Project Phase Completion Metrics

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Summary

Project phase completion metrics are data-driven measures that track how well a project advances through its different phases, helping teams understand progress, costs, quality, and risks at each stage. These metrics reveal where delays, budget overruns, or quality issues may occur, making it easier to keep projects on track.

  • Monitor progress closely: Regularly compare planned milestones and tasks against actual completion dates to spot delays early and adjust schedules as needed.
  • Analyze budget trends: Track spending in each project phase and compare it with the planned budget to catch overruns and prevent financial surprises.
  • Evaluate quality and risks: Keep an eye on defects, rework cycles, and risk issues so you can address problems before they impact the final project outcome.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Mary Tresa Gabriel
    Mary Tresa Gabriel Mary Tresa Gabriel is an Influencer

    Operations Coordinator at Weir | Documenting my career transition | Project Management Professional (PMP) | Work Abroad, Culture, Corporate life & Career Coach

    26,386 followers

    Here are some realistic KPIs that project managers can actually track : 1. Schedule Management 🔹 Average Delay Per Milestone – Instead of just tracking whether a project is on time or not, measure how many days/weeks each milestone is getting delayed. 🔹 Number of Change Requests Affecting the Schedule – Count how many changes impacted the original timeline. If the number is high, the planning phase needs improvement. 🔹 Planned vs. Actual Work Hours – Compare how many hours were planned per task vs. actual hours logged. 2. Cost Management 🔹 Budget Creep Per Phase – Instead of just tracking overall budget variance, break it down per phase to catch overruns early. 🔹 Cost to Complete Remaining Work – Forecast how much more is needed to finish the project, based on real-time spending trends. 🔹 % of Work Completed vs. % of Budget Spent – If 50% of the budget is spent but only 30% of work is completed, there's a financial risk. 3. Quality & Delivery 🔹 Number of Rework Cycles – How many times did a deliverable go back for corrections? High numbers indicate poor initial quality. 🔹 Number of Late Defect Reports – If defects are found late in the project (e.g., during UAT instead of development), it increases risk. 🔹 First Pass Acceptance Rate – Measures how often stakeholders approve deliverables on the first submission. 4. Resource & Team Management 🔹 Average Workload per Team Member – Tracks who is overloaded vs. underloaded to ensure fair distribution. 🔹 Unplanned Leaves Per Month – A rise in unplanned leaves might indicate burnout or dissatisfaction. 🔹 Number of Internal Conflicts Logged – Measures how often team members escalate conflicts affecting productivity. 5. Risk & Issue Management 🔹 % of Risks That Turned into Actual Issues – Helps evaluate how well risks are being identified and mitigated. 🔹 Resolution Time for High-Priority Issues – Tracks how quickly critical issues get fixed. 🔹 Escalation Rate to Senior Management – If too many issues are getting escalated, it means the PM or team lacks decision-making authority. 6. Stakeholder & Client Satisfaction 🔹 Number of Unanswered Client Queries – If clients are waiting too long for responses, it could lead to dissatisfaction. 🔹 Client Revisions Per Deliverable – High revision cycles mean expectations were not aligned from the start. 🔹 Frequency of Executive Status Updates – If stakeholders are always asking for updates, the communication process might be weak. 7. Agile Scrum-Specific KPIs 🔹 Story Points Completed vs. Committed – If a team commits to 50 points per sprint but completes only 30, they are overestimating capacity. 🔹 Sprint Goal Success Rate – Tracks how many sprints successfully met their goal without major spillovers. 🔹 Number of Bugs Found in Production – Helps measure the effectiveness of testing. PS: Forget CPI and SPI - I just check time, budget, and happiness. Simple and effective! 😊

  • View profile for Carlos Shoji

    Technical Program Management | Data Analyst | Business Intelligence Analyst | SRE/DevOps | Product Management | Production Support Manager | Product Analyst

    4,813 followers

    What silent metrics decide if your project succeeds... or silently fails? Projects crash quietly. 70% overrun budgets. 50% miss deadlines. The fix? Track these 5 ruthlessly. → 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐞𝐬𝐬 • Tasks completed vs total • Milestones hit vs planned dates → 𝐁𝐮𝐝𝐠𝐞𝐭 𝐏𝐞𝐫𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐦𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐞 • Actual spend vs budget • Cost variance + burn rate trends → 𝐐𝐮𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐲 𝐌𝐞𝐭𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐬 • Defects found + resolved • Client satisfaction scores → 𝐑𝐞𝐬𝐨𝐮𝐫𝐜𝐞 𝐔𝐭𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐳𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 • Team allocation rates • Overtime/underuse percentages → 𝐑𝐢𝐬𝐤 & 𝐈𝐬𝐬𝐮𝐞 𝐌𝐚𝐧𝐚𝐠𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭 • Open risks + issues count • Risk-triggered actions frequency Data-driven PMs live by these. Teams deliver 40% faster. Stakeholders trust grows. Master these numbers. Transform chaos into control. Follow Carlos Shoji for more insights

  • View profile for Asia Allah Buksh

    Online Training Executive at The Skills Age | with Leadership Qualities | EPC - Primavera P6 | Planning Engineering | Shutdown Management | Delay Claim (EOT) Management | Project Management Professionals (PMP)

    9,094 followers

    🚨 Are You Controlling Your Project — Or Just Updating Primavera P6? 📊🔥 In today’s competitive EPC environment, success is NOT measured by activity updates… It’s measured by Earned Value Performance. Most engineers update schedules. Professional Planning Engineers analyze performance. 📊 What Is Earned Value Management (EVM)? Earned Value Management is a powerful performance measurement system that integrates: 📌 Scope 📌 Schedule 📌 Cost Into one intelligent control framework. It answers 3 critical project questions: 1️⃣ Are we ahead or behind schedule? 2️⃣ Are we under or over budget? 3️⃣ What will be the final cost & completion date? 🔎 Key EVMS Metrics Every Planning Engineer Must Know: • PV (Planned Value) • EV (Earned Value) • AC (Actual Cost) • SPI (Schedule Performance Index) • CPI (Cost Performance Index) • EAC (Estimate at Completion) Without EVMS, progress reporting is incomplete. With EVMS, you convert data into project intelligence. 📈 Why S-Curves Are the Heartbeat of Project Control An S-Curve is not just a graph. It is a management signal. When you compare: 🔵 Planned Curve 🔴 Actual Expenditure 🟢 Budgeted Cost You can: ✔ Detect early schedule slippage ✔ Identify cost overrun trends ✔ Forecast final project performance ✔ Support delay analysis & claims ✔ Present executive-level reports A deviation is not just variance — it’s a warning system. 📊 KPI Dashboard – What Every Project Must Include A professional Progress Report should contain: • Overall % Physical Progress • SPI & CPI • Critical Path Status • Cost Variance (CV) • Schedule Variance (SV) • Resource Histogram • 4-Week Lookahead • Cash Flow Status • Risk & Mitigation Summary When structured in Excel or Power BI, dashboards turn reporting into decision-making tools — not emotional reactions. 🎯 Final Thought Updating Primavera P6 ≠ Project Control. Analyzing EVMS + Interpreting S-Curves + Reporting KPIs ➡ That is Real Project Planning & Control. If you want a complete professional Progress Report Template (Excel-based with EVMS calculations, S-Curves & KPIs)… 💬 Comment below: Progress Report I’ll share the soft copy template with you. — Engr Waqas Project Planning & Control | EPC | Primavera P6 | EVMS

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