If resource availability is not a constraint, then a project's critical chain becomes the same as its critical path (just like Einstein's theory reduces to Newton's under conditions of low speeds and gravity).
It is an alternative to critical path analysis. The main features that distinguish the CC method from the critical path are:
It aggregates the large amounts of safety time added to many subprojects in project buffers[?] to protect due-date performance, and to avoid wasting this safety time through bad multitasking[?], student syndrome[?], and poorly synchronised integration.
Critical chain project management uses buffer management[?] instead of earned value management to assess the performance of a project. The earned value management technique is thought to be misleading, because it does not distinguish progress on the project constraint (i.e. on the critical chain) from progress on non-constraints (i.e. on other paths).
Concept developed by Eliyahu M. Goldratt as an application of his theory of constraints.
See also: project planning
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