Typical usage
The following information is based on typical usage of PPM and Project Management. It is not warranted that you will have the same or similar experience.
Table A-1. Project Management Typical Usage lists entities with an amount for its typical usage, comments about typical usage, amounts that are considered complex and might impact performance, where that performance impact might occur, and recommendations or comments about complex usage.
Table A-1. Project Management Typical Usage
|
Typical |
Complex |
Performance Impact |
Recommendations/Comments |
Number of Tasks
|
50–500 |
> 5,000 |
Load work plan, cost
roll-ups |
Do not create a task that represents a
generic topic such as vacation or training.
Shorten the project duration and simplify
work breakdown. |
Number of Levels in a
Work Plan
|
< 5–7 |
|
|
|
Number of Resources
Assigned to a Single Task
|
< 100a |
>= 50 |
Time sheet submission,
cost roll-ups |
Performance depends on the number of
resources per project rather than the
number of resources per task. |
Number of Resources
Assigned to an Entire
Project
|
|
hundreds |
|
Make tasks more granular to optimize
performance for resources entering time
and for project managers and summary
task owners. |
Duration of a Single
Leaf Task
|
<= 1 year |
|
|
Model large projects with a separate project
for each phase, with each phase lasting
three to five years. |
Duration of a Single
Summary Task
|
< 5 yearsb |
> 2 years |
View work plan, enter
time on a time sheet or
task, approve time |
|
Duration of a Project
|
|
|
Cost roll-ups |
Accumulation of time sheets increases
work load for services and resource
utilization calculations. |
Number of Time Sheets
Logged Against a
Single Task
|
|
thousands |
|
Performance depends on the number of
resources assigned to the task and the task
duration. |
a. For tasks with a duration of less than five years. b. For tasks with less than 100 resources.
|