I have a lot of sympathy for the Scheduling sector within
the AEC. On one hand they seem to have it easy, any project nowadays will need
a Program Manager by default.
For a ‘Regular’ Engineer to become a ‘Planning Engineer’
they need to be fluent in one of the (for most in the industry) extremely
complicated tools like Primavera or the somewhat dumber MS Project.
Relatively small numbers within this industry unusually flushed
with ‘super talent’ can be bothered with going beyond anything more complex
than the basic tools of Excel, so the numbers of qualified schedulers are
limited.
Job security is more or less guaranteed.
On the other hand though – being a Planner (as in the ‘time
scheduler’ type) on an AEC project is generally a pretty thankless role to be
in. I’ve seen many times through my career these poor souls getting seriously roasted
over any/all failures of the project by people that should know better, like
project directors and the ones above them.
In fact, having spent a good quarter of a century working
in close proximity with Planners, I’ve seen their fortunes shape in very
similar ways to those of us practicing the similarly ‘black art’ of BIM.
Apart from the obvious similarities, like the necessity
of knowing at least one mystical (un-learnable?) software to operate within either
of these sectors, there are many other likenesses between the two sub-species.
Like, expectations.
Others on the projects generally expect ‘unreasonably
high’ or ‘ridiculously low’ results from both Planners and BIM-mers. Few
understand what exactly are these specialist team members supposed to be doing,
in turn their efforts and outputs get either shrugged off as ‘meaningless’ or
they are expected to press the magic button on their ‘super-tools’ that will instantaneously
save the project from all upcoming dooms, whenever the PD asks or directs.
They are mistrusted and secretly admired, simultaneously hated
and worshipped.
Then, there are the officially promoted ‘supposed synergies’,
of the ‘D’s type, BIM-mers theoretically are the guardians of all ‘D’s on BIM
enabled projects (anything from 3 up) with Schedulers the official custodians
of the 4th or 5th D, depending on their pecking order
with the QS-s on the team. Since D’s should stick together, for high level
strategist in charge of mega projects and companies it usually ‘makes sense’ for BIM and Planning Departments
to work hand-in-hand, in fact for many companies the first step towards doing anything
BIMish is to charge their existing Planning Departments with rolling out the BIM
implementation. (a big mistake on its own, often preceded by an in-sourcing/outsourcing
fiasco but let’s not digress from the
main line of the story).
In practical terms, working closer for the two sectors is
not easy.
Being the despised (or often only just tolerated) nerds of
AEC projects is not necessarily a strong enough reason to seek out the other
for cooperation or even just for company. The two groups, unless forcefully
lumped together often are happy to eye the other camp with the same level of ‘no
one understands us’ rhetoric they cultivate for the general project staff.
For a meaningful (technical) collaboration a significant
effort would be required from both sides, understanding what the others are
really about, learning about their tools and finding ways to support the others
without hindering the progress of one’s own ‘specie’.
Too much effort needed for likely little gain.
Yet, I do see some opportunities in the future for both
of these sectors to truly prosper in forming a stronger alliance with the
other.
For a start, collectively they do have the smartest, most
ambitious and adventurous part of the industry’s intellectual resource, forging
an internal army of thinkers is only a step away.
Individually, they both have battled for decades the negative
forces of the industry wanting to remain led by the bullies as opposed to the
smart ones.
And managed to survive over a significant timeframe and
often against the odds of the immense bully-power.
Admittedly weak, marginalised and hardly taken seriously
still they together also own some core values and qualities, that normally take
decades to develop and will take decades for those that start from scratch now.
‘Paperless Construction’ is my bet for the ‘idea’ over what
these two groups could meaningfully cooperate and simultaneously give the
industry a good jolt where it is desperately needed to be kicked in.
Surely, quite a number of stars would need to align favourably
for this to happen any time soon especially at any meaningful scale, but who
knows – with a little help here and there to nudge those stars to the right positions;
there is a chance for real progress for the entire industry.
And for those that still think Paperless Construction is
a naïve utopia – let’s just state for the record, it is not.
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