PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) was developed in 1958 to help measure and
control the progress of the Polaris Fleet Ballistic Missile program. The technique earned considerable
respect for assisting in the management of thousands of different contractors and agencies, and is credited
with helping to advance the completion date of the program by two years
PERT is a technique for estimating and planning a large project. One of its most powerful concepts is
that project management is the management of probabilities. PERT makes use of simple statistical
mathematics in order to come up with a probability distribution for the completion dates of the project
milestones.For example, in PERT tasks are estimated with three numbers: The best case, the nominal case, and the
worst case. These three estimates are combined into an expected duration, and a standard deviation. Thus
the duration of each task is presumed to be a random variable with a known distribution.
The math is very simple. Consider a task whose best/nominal/worst estimate is 3/5/9. The expected
completion time (ยต) is assumed to be (4*nominal + best + worst)/6, or in our case (4*5+3+9)/6 or about
5.33. The standard deviation (s) is assumed to be (worst - best)/6 or (9-3)/6 or 1.
Now consider a simple project consisting of three tasks. We represent this as a simple chart with
circles and arrows. The circles denote events, and the arrows denote tasks
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