Difference between revisions of "Enterprise effort"

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*[[Level of effort]] (LOE). Support-type activity (e.g., vendor or customer liaison) that does not readily lend itself to measurement of discrete accomplishment. It is generally characterized by a uniform rate of activity over a period of time determined by the activities it supports.
 
*[[Level of effort]] (LOE). Support-type activity (e.g., vendor or customer liaison) that does not readily lend itself to measurement of discrete accomplishment. It is generally characterized by a uniform rate of activity over a period of time determined by the activities it supports.
  
==Curriculum==
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==Related lectures==
*[[Effort Engineering Quarter]]
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*[[Effort Engineering Quarter]].
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[[Category: Septem Artes Administrativi]][[Category: Articles]]

Revision as of 12:56, 4 January 2019

Enterprise effort (hereinafter, the Effort) is a determined attempt or a set of attempts undertaken by individuals, groups, and/or organizations in order to create or support some enterprise and/or its processes and/or to create its products and/or to contribute to their features.


Level of enterprise effort

Definitions

  1. Task. The lowest level of the Effort that
  2. Activity. The Effort undertaken as part of a process. An activity shall have its own name and description; most often, they have one or more predecessor activities and successor activities. Planned activities may have their expected input resources, process assets, time frames, and costs; completed activities may have their actual data. Activities may be subdivided into tasks.
  3. Process.

, project or operations, and/or enterprise

  • Effort. The number of labor units required to complete an activity or other project element. Usually expressed as staff hours, staff days, or staff weeks. Should not be confused with duration.
  • Level of effort (LOE). Support-type activity (e.g., vendor or customer liaison) that does not readily lend itself to measurement of discrete accomplishment. It is generally characterized by a uniform rate of activity over a period of time determined by the activities it supports.

Related lectures