Schedule management plan
A schedule management plan explains how the project schedule will be planned, built, updated, reported, and controlled. It defines methods, tools, roles, baselines, and thresholds, tailored to predictive, agile, or hybrid delivery.
Key Points
- Defines how to plan, develop, update, and control the project schedule across the life cycle.
- Tailors scheduling rules for predictive, agile, or hybrid approaches, including iteration length and release planning.
- Sets estimating methods, units of measure, calendars, and level of accuracy for activity durations.
- Establishes the schedule baseline, update frequency, and control thresholds for variance and performance indicators.
- Specifies tools, data sources, and roles responsible for building and maintaining the schedule model.
- Aligns with integrated change control, risk management, and reporting requirements.
Purpose
The schedule management plan provides clear, agreed rules for creating and controlling the schedule so the team can forecast dates, manage slippage, and communicate progress consistently. It reduces confusion by stating how estimates are made, how often updates occur, and when a variance requires action or a change request.
Typical Sections
- Schedule approach and lifecycle (predictive, agile, hybrid).
- Roles and responsibilities for scheduling activities and approvals.
- Tools, repositories, and data sources (e.g., IMS, backlog system, calendars).
- Estimating methods, level of accuracy, and units of measure.
- Calendars, work periods, and scheduling constraints/assumptions.
- Schedule model structure, baselines, and coding conventions.
- Iteration length, release planning, and backlog synchronization (if agile).
- Performance measures and thresholds (e.g., SPI targets, variance limits, burndown).
- Update and reporting cadence, formats, and audiences.
- Change control for schedule baseline changes and integration points with other plans.
How to Create
- Review project objectives, delivery approach, governance, and stakeholder reporting needs.
- Select scheduling methods and tools (e.g., CPM, rolling wave, backlog tools) suitable for the approach.
- Define estimating techniques, units, accuracy, and rules of credit for progress.
- Set work calendars, time zones, and constraints that affect dates.
- Specify the schedule model structure, baseline creation, and coding/ID conventions.
- Establish performance measures and control thresholds (e.g., SPI triggers, day variance limits).
- Define update procedures, reporting cadence, and audiences.
- Align change control, risk responses, and dependencies with the broader project management plan.
- Circulate for stakeholder review, incorporate feedback, approve, and communicate.
How to Use
- Guide schedule development and maintenance consistently across teams and vendors.
- Apply stated estimating and progress rules when planning, updating, and forecasting.
- Use thresholds to decide when to escalate, replan, or submit a change request.
- Align sprint planning, release planning, and critical path updates to the defined cadence.
- Report status using the agreed formats and performance measures.
- Coordinate with risk, resource, and cost plans for integrated analysis and decisions.
Maintenance Cadence
- Treat as a living document during planning and early execution; stabilize after baseline.
- Review at phase gates, major releases, or when delivery approach, tools, or governance change.
- Update after significant lessons learned that affect estimating, progress rules, or reporting.
- Minor clarifications may be handled by the project manager; baseline changes follow change control.
Example
Below is a brief excerpt from a schedule management plan for a hybrid project:
- Approach: Hybrid. Two-week sprints; monthly releases; vendor provides fixed-date milestone deliverables.
- Tools: Jira for team backlog; MS Project for integrated master schedule; weekly synchronization meeting.
- Calendars: Standard 8x5; project holiday list maintained in the schedule tool.
- Estimating: Story points for agile backlog; durations in days for predictive work; accuracy +/- 10% for near-term tasks.
- Baseline: IMS v1.0 approved at Gate 2; changes require a change request if variance > 10 days or SPI < 0.90.
- Reporting: Weekly status dashboard with critical path and sprint burndown; monthly forecast to stakeholders.
- Control: Schedule updates every Friday; schedule risk analysis performed monthly or upon major scope change.
PMP Example Question
While defining the schedule management plan for a hybrid project, what should the project manager include to ensure consistent control across sprints and vendor milestones?
- Detailed network diagrams for every vendor activity.
- Control thresholds and a clear update/reporting cadence for schedule performance.
- A complete list of risks with mitigation actions.
- All activity duration estimates for the entire project.
Correct Answer: B - Control thresholds and a clear update/reporting cadence for schedule performance.
Explanation: The schedule management plan should state how often the schedule is updated and reported, and what variance triggers action. Network diagrams, risks, and detailed estimates are important, but thresholds and cadence drive consistent control.
HKSM