Practical Definition:
Slack Is the Right Tool for the Wrong Way to Work By Cal Newpor t December 14, 2020 Slack is both absolutely necessary and absolutely aggravating: we rely on it, but we also can’t stand it. Slack is a distributed platform and during any given incident it is rare for all Slack teams to be affected. For this reason, we report our uptime as an average derived from the number of affected users.
Slack or Float provide flexibility in the project schedule. When leveraged properly, project managers can shift activities and resources to meet the project objectives and priorities. It is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without impacting other activities or the project end date and changes over the course of the project implementation.
PMBOK® Guide Definition:
Slack: Also called Float. See Float. (update May 2018: sort of kidding. Slack is only mentioned in the index of the PMBOK® Guide 5th & 6th edition where is states to see Float. It is no longer in the glossary).
Float: Also called Slack. See Slack. (update May 2018: still sort of kidding. Float was mentioned in the PMBOK® Guide 5th edition glossary separately and defined as “Also called Slack. See Free Float and Total Float.” It is no longer listed in the PMBOK® Guide 6th edition separately, only under Free Float and Total Float. It is listed separately in the index of the 6th edition.)
Total Float: The total amount of time that a schedule activity may be delayed from its early start without delaying the project finish date, or violating a schedule constraint. Calculated using the critical path method technique and determining the difference between the early finish dates and late finish dates. See also Free Float.
Free Float: The amount of time that a schedule activity can be delayed without delaying the early start date of any immediately following schedule activities. See also Total Float.
Update May 2018: it appears Slack has fallen and Float is the preferred term according to the PMBOK®Guide 6th edition, although many project managers will continue to use the term Slack. Additionally, Slack is used in Microsoft Project, therefore, knowing both terms – Float and Slack – is important.
So, What Is Slack or Float?
Slack and float are the same thing. They can be used interchangeably, therefore, our discussion of slack and float will purposely use both. Once the concept is understood, it is more important to understand how to leverage slack time within projects.
We discussed float in the article defining of the Critical Path (The Critical Path – A Tool To Keep The Project On Schedule) because the critical path has no slack or float by definition. The non-critical path(s) contains the float – the amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying successor tasks or the project end date.
A Bit o’ History
Modern Project Management practices were developed starting in the 1950s. Much of the credit goes to the US Navy while developing the Polaris project: a missile launch system from a submerged submarine. Prior to that period, no formal methodology was used to manage projects. Because of time pressure, highly classified and cutting edge developments, the leaders felt it important to standardize the implementation of the project.
The US Navy developed the Project Evaluation and Review Technique, a.k.a., PERT for managing the projects. From that methodology, we have the Work Breakdown Structure, Work Packets, PERT Analysis, Earned Value Management and more. They coined the term Slack (float has a different meaning for the US Navy).
Meanwhile, private industry was coming to a similar conclusion: the lack of project management methodology caused many projects to fail or not be completed according to plan. It developed the Critical Path Method which determined the path of activities that defined the project’s shortest duration. From it, we gained the concept of the Critical Path, Critical Tasks, Non-critical Path, Non-critical Task, etc. They used the term Float.
Today, we follow the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) developed by the Project Management Institute which is a compilation of the two methodologies keeping the best of both and continuing to evolve the standard based on best practices and experience.
Calculating Slack or Float
Total Float
In our The Critical Path – A Tool To Keep The Project On Schedulearticle, we described the method of forward passes and backward passes to determine the critical path of the project network diagram, the free and total float, the early start and finish of each activity and the late start and finishes. Using the early start (ES) and late start (LS) information generated while calculating the critical path, we use the following formula to determine Total Float – the amount of time a task can be delayed without delaying the project end date.
Total Float = Late Start (LS) – Early Start (ES)
Each task along the non-critical path will initially have the same Total Float value.
Assuming the following notation represents a specific task where
- ES = Early Start
- EF = Early Finish
- LS = Late Start
- LF = Late Finish
- DU = Duration
Using the same network diagram we used in the critical path definition, shown below, we see the Total Float (TF) equals eleven (11). Note, it is the same value for the entire non-critical path (the top path). As the project progresses, various tasks may slip, be delayed or take longer than originally planned. This change decreases Total Float.
For example, assume Activity C slips by 3 days. The remaining total float would be 8 days for Activities D and E. In fact, since Activity C slipped by 3 days, so do Activities D and E – their Early Starts (ES) and Early Finish (EF) would increase by 3 days and the Total Float values decrease to 8 days, also. If Activity D takes 10 days instead of the planned 8, Total Float will decrease another 2 days. Activity E’s Total Float then becomes 6 days with adjustments to ES and EF accordingly.
If Activity E subsequently slips for whatever reason more than 6 days, the project will be delayed. So you can see how Total Float changes over the length of the project. This is normal of projects.
Conversely, if Activity C were to take less time than originally planned, say 3 days instead of the planned 4, Total Float would increase by 1 day to 12 days for Activities D and E. If Activity D finishes in 6 days instead of the planned 8, Total Float increases by 2 days to 14 days for Activity 14. (Yes, we can only dream of such projects).
Our diagram is simple. In typical project schedules, many non-critical paths exist, each with different values for their total float. As the project progresses, their float values will change at different rates as their respective activities delay.
