About this Presentation
The vast majority of case studies involving critical chain have been on projects where most of the project resources were in-house, or where procured resources are a relatively small part of the overall project. But what about projects like construction, capex and infrastructure? On this kind of project, the project owner outsources the vast majority of the work - often over 90%. How can you have a shared project buffer, when the major team members are contracted with a fixed-price contract, that expects them to take the risk of uncertainty and variability? What about when standard contractual terms require compliance to a baseline, and the use of earned value management? In this presentation, Ian Heptinstall will talk about how you can make project procurement and contracting compatible - and complementary, to critical chain. He will describe a collaborative project contracting approach called a Project Alliance (or IPD = Integrated Project Delivery). He will also mention other approaches that can be used to reduce the chances of misalignment between the project supply chain and the project owner, including the well-known earned value method.
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.
Critical chain is a great way to overcome obstacles to collaboration that come from conventional approaches to planning, scheduling, and control.
Common approaches to procurement and contracting introduce significant obstacles to collaboration.
Project alliances or collaborative contracts can significantly reduce these barriers.
Instructor(s)
Ian Heptinstall
Ian is an Associate Professor of Project Management at the University of Birmingham (UK).
He is a late-career academic, joining the University after 35 years of working in project management, procurement and management consulting.
His project & procurement experience primarily in the capex, construction & engineering fields.
He has been a regular TOCICO Conference attendee since 2011, and in 2020 he helped set up the annual Critical Chain virtual conference, to share CC real world experience with project management practitioners who have little or no knowledge of TOC or critical chain.
In 2016 he published “The Executive Guide to Breakthrough Project Management” about overcoming obstacles to using critical chain on capital/construction projects, in collaboration with Robert Bolton, and he supported Rene Nibbelke in producing the APM’s “Senior Managers’ and Project Managers’ Guide to Critical Chain” (2024