Critical path with AI: what is the most likely date?
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เนื้อหาจัดทำโดย Andres Diaz เนื้อหาพอดแคสต์ทั้งหมด รวมถึงตอน กราฟิก และคำอธิบายพอดแคสต์ได้รับการอัปโหลดและจัดหาให้โดยตรงจาก Andres Diaz หรือพันธมิตรแพลตฟอร์มพอดแคสต์ของพวกเขา หากคุณเชื่อว่ามีบุคคลอื่นใช้งานที่มีลิขสิทธิ์ของคุณโดยไม่ได้รับอนุญาต คุณสามารถปฏิบัติตามขั้นตอนที่แสดงไว้ที่นี่ https://th.player.fm/legal
Summary: - Purpose: Explain how to estimate the most probable project end date by combining the critical path method, AI-adjusted estimates, and Monte Carlo simulations, so you can defend commitments with data rather than gut feelings. - Core ideas: - The finish date is a probability distribution, not a single number, and the critical path can shift as the project evolves. - Use a structured process to describe the project, account for uncertainty, and ground decisions in data. - Step-by-step method: 1) Describe the project with a work breakdown structure (WBS) and a network diagram. For each task, collect three PERT estimates: optimistic (O), most likely (M), and pessimistic (P). Compute the initial expected duration as (O + 4M + P) / 6 to reduce optimism bias. 2) Compute the traditional critical path, identify zero-slack activities, and note that the most worrisome task isn’t always on the CP, yet often drives discussions. 3) Add AI-adjusted durations: gather historical data (planned vs actual durations, complexity, deliverable size, team experience, technical context, concurrent load) and train a simple model to predict an adjustment factor per task. Apply this factor to the PERT estimates before simulation. 4) Run a Monte Carlo simulation: for each task, define a distribution from the three estimates and the AI adjustment. In each iteration, sample durations, recalculate the CP, and record the finish date. After thousands of iterations, obtain a distribution of finish dates. The peak gives the most probable date; use percentiles (e.g., 80% for external commitments, 90% for critical contracts) to set commitments. Communicate with a confidence level rather than a single date. - Practical guidance: - This week: add three estimates per task, include two contextual factors (e.g., complexity, team maturity), run the AI-based adjustment, and launch the simulation. Start collecting actual durations to improve the model over time. - Insights and cautions: - The CP often jumps as variability occurs; simple averages are poor predictors—simulation captures these shifts. - Hofstadter’s law (“everything takes longer than you think”) still applies even when accounting for uncertainty. - Consider holidays, team capacity, external dependencies, and resource contention; AI can detect patterns (e.g., parallel reviews causing delays) and adjust durations accordingly. - Negotiation and communication: - Publish three dates from the simulation: (1) the most probable date, (2) the 80% confidence date, and (3) an internal alert date for mitigation if close to the target. - Include a sensitivity analysis (e.g., a tornado diagram) to show which tasks drive most variability and explore which tasks to de-risk first. - Common mistakes to avoid: - Treating the CP as fixed, using ideal hours, underestimating approvals, ignoring integration time, or not updating the model with progress. Update weekly and lightly retrain the AI adjustment. - Cultural takeaway: - Presenting dates with confidence levels reflects maturity and realism; many leaders already negotiate with probability curves. This approach is a precision tool, not luxury. - Actionable challenge: - In your next committee, present (1) the finish-date probability curve, (2) the top three drivers of variability and mitigations, (3) the gap between the target date and the 80% confidence date with the cost to close it. If asked to “cut a week,” respond with data-driven implications. - Closing thought: - The most probable date is designed through the CP, risk analysis, AI learning from context, and a probabilistic simulation that embraces uncertainty. The alternative is over-optimistic planning based on wishful thinking. - Sign-off reminder (for context): subscribe, review, or share the episode. Remeber you can contact me at [email protected]
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