Free Float
Let’s understand Free Float before we discuss how to leverage this knowledge.
Free Float is the amount an activity can be delayed without impacting any of its successor tasks. Typically, the only place you’ll see Free Float is at the end of a non-critical branch, unless the team purposely placed buffers between tasks.
Buffers are also called Reserve in the PMBOK®Guide. The PMBOK®Guide defines Reserve as a provision in the project management plan to mitigate cost or schedule risk. The reserve we are discussing here is a schedule buffer. Buffers are placed in the schedule after high-risk tasks or tasks that have a high risk of slipping, such as “Waiting for material from an outside vendor.” These can experience shipping delays, manufacturing issues, vendor priority changes, etc. These conditions can have severe results on project schedules. We lower the risk’s probably or impact (mitigation) by placing buffers after those tasks.
Back to Free Float.
We use the following formula to calculate Free Float:
Free Float = Successor Task Early Start (ESs) – Predecessor Task Early Finish (EFp) – 1 – Lag
We calculate Free Float by subtracting the EF of the predecessor from the ES of the successor minus any lag between the two minus 1 since it ends the day before the early start of the successor. Let’s understand this conceptually. Any value greater than zero represents the amount of time the predecessor can delay without impacting the successor. If it has multiple successors, the predecessor’s Free Float is the minimum value of all those calculated.
In other words, let’s say that once the predecessor finishes the successor can start (the classical Finish-to-Start relationship). If the successor can start without any delay after the predecessor finishes, than the Early Start (ES) of the successor equals the Early Finish (EF) of the predecessor minus 1, therefore, ESs – Efp – 1 equals zero, there is no Free Float. Even if a lag is defined between the two tasks, Free Float would be zero because lag does not change if the predecessor slips – it simply pushes the successor task ES by the same amount of the predecessor’s delay.
In our diagram, we see Free Float (FF) in the top path equals zero for all tasks except Activity E. That is true because once the predecessor task finishes, the successor task is scheduled to start immediately. Activity E has Free Float because its successor’s ES is determined by Activity G, which finishes later, therefore, providing Free Float for Activity E.
Observation For PMP® Exam Takers
For those looking to take the PMP® exam, consider the following observations:
- Total Float (TF) and Free Float(FF) are zero for every task in the critical path. That follows the definition and, if calculated mathematically, would prove to be true. Thus, once the critical path is determined, you know those values will be zero and don’t need to calculate them – simply mark them zero.
- If, while conducting the backward pass and all calculations are correct, you have a value greater than zero upon reaching the first task of the network diagram, that value represents the Total Float (TF) and Free Float (FF) for the non-critical path (of course, if there is only one non-critical path in the network diagram). Use this value to double-check your calculations during the test.
- Free Float (FF) only exists at the end of the non-critical path if there are no buffers placed in the path.
- Be careful to look for lag designations such as the one between Activity F and Activity G. This is a big downfall for test-takers.
Practical Application
You are thinking, “While all this understanding is fine and dandy, what does it have to do with the real world and how can I leverage it? Install samsung kies 3. Oh, and by the way, I’m not going to be calculating this stuff, so why the big definition?”
Certainly, in a real project where 400 to 800 activities exist, you will not be calculating this information by hand. Instead, using project management software such as Microsoft Project (Microsoft Project 2010 shown below), you can see and watch, as well as leverage, the float time occurring naturally or see the buffers placed after high risk tasks.
Slack Is Evil
In the Gantt chart shown, the time illustrated between the green lines represents Total Float. It shows the amount any one of the tasks in the Extruder portion of the project can be delayed without delaying the project end date. It also represents the Free Float between the Extruder Delivery and the end of the project. Notice there is no other Free Float on that path or on the Critical path (shown using red Gantt bars).
Note: If you want to see the actual values of free and total float in Microsoft Project, insert two columns and select the fields Free Slack and Total Slack.
How to Leverage the Free Float and Total Float
As the project progresses, the “whitespace” will change, showing the impact on the float time. You’ll want to watch it so it doesn’t “disappear” causing the project or successor tasks to be delayed.
Let’s say one of the critical tasks (shown in red Gantt bars) is not progressing as planned. If adding additional resources to the task would help bring it back in line, then moving resources from non-critical tasks might make sense. We can see the impact of moving resources from one task to another because the software will update the plan accordingly – assuming the tasks are effort-driven and developed properly. As a resource is removed from the non-critical task, its duration will lengthen. By placing the resource on the critical task, its duration will shorten. We can see the impact on the float and determine if it is acceptable.
Because our plan is in some project management software, we can play several “what-if” scenarios to determine the best avenue of re-aligning resources before we actually make the changes permanently. In this manner, we can avoid some costly mistakes.
Slack Is Free
Conclusion
Slack and Float are the same thing. We differentiate between Total Float and Free Float to understand the amount of delay we can tolerate without impacting the project schedule and successor activities, respectively.
The concept and use of float helps us keep our project on schedule and use resources more efficiently as the project progresses. The lack of float or its disappearance gives us clear indication our project is out of control and corrective measures must be taken. Additionally, by using what-if scenarios, we can understand impacts to the project
Slack Is Back
Understanding float and its use is one industry trick of successful project managers.
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