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The '''program ''' '''evaluation and review technique''' ('''PERT''') is a statistical tool used in [[project management]], which was designed to analyze and represent the [[task (project management)|tasks]] involved in completing a given [[project]].
PERT was originally developed by Charles
== Overview ==
PERT is a method of analyzing the tasks involved in completing a project, especially the time needed to complete each task, and to identify the minimum time needed to complete the total project. It incorporates uncertainty by making it possible to schedule a project while not knowing precisely the details and
PERT offers a management tool,{{sfn|Kerzner|2009}}{{rp|497}} which relies "on arrow and node diagrams of ''activities'' and ''events'': arrows represent the ''activities'' or work necessary to reach the ''events'' or nodes that indicate each completed phase of the total project."<ref name="MB 1968" />
PERT and CPM are complementary tools, because "CPM employs one time estimation and one cost estimation for each activity; PERT may utilize three time estimates (optimistic, expected, and pessimistic) and no costs for each activity. Although these are distinct differences, the term PERT is applied increasingly to all critical path scheduling."<ref name="MB 1968" />
==History==
PERT was developed primarily to simplify the planning and scheduling of large and complex projects. It was developed
[[File:PERT Summary Report Phase 2, 1958.jpg|thumb|upright|''PERT Summary Report Phase 2'', 1958]]
Initially PERT stood for ''Program Evaluation Research Task,'' but by 1959 was renamed.<ref name="MRCW 1959" /> It had been made public in 1958 in two publications of the U.S. Department of the Navy, entitled ''Program Evaluation Research Task, Summary Report, Phase 1.''<ref>U.S.
{{Blockquote|Through an electronic computer, the PERT technique processes data representing the major, finite accomplishments (events) essential to achieve end-objectives; the inter-dependence of those events; and [[Estimation (project management)|estimates]] of time and range of time necessary to complete each activity between two successive events. Such time expectations include estimates of "most likely time", "optimistic time", and "pessimistic time" for each activity. The technique is a management control tool that sizes up the outlook for meeting objectives on time; highlights danger signals requiring management decisions; reveals and defines both methodicalness and slack in the flow plan or the network of sequential activities that must be performed to meet objectives; compares current expectations with [[Schedule (project management)|scheduled]] completion dates and computes the probability for meeting scheduled dates; and simulates the effects of options for decision— before decision.<ref name="SDFJWM 1959">[[Willard Fazar]] cited in: Stauber, B. Ralph;
[[File:PERT Guide for management use, June 1963.jpg|thumb|upright|''PERT Guide for Management Use'', June 1963]]
Ten years after the introduction of PERT, the American [[librarian]] Maribeth Brennan compiled a selected [[bibliography]] with about 150 publications on PERT and CPM, all published between 1958 and 1968.<ref name="MB 1968">Brennan, Maribeth
For the subdivision of work units in PERT<ref>Cook, Desmond L.
==Terminology==
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[[Category:Booz Allen Hamilton]]
[[Category:Operations research]]
[[Category:Engineering management]]
[[Category:Management science]]
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