Re: One worker, two groups with two pay rates
- From: "Steve House [Project MVP]" <sjhouse.remove.this@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 19 May 2005 12:57:01 -0400
That's a classic example of the use of the Rate Tables feature - in fact, I use almost exactly that example - Mary Ann who can serve as either an AD or a Camera Assistant on a film shoot - in my classes. Go to the Resource ***. Joe Smith should have only ONE entry, not two, in the resource *** otherwise Project won't be able to tell if you've double booked him on different tasks occuring at the same time. Doing it the way you have really fouls up the whole resource allocation functions. Double click on his ID number on the left to display the Resource Information Form. You'll see there are 5 rate tables there - the entrys from the regular resource *** populate Rate Table A with his standard rate, OT rate, and cost per use. For simplicity use this table for the rates for his primary function, perhaps Camera. Select the tab for Rate Table B and on it enter the std, ot, and cost per use rates for his secondary function, pehaps that's Tape. When you assign him to tasks Project will use the rates from Table A by default to determine the costs. But you can then display your choice of either the Task Usage or Resource Usage view, double click the ID number for the assignment to display the Assignment Information form, and select the rate table to be used for that specific task.
Be careful you understand how Cost per Use tallys into the cost of a task. If you have Joe working as a Camera Operator at $250 per use, the budget is assesed $250 for each time he is assigned to a task regardless of how long that task takes - $250 per setup or per shot depending on how well you break down the shot plan. If he is assigned to 5 days of filming entered as 1 task running for 5 days duration, the total cost will be $250. But if that same shoot is carried in the plan as 5 individual 1-day setups, the cost is 5*$250 or $1250 even though the total duration of the work is exactly the same. Make sure that accurately describes your actual situation. If those rates represent day rates for a crew member, I'd recommend you consider entering those as his Standard Rate so the estimated cost is calculated based on the time spent working rather than the number of different tasks he's assigned to. Otherwise you could easily have someone who actually gets paid $250 a day hitting your budget at $500 because he's done one setup in the morning and another the afternoon of the same day.
Hope this helps
-- Steve House [MVP] MS Project Trainer & Consultant Visit http://www.mvps.org/project/faqs.htm for the FAQs
"CynthiaM" <CynthiaM@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:D8F843A3-E8FB-44DE-936D-68404F72A510@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
How do I enter a resource with the same name who does two different jobs (groups=Camera and Tape) and the two jobs have different day rates (Cam = $300, Tape=$350)?
I entered ID: 1, Name: Joe Smith, Group: Camera, Per Use: $250 as one resource
and ID: 2, Name: Joe Smith, Group: Tape, Per Use: $300 as another resource
The Assign Resource dialog box will only assign the first Joe even if I
click assign on the second Joe, or filter by group=tape and assign that Joe.
.
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- From: CynthiaM
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