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I'm using Excel 2002 to track budgets, actual costs and burn rates on a
project which has 20 sub-projects under the main project office. The first sheet is linked to over 20 sub-project sheets, and is a summary of totals by month and year for each sub-project, and then has project grand totals at the bottom. This is a multimillion dollar project which will take 3+ years to complete. The sub-projects have varying start and end dates. As with any project, the schedule keeps shifting, especially as we get closer to project launch. Or, sometimes the accounting dept. requests scenarios of costs, for hypothetical schedule shifts, as a financial forecasting tool. You're probably all wanting to tell me this process begs to be managed by MS Project. And you're right, it probably should be, as the project schedule is already in MS Project but the budget is tracked separately in Excel and because of time and resource constraints, will not soon be changed. Here's the question. Can I use a formula or is there a quick way to shift line items of cost by say 3 months, and across years? Some sub-project sheets have 20 line items that need to be shifted. Thanks for any suggestions you have. |
#2
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Remember that you can add dates just as with other numbers. If you set up
formulas based on related dates upstream, you can make adjustments at one point in the stream and have all downstream dates adjust automatically. It might be easier to set up 'paired' cells to make playing the what-if game easier. Example: Cell A1 on a sheet has project start date, as a date: 1/1/2007 a process/phase starts 42 days later 'downstream', you have the length of the PREVIOUS process (one that started 01 January) in cell R1 as 42, and in R2 you calculate the start date for that phase with the formula = A1+R1, which will display as 2/12/2007. And continue on as appropriate, identifying dependent paths and setting up similar formulas as necessary. This allows you to play 'what-if' just by changing the value associated with the length of a process/phase without having to go directly into cells and manipulate formulas (which always introduces a risk of human error either in making the mod or in forgetting to undo it later - at least this way you have more visibility of the values involved). Keep in mind that you can perform such calculations across sheets as needed also. "RavenPM" wrote: I'm using Excel 2002 to track budgets, actual costs and burn rates on a project which has 20 sub-projects under the main project office. The first sheet is linked to over 20 sub-project sheets, and is a summary of totals by month and year for each sub-project, and then has project grand totals at the bottom. This is a multimillion dollar project which will take 3+ years to complete. The sub-projects have varying start and end dates. As with any project, the schedule keeps shifting, especially as we get closer to project launch. Or, sometimes the accounting dept. requests scenarios of costs, for hypothetical schedule shifts, as a financial forecasting tool. You're probably all wanting to tell me this process begs to be managed by MS Project. And you're right, it probably should be, as the project schedule is already in MS Project but the budget is tracked separately in Excel and because of time and resource constraints, will not soon be changed. Here's the question. Can I use a formula or is there a quick way to shift line items of cost by say 3 months, and across years? Some sub-project sheets have 20 line items that need to be shifted. Thanks for any suggestions you have. |
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