks to be carried out showing the people or sections who would need to do them. Then chart these activities using either a Critical Path analysis network, a Gantt chart, or milestone plan. With this chart, talk to the people who would need to be involved about their contribution and to get their ideas, their estimates of time involved, and their availability. Continue this until you have a fairly complete map of the project. During this process you will start to identify possible difficulties and blockages and should become clear as to which activities are the critical ones – those, which could delay the whole project. Having done that, simply get the team and other contributors to talk and think about what needs to be done, and then use charts to communicate that to others. Planning Sheets, Milestone Plans and Gantt ChartsYou will almost certainly need to use one of the following planning techniques to plan your project.
Each technique has its strengths and weaknesses and you need to select the technique most suited to your particular project. Each is illustrated below. (Note: For more details on drawing planning charts using in WORD, EXCEL, or Microsoft Project , see the section on Drawing Planning Charts. )
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