Proper Task Scoping — Early Finish
Steven Souther
I train & consult with PMOs to remove chaos, reduce costs, and improve services ROI. Contact me for free consultation & assessment.
Do your Tasks finish late? If so, there is a high probability that they are improperly scoped.
My last article discussed how to properly create task definitions. Since task scoping directly effects the task definition, this article discusses Task Scope — that is to say, just how much work is defined by a single task.
Over the years I’ve observed that tasks tend to be over-scoped — they have way too much packed into them. I also find that when they are over-scoped, they tend to finish late. Interestingly, they are not late because the scope of work is large — they are late because too many individuals are responsible for their completion.
To fix this I defined 2 important task scoping rules that I use in my method of practice:
1. Scope the task for assignment to an individual resource, not to a team or group
2. Scope the task to finish without waiting on another task
There are cases where Rule 1 is impractical, or even impossible to follow. When this happens, assign the task to a team lead who is responsible for reporting the task status. Be sure to keep the task scope constrained to the smallest practical unit of work possible.
Rule 2 should always be followed. It provides scheduling flexibility and protects the integrity of the task estimate. As an example, if a task needs to be tested or inspected by a separate Individual or team, create a separate task for this.
I consistently achieve early finish times when using these scoping rules in conjunction with the following management techniques:
- Task effort is estimated by the assigned resource
- Remaining effort is reported at the end of each working day
- Inhibitor status is reported at the end of each working day
- Management actively removes task inhibitors
This method does create many tasks in a project — it also creates excellent accountability and project performance.
Planning Specialist in SPV Contracts
5 年the topic is very informative. but the question is that: what about the resource constraint? that is you have to assign more resources to a task to be sure it is performed without?waiting on another task? Am I right?
I would add that an effective way for the assigned resource to estimate their effort is to ask them:? "how many hours would it take you to complete the task if you were locked in a room doing only that task?" And then ask "what percentage of time they will be able to work on that task?" Multiplying the hours times the % will provide a reasonably accurate duration.