ENR logo
search
cart
facebook twitter linkedin instagram youtube
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
ENR logo
  • NEWS
  • PROJECTS
    • Buildings
    • Construction Methods
    • Design
    • Sustainability
    • Transportation
    • Environment
    • Power & Industrial
    • Water & Dams
    • Best Projects
    • Pulse
  • BUSINESS
    • Safety & Health
    • Workforce
    • Diversity and Inclusion
    • Finance
    • Companies
    • Project Delivery
    • Ethics & Corruption
    • Government
    • Risk
    • Contractor Business Strategy
  • TALENT
    • Awards
      • Top 25 Newsmakers
      • Award of Excellence
      • Legacy Award
      • Top Young Professionals
    • Promotions & New Hires
    • Obituaries
    • Annual Photo Contest
  • REGIONS
    • ENR East
    • ENR Midwest
    • ENR Mountain States & Southwest
    • ENR Texas & Southeast
    • ENR West
    • Regional Contests and Surveys
  • TECH
    • Information Technology
    • Construction Technology
    • BIM
  • PRODUCTS
    • Equipment
    • Materials
    • Featured Products
  • IDEAS
    • Blogs
    • Editorials
    • Viewpoints
    • Letters
    • Book Reviews
    • ENR History
  • COSTS
    • Weekly Construction Economics Reports
    • Quarterly Cost Reports
    • Construction Cost Data Dashboard
    • Construction Cost Index
    • Building Cost Index
    • Historical Indexes
    • FAQs
  • LISTS
    • ENR Top Lists
    • ENR Sourcebooks
    • Survey Schedule
    • 2025 Top 200 Environmental Firms Survey
  • INFOCENTERS
    • Successful Site Intelligence
  • EVENTS
    • Award of Excellence
    • Best of the Best Project Awards
    • FutureTech
    • Groundbreaking Women in Construction WEST
    • Global Best Projects Awards
    • LA Infrastructure Forum
    • NY/NJ Infrastructure Forum
    • Regional Best Projects
    • Seattle Infrastructure Forum
    • Top 25 Newsmakers
    • Upcoming Events
    • Webinars
  • MORE
    • About
      • Contact Us
      • Advertise
      • Social Media Channels
    • Best Project Award Contests
      • Global
      • Regional
    • CE Center
    • Digital Editions
    • ENR Book Store
    • Industry Jobs
    • Podcasts
    • Proposals & Bids
    • Special Advertising Sections
    • Subscribe
    • Videos
    • Year In Construction Photo Contest
    • Sponsor Insights
    • Interactive Spotlights
    • eBooks
Project deliveryRiskViewpoint

Commentary on Construction Schedules

Why Many Contractors Prefer To Revert To Bar Charts

By Fredric L. Plotnick
Ganttproject-house-building-sample.png

Image: Ganttproject Developers via Wikimedia Commons

October 18, 2018
Plotnick

Why was Jim O’Brien so successful in promoting the concept of critical path management in the 1960s, and yet today many contractors would prefer to revert to bar charts? The bar chart – or Gantt Chart – was invented in 1910 as a vast improvement over prior art of making a to-do list and perhaps reordering roughly in a preferred sequence. It allowed users to create a true “schedule” of tasks or “activities” including estimated duration, preferred (usually early) start and finish dates. The placement of activities to specific dates was accomplished by the intuition of a superintendent alone or with his or her team and they figured out how the finish of one activity may impact the start of another.

Done properly for any but the simplest of projects, it required significant effort. But this consideration of logic was rarely recorded.

If even minor changes were made to the scope, or actual durations and progress did not match those initially anticipated, the team was required to meet again to re-create (or using today’s jargon, “rebaseline”) the bar-chart schedule, often requiring more than 40% of the initial effort.

Jim Kelly and Morgan Walker developed the mathematics in 1956, and with John Mauchly (who designed the first general purpose electronic digital computer) created a means to record the logic discussed by the team and automate the calculation of early dates. These dates represent the earliest that an activity may be anticipated to start and finish (based on logic and durations) and leaves it to the superintendent to prosecute some and defer others based upon available resources. As an added benefit, the computer also calculated late dates, representing the latest start and finish necessary to complete the project by a specified date or as early as possible.

