MicrosoftВ® Office Project 2007 Step by Step (Step By Step (Microsoft))

There are many different ways to report a project’s status in terms of task or budget variance or other measures. There is no shortage of features in Project that support reporting project status, but the main thing to keep in mind is that the method by which you report project status is less a technical question than a communications question. For example, what format and level of detail do your stakeholders need to see? Should project sponsors see different aspects of a project’s performance than those seen by its resources? These questions are central to the project manager’s job. Fortunately, as noted earlier, Project is a rich communications tool that you can use to construct the type of project status information that best meets the needs of your stakeholders.

Tip 

Creating a stoplight view involves using formulas in custom fields. Custom fields are a very powerful and flexible feature, and the stoplight view is just one example of what you can do with them. To learn more about custom fields, type About custom fields into the Search box in the upper right corner of the Project window.

In this exercise, you focus on creating what is often called a stoplight report. This status report represents key indicators for tasks, such as schedule or budget status, as a simple red, yellow, or green light. Such status reports are easy for anyone to understand, and they quickly provide a general sense of the health of a project. Strictly speaking, what you’ll create here is not a report in Project, so we’ll call it a stoplight view instead.

1. On the View menu, click More Views.

The More Views dialog box appears.

2. Click Task Sheet, and click Apply.

Project displays the Task Sheet view. It currently contains the Cost table.

To save you time, we have customized a field in this Project file containing a formula that evaluates each task’s cost variance. Next, you will view the formula to understand what it does and then view the graphical indicators assigned to the field.

3. On the Tools menu, point to Customize, and then click Fields.

The Custom Fields dialog box appears.

4. In the Type box in the upper right corner of the dialog box, click Number on the drop-down list.

5. In the list box, click Overbudget (Number3). This is the customized field we’ve set up for you.

6. Under Custom attributes, click the Formula button.

The Formula dialog box appears.

This formula evaluates each task’s cost variance. If the task’s cost is 10% or less above baseline, the formula assigns the number 10 to the task. If the cost is between 10% and 20% above baseline, it is assigned a 20. If the cost is more than 20% above baseline, it receives a 30.

7. Click Cancel to close the Formula dialog box.

8. In the Custom Fields dialog box, under Values to display, click the Graphical Indicators button.

The Graphical Indicators dialog box appears. Here, you specify a unique graphical indicator to display, depending on the value of the field for each task. Again, to save you time, the indicators are already selected.

9. Click the first cell under the Image column heading (it contains a green smiley face), and then click the drop-down arrow.

Here you can see the many graphical indicators that you can associate with the values of fields.

10. Click Cancel to close the Graphical Indicators dialog box, and then click Cancel again to close the Custom Fields dialog box.

To conclude this exercise, you will display the Overbudget (Number3) column in the Cost table.

11. Click the Fixed Cost column heading.

12. On the Insert menu, click Column.

The Column Definition dialog box appears.

13. In the Field Name box, click Overbudget (Number3) on the drop-down list, and then click OK.

Project displays the Overbudget column in the Cost table.

14. Scroll the Task Sheet view down to display task 24, the Production summary task and its subtasks.

As each task’s cost variance changes, so do the graphical indicators according to the ranges specified in the formula. This is a handy format for identifying tasks whose cost variance is higher than you’d like, as indicated by the yellow or red lights.

Tip 

To see a graphical indicator’s numeric value in a ScreenTip, just point to the indicator.

Up to now, you’ve identified schedule and budget variance in a task view and budget variance in a resource view-each an important measure of project status. This is a good time to remind yourself that the final qualifier of project status is not the exact formatting of the data in Project, but the needs of your project’s stakeholders. Determining what these needs are requires your good judgment and communication skills.

Close the Short Film Project 14 file.

Категории