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

Important 

Follow the steps in this section if you have Microsoft Office Project Standard. If you have Microsoft Office Project Professional, skip this section and refer to the next section, “Starting Project Professional.” If you are uncertain, here is an easy way to tell which edition of Project you have: After starting Project, look for a Collaborate menu between the Report and Window menus. If you see it, you have Project Professional; if not, you have Project Standard. You can also click About Microsoft Office Project on the Help menu any time after Project has been started. The dialog box that appears indicates which edition you have.

In this exercise, you’ll start Project Standard, create a file based on a template (containing some initial data that you can use as a starting point for a new project plan), and view the major areas of the default Project interface.

1. On the Windows taskbar, click the Start button.

The Start menu appears.

2. On the Start menu, point to All Programs, click Microsoft Office, and then click Microsoft Office Project 2007.

Project Standard appears. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration.

Tip 

Depending on the screen resolution that is set on your computer and the toolbar buttons you use most often, it’s possible that not every button on every toolbar will appear on your Project toolbars. If a button mentioned in this book doesn’t appear on a toolbar, click the Toolbar Options down arrow on that toolbar to display the rest of the available buttons.

If you’ve used other Office applications or if you’re upgrading from a previous version of Project, you’ll be familiar with many of the major interface elements in the Project window. Let’s walk through them:

Next, you will view the templates included with Project and create a project plan based on one of them.

3. On the File menu, click New.

The New Project task pane appears.

4. In the New Project task pane, under Templates, click On computer.

The Templates dialog box appears.

5. Click the Project Templates tab.

Your screen should look similar to the following illustration.

6. Click New Business (you may need to scroll down through the list of Project Templates to see it), and then click OK.

Tip 

Depending on how Project was installed on your computer, the templates included with Project might not be installed at this point. This “install on first use” setting is one of the setup choices for optional components included with Project. If you have never seen the templates included with Project before, spend some time browsing through them. You might find one that matches an upcoming project for which you’d like to develop a full plan. Starting with a predefined template can save you a great deal of effort.

Project creates a project plan based on the New Business template and closes the New Project task pane. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration.

For the next few exercises in this chapter, you will use the sample data provided by the template to identify the major parts of the Project interface.

The Project Guide: Well Worth a Look

Project includes a wizard-like interface that you can use when creating or fine-tuning a project plan. This helper is called the Project Guide. You can use the Project Guide to perform many common activities relating to tasks, resources, and assignments.

In Project 2007, the Project Guide is turned off by default, but you can display the Project Guide by clicking Turn On Project Guide on the View menu or checking the Display Project Guide box on the Interface tab of the Options dialog box (Tools menu). Once you do this, the Project Guide appears in the left pane of the Project window.

The Project Guide contains instructions, definitions, and commands that not only walk you through common activities, but can change views and other settings in Project to help you complete your chosen activity. You can view all activities in the Project Guide through the Project Guide toolbar. This toolbar is divided into the most common subject areas within Project (Tasks, Resources, Track, and Report).

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