S
Simon Dullingham
I've been seeing some things that don't make sense to me, and I was
wondering if someone can comment.
I set up an administrative project to track company overhead time. This is
for things like company administration (management), and not
project-specific work. Projects (in our company) are generally where
customers foot the bill, with the exception being development.
Anyway, When I open Project Professional and look at the daily task usage,
everything looks great. However in PWA, "% work complete", "Actual Work" are
zero, and all time that has been booked in the past is assigned to
"remaining work". Work is also set to the the total hours in the past. This
seems wrong to me. Any work that is in the past should be 100% complete. If
I use the "notify manage of time you will not be available for project
work", then that sets up time in the future that should show in the
"remaining work" field.
As I said, everything is correct in Professional. I've republished the
projects. The seems to be a quirk with Administrative projects.
Can any one help?
Thanks,
Simon
wondering if someone can comment.
I set up an administrative project to track company overhead time. This is
for things like company administration (management), and not
project-specific work. Projects (in our company) are generally where
customers foot the bill, with the exception being development.
Anyway, When I open Project Professional and look at the daily task usage,
everything looks great. However in PWA, "% work complete", "Actual Work" are
zero, and all time that has been booked in the past is assigned to
"remaining work". Work is also set to the the total hours in the past. This
seems wrong to me. Any work that is in the past should be 100% complete. If
I use the "notify manage of time you will not be available for project
work", then that sets up time in the future that should show in the
"remaining work" field.
As I said, everything is correct in Professional. I've republished the
projects. The seems to be a quirk with Administrative projects.
Can any one help?
Thanks,
Simon