IB Business Management HL

BMT 14 – Critical Path Analysis | Business Management Toolkit | IB Business Management HL

Unit 6: Business Management Toolkit — BMT 14 Critical Path Analysis
What is Critical Path Analysis?
Critical Path Analysis (CPA) is a project management technique used to identify the sequence of key tasks in a project that determine its minimum completion time. It helps managers plan, schedule, and allocate resources for complex projects efficiently.
Purpose:
- Determine project duration
- Identify tasks that must be completed on time to avoid delays
- Highlight tasks where time flexibility (float/slack) exists
Steps in Critical Path Analysis
  1. List all activities required to complete the project
  2. Estimate duration for each activity
  3. Identify task dependencies (what follows/follows what)
  4. Draw a project network diagram (nodes and arrows)
  5. Calculate earliest start/finish times (forward pass)
  6. Calculate latest start/finish times (backward pass)
  7. Identify the critical path (longest path through the diagram)
Activities on the critical path have zero float/slack — any delay in these tasks will delay the whole project.
Key Definitions & Formulas
TermMeaningFormula
Earliest Start Time (EST)Soonest a task can begin EST_{Activity} = \max( \text{Finish Times of Predecessors})
Earliest Finish Time (EFT)Earliest a task can end EFT_{Activity} = EST_{Activity} + Duration_{Activity}
Latest Finish Time (LFT)Latest a task can end without delaying the project LFT_{Activity} = \min( \text{Start Times of Successors})
Latest Start Time (LST)Latest a task can start without delaying the project LST_{Activity} = LFT_{Activity} - Duration_{Activity}
Float/SlackTime an activity can be delayed without affecting the project Float = LST_{Activity} - EST_{Activity}
Worked Example: Simple CPA
Suppose a project has these activities:

- A (5 days, start)
- B (4 days, starts after A)
- C (3 days, starts after A)
- D (2 days, starts after B and C)
Find the Critical Path:
  • Paths: A-B-D (5+4+2=11 days), A-C-D (5+3+2=10 days)
  • So, Critical Path = A-B-D (11 days)
Benefits & Limitations of CPA
BenefitsLimitations
- Improves project scheduling
- Highlights crucial activities
- Supports resource planning
- Enables "what if" scenario analysis
- Requires accurate duration estimates
- Can be complex for large projects
- Doesn't show resource constraints
- Network diagrams can be complicated
Conclusion
Critical Path Analysis is an essential toolkit method for managing complex projects. It focuses management attention on key tasks, helps prevent delays, and improves the chances of successful on-time completion.
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