About this Presentation
The boundaries of critical chain project management include: * The key assumptions behind critical chain project management (CCPM) . * How planning and execution in the TOC Way fits the CCPM methodology? * What type of projects require changes to the CCPM methodology? * The difficult issue of capacity management in multi-projects. * Performance measurements in projects.
What Will You Learn
To help you get the most value from this session, we’ve highlighted a few key points. These takeaways capture the main ideas and practical insights from the presentation, making it easier for you to review, reflect, and apply what you’ve learned.
The session reveals that true strategy begins with clearly defining what success looks like and deeply understanding the system’s constraint before choosing “solutions.”
It shows how untested assumptions about markets, capability, and resource priorities often hide real conflict and cause strategies to fail once implemented.
The presentation illustrates how linking goals, prerequisites, injections, and measures in a structured S&T Tree aligns priorities and exposes hidden obstacles to execution.
It emphasizes that selecting the wrong metrics can derail strategy — true improvement comes from measures that reflect overall system performance, not local efficiency.
Instructor(s)
Eli Schragenheim
Eli Schragenheim is a well-known international management educator, author and consultant active in various fields of management. He worked with a huge variety of organizations all over the world, including public-sector organizations, industrial, high-tech and start-ups. Since he had joined Dr. Eliyahu M. Goldratt, the famous creator of the Theory of Constraints (TOC) in 1985, Eli Schragenheim had taught, spoke at conferences, and consulted all over the globe. Eli Schragenheim is the author of several books on various aspects of management. His last book, Throughput Economics – Making Good Management Decisions, together with Henry Camp and Rocco Surace, was published in July 2019. Eli Schragenheim first book Management Dilemmas (1998) showed a variety of problematic situations in management and the rigorous analysis leading to the right solution. Next he collaborated with William H. Dettmer in writing Manufacturing at Warp Speed. In this book the new concept of Simplified-DBR, now a key concept in production planning according to TOC, was introduced. He collaborated with Carol A. Ptak on ERP, Tools, Techniques, and Applications for Integrating the Supply Chain, and with Dr. Goldratt and Carol Ptak on Necessary but Not Sufficient. In 2009 his book Supply Chain Management at Warp Speed, with William H. Dettmer and Wayne Patterson was published. In March 2015, Eli has opened a blog, now containing more than 140 articles on various topics in TOC that everybody can access.