Review of both early and late dates now assist the superintendent to deploy resources and to determine which activities to perform as soon as possible and which to allow to “float” toward the “drop dead” deadlines set by the calculated late dates. Thus, performance of some activities must start and finish as soon as possible and are deemed “critical” to timely project completion, while others may “float” to achieve the best deployment of resources subject to the primary goal of timely completion. Initially called the “Kelly-Walker Method,” this procedure was rebranded as the “Critical Path Method” or CPM and sold to the world by Jim O’Brien’s book, CPM in Construction Management (1964: McGraw-Hill.) Notice well the primary goal of the contractor and its superintendent: to complete on-time or even earlier if possible.

Unlike the world of manufacturing, construction usually permits the contractor to bring in additional resources as needed, to use or hold in reserve, release and then if necessary to bring back, without regard for “best use of the resource,” and all to support this primary goal. And both the mathematics and initial computer instruction programs were specifically developed to support this primary goal.

What happened to reduce enthusiasm for use of CPM?

This is why Jim O’Brien and others were so successful in selling this new concept to contractors.

Despite the extra work of asking “why must A be done before B” and recording this logic in a strange format to be entered into a computer, the benefits of assisting in building the preferred schedule, and in rapid recalculation as actual diverged from anticipated, sold the concept. Contractors rushed to implement this new idea without demands of owners – this was scheduling of, by and for the contractor. CPM in Construction Management became (and remains) the single best seller of McGraw Hill's professional series.

What happened to reduce enthusiasm for use of CPM? In United States v. Citizens and Southern National Bank, 367 F. 2d 473 (1966), both subcontractor and contractor were able to show delay damages caused by factors for which they were not responsible. In the absence of clear evidence separating the two claims, the court rejected both claims, stating, “As the evidence does not provide any reasonable basis for allocating the additional costs among those contributing factors, we conclude that the entire claim should have been rejected.” But that changed with the advent of CPM. As early as 1963–1964, consultants to the litigants on both sides of a case involving the Atomic Energy Commission used CPM to prepare their positions. And by 1967 other courts were citing CPM as the basis for decisions.

Separation of Competing Claims

By 1972, courts were demanding a CPM schedule be used as the basis for allegations of delays to allow separation of competing claims, as in (Appeal of Minmar Builders, Inc., GSBCA No. 3430, 72-2 BOA.) With CPM now available to be used as a weapon, rather than as a tool,  the first effort to alter its primary purpose began. The mathematics of 1956 and software developed to support CPM had always been understood to have tolerances and be approximate. But in the courtroom, the printouts and exhibits prepared by “experts” provided only “the computer says so and thus it must be.” Software that permitted a party to bend the calculation to a desired result was desired, and provided by willing vendors. Options that may be proper in only rare circumstances were added – and not reported as used by the printouts.

And only now did owners (to their contractors – or contractors to their subcontractors) begin to require a CPM of their subordinate, and with the purpose to “game the claim” rather than “provide additional assurance that the subordinate can complete on time.” As owners demand the CPM and specify software to be used, so the developer of the software has a new voice dictating new features. The software is no longer of, by and for the contractor.

Concurrently, others outside of construction viewed the “computer-drawn bar chart” and desired the same for their business use neither knowing, understanding nor caring that CPM calculates two schedules (early and late) from which the team leader (or superintendent) is advised how to deploy resources for a working schedule. An alternate algorithm based on best (usually continuous) use of fixed resources (whether machines of iron or computer coding personnel chained to their cubicle) was incorporated, perhaps even knowing that would delay the project, but for a possibly lower cost.

Modified Software

At this point the major software developers had to choose where to place programming resources – to serve 35,000 construction customers buying 350,000 licenses or to serve 5,000 IT customers buying 1 million licenses. Meeting with 5,000 decision makers who each may buy thousands of licenses is a lot easier and a lot more productive for sales. The software companies modified their product to add features for the 5,000. Top management of the 5,000 did not want irrelevant and “confusing” options, and so the original algorithms of 1956 were removed.

Owners specifying CPM for construction did not care that software may not assist a contractor so long as it may hamper claims. Contractors finding software did not assist earliest completion now provide minimal effort to prepare the submittal required for payment, while falling back to simpler tools to actually manage the project. And so today many contractors have reverted to bar charts and other tools to display their preferred (if not most likely to bring in the project on-time) schedule.

