📅 Schedule Management Guide
The schedule is your roadmap. If you're not managing it actively, you're just hoping the project finishes on time.
Use it or lose it. A schedule that sits in a drawer isn't managing anything.
Schedule Fundamentals
Types of Schedules
| Type | Purpose | Update Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Master Schedule | Overall project timeline | Monthly |
| Phase Schedule | Major phase detail | Bi-weekly |
| 3-Week Lookahead | Near-term coordination | Weekly |
| Daily Plan | Day's activities | Daily |
Schedule Elements
Activities:
- Discrete work tasks
- Defined duration
- Assigned resources
- Clear start/finish
Dependencies:
- Finish-to-Start (most common)
- Start-to-Start
- Finish-to-Finish
- Start-to-Finish (rare)
Milestones:
- Contract milestones
- Owner requirements
- Inspections
- Substantial completion
CPM Scheduling
Critical Path Method
The critical path is the longest sequence of dependent activities — it determines project duration.
Key terms:
- Float/Slack — Time an activity can slip without delaying project
- Critical Path — Activities with zero float
- Near-Critical — Activities with minimal float (watch closely)
Why Critical Path Matters
- Identifies what drives completion
- Shows where delays hurt most
- Focuses management attention
- Required for delay claims
Reading a CPM Schedule
Look for:
- Critical path (usually highlighted)
- Float on non-critical activities
- Logic ties between activities
- Milestones and constraints
3-Week Lookahead
The most useful day-to-day tool.
Creating a Lookahead
- Pull activities from master schedule
- Add detail for next 3 weeks
- Break into daily/weekly tasks
- Assign crews and resources
- Identify constraints and prerequisites
Weekly Lookahead Meeting
Attendees: Super, foremen, key subs
Agenda:
- Review last week (planned vs. actual)
- Walk through next 3 weeks
- Identify constraints and blockers
- Assign responsibilities
- Document commitments
Making Lookaheads Work
✅ Do:
- Update every week
- Be realistic about durations
- Include procurement and inspections
- Track actual vs. planned
- Hold people accountable
❌ Don't:
- Copy master schedule verbatim
- Ignore prerequisites
- Over-commit resources
- Skip the meeting when busy
Schedule Updates
Monthly Update Process
- Record actual start/finish dates
- Assess remaining duration
- Update logic if changed
- Recalculate schedule
- Compare to baseline
- Report to owner
What to Update
- Actual dates for completed work
- Revised durations for in-progress
- New activities (change orders)
- Logic changes
- Resource adjustments
Baseline vs. Current
Baseline: Original approved schedule (frozen)
Current: Updated schedule with actuals
Variance: Difference between them (early/late)
Always maintain baseline for comparison.
Delay Management
Types of Delays
| Type | Responsibility | Entitlement |
|---|---|---|
| Excusable-Compensable | Owner-caused | Time + money |
| Excusable-Non-Compensable | Neither party (weather) | Time only |
| Non-Excusable | Contractor-caused | Nothing |
| Concurrent | Both parties | Complex analysis |
Documenting Delays
When a delay occurs:
- Identify the cause
- Document with photos and reports
- Quantify the impact
- Send written notice per contract
- Update schedule to show impact
Notice Requirements
Most contracts require prompt notice:
- Read your contract's notice clause
- Send written notice immediately
- Don't wait to quantify cost
- Reserve rights in writing
Resource Management
Labor Loading
- Match crews to schedule
- Identify peaks and valleys
- Plan for overtime or double shifts
- Coordinate with subcontractors
Equipment Planning
- Major equipment tied to schedule
- Lead time for rentals
- Crane picks coordinated
- Mob/demob timing
Material Procurement
- Link submittals to schedule
- Long-lead items tracked
- Delivery coordinated with work
- Storage planned
Schedule Tools
Software Options
| Tool | Best For |
|---|---|
| P6 | Large/complex projects |
| MS Project | Mid-size projects |
| Smartsheet | Collaborative planning |
| Buildingconnected | Subcontractor scheduling |
| Excel | Simple schedules |
Reporting
Weekly:
- 3-week lookahead
- Percent complete
- Issues and risks
Monthly:
- Schedule narrative
- Critical path status
- Variance analysis
- Recovery plan (if behind)
Common Mistakes
❌ Overly optimistic durations — Be realistic
❌ Ignoring float — Float belongs to the project
❌ Not updating regularly — Stale schedule is useless
❌ Missing logic ties — Activities float randomly
❌ No baseline — Can't measure variance
❌ Weather ignored — Build in realistic weather days
Stay on Track
Free Template: Download our 3-week lookahead template.
Integrated Scheduling: BLDR Pro links daily reports to schedule activities, so you always know if you're ahead or behind — without manual status updates.