The mantra of manufacturing, best productivity of the unit or activity or of the individual, has eclipsed attempts to achieve the best (or fastest) project and the very concept of team effort. So our challenge is to again teach construction contractors and others desiring earliest completion of projects, from the superintendents in the field to the professional managers in the boardrooms, that the mathematics and discipline of CPM, coupled with proper software to solve this problem and not those of others, will deliver return on the intellectual effort required.

I think Jim would agree this may be more difficult today than in the early 1960s.

KEYWORDS: critical-path method Fredric Plotnick

Share This Story


ENR Subscribe

 

 

Fredricplotnick

Fredric L. Plotnick, PhD, is a licensed engineer, attorney and expert consultant on critical-path management. He promotes the Construction CPM Conference (see www.constructioncpm.com) and he can be reached at fplotnick@fplotnick.com.

Post a comment to this article

Report Abusive Comment

Subscription Center
  • About ENR UNLIMITED
  • Join ENR UNLIMITED
  • Renew Membership
  • Create Account
  • Change Address
  • Pay My Bill
  • Free Newsletters
  • Customer Care
  • Manage My Preferences

More Videos

Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content is a special paid section where industry companies provide high quality, objective, non-commercial content around topics of interest to the ENR audience. All Sponsored Content is supplied by the advertising company and any opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily reflect the views of ENR or its parent company, BNP Media. Interested in participating in our Sponsored Content section? Contact your local rep!

close
  • Bentley iTwin
    Sponsored byBentley

    Bringing Infrastructure Projects to Life

  • Construction Safety Week
    Sponsored byConstruction Safety Week

    Recognize: Identifying High Energy | High Hazard | STCKY Activities

  • digital twins
    Sponsored byBentley

    Mapping Madinah’s Future: A Digital Twin for a Timeless City

Popular Stories

Floor slabs role in big Tutor Perini court decision

On Tutor Perini Project, Floor Slab Deflection Problem Apparently Had No Clear Owner

Steel border barrier panels installed with crane along U.S.–Mexico border.

Border Wall Contractor Says $2B Federal Award Package Sets Stage for 2026 Construction

Image shows the WSP longs in a red square taking up half the image, and the TRC logo on a blue square taking up the second half

WSP Aims for Power Market Boost in $3.3B Deal to Buy Sector Design Leader TRC Cos.

Pirros

Start-up Pirros Seeks to Pull the Right Design Detail for the Moment

Alquist

Walmart Strikes Deal for 3D-Printed Buildings from Alquist in Boost for Emerging Sector

Industry Jobs



Events

January 21, 2026

2026 Construction Forecast

Airs Live on January 21, 2026 @ 2 PM EST Forecasters will share how they see construction markets developing in 2026 as the industry faces continued economic uncertainty caused by tariffs, inflation and other factors. ENR invites top forecasters to share their views on the market prospects for the industry both nationally and regionally.

Sponsored by: 

March 26, 2026

ENR 2025 Award of Excellence

Three award programs will be wrapped into one exciting day, recognizing the 2025 Best of the Best winning projects, the Top Newsmakers of 2025, and announcing the recipient of the 2026 Award of Excellence. It's a day to be inspired by the people and projects advancing the construction industry!

Best of the Best Brunch
9:15am-12:30pm EDT

Top Newsmaker Recognition and Award of Excellence Gala
5:15pm-10:30pm EDT

View All Submit An Event

Products

ENR Square Foot Costbook, 2026 Edition

ENR Square Foot Costbook, 2026 Edition

See More Products

Special Ad Section

Year in Healthcare & Hospital Construction
 YEAR IN WATER
WASTEWATER

 View all Special Ad Sections
 Archives

 


Related Articles

  • mardi_gras.jpg

    Why You Should Join Us in New Orleans for the 2016 Construction CPM Conference

    See More
  • One Professional v. Governance by Many – Round II

    See More
  • Trends for Construction Planners and Schedulers to Watch in 2016

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • 1118942760.gif

    BIM and Construction Management: Proven Tools, Methods, and Workflows, 2nd Edition

See More Products
×

The latest news and information

#1 Source for Construction News, Data, Rankings, Analysis, and Commentary

JOIN ENR UNLIMITED
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Store
    • Want More
    • Photo Submissions
  • Subscription Center
    • Subscribe
    • Renew
    • Create Account
    • Change Address
    • Pay My Bill
    • Free Newsletters
    • About ENR UNLIMITED
    • Customer Care
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X
  • Privacy
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY
    • UPDATE MY PREFERENCES

Copyright ©2025. All Rights Reserved BNP Media.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing