Task Planning - Jobscope
Transcript of Task Planning - Jobscope
Task Planning User’s Guide JOBSCOPE ®
JOBSCOPE Task Planning Copyright, Jobscope, LLC, 1996 - 2011 JOBSCOPE® Information in this document is subject to change without notice. Jobscope LLC makes no warranty of any kind regarding this material, and shall not be held liable for errors contained herein or for damages resulting from the use and performance of this material. The information in this document is protected by copyright. No part of this manual may be reproduced in any form without the expressed written consent of Jobscope LLC.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 1
Table of Contents
Task Planning ................................................................................................................................................ 3
Setting Up for Task Planning ......................................................................................................................... 4
Table Entries ............................................................................................................................................. 5
Department Codes (Table 0009) ........................................................................................................... 5
Standard Job Cost Categories (Table 2005) .......................................................................................... 6
Labor Cost Categories (Table 2006) ...................................................................................................... 7
Task Labor Collection Accounts (Table 4001) ....................................................................................... 9
Employee Levels (Table 4003) ............................................................................................................ 10
Costing Labor Transactions ..................................................................................................................... 11
Labor Subledger .................................................................................................................................. 11
Burden Charges ................................................................................................................................... 12
Employee Master .................................................................................................................................... 13
Using the Task Planning Module ................................................................................................................. 14
Task Planning Mode .................................................................................................................................... 14
Task Planning/Reporting ......................................................................................................................... 14
Charging to a Previously Entered Task ................................................................................................ 15
Entering A New Task ........................................................................................................................... 16
View Entries ........................................................................................................................................ 17
Inquiry ................................................................................................................................................. 18
Print Plans ............................................................................................................................................... 19
Project Planning ...................................................................................................................................... 20
Shift Project Task Dates .......................................................................................................................... 23
Delete Completed Tasks ......................................................................................................................... 24
Copy Project Tasks .................................................................................................................................. 25
Labor Collection Mode ................................................................................................................................ 26
Releases ...................................................................................................................................................... 27
Engineering Releases in Design Data Management............................................................................ 28
Engineering Releases in Job Management and Control ..................................................................... 28
Getting Started ........................................................................................................................................ 29
Configuration Settings ........................................................................................................................ 30
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 2
Table Entries for Releases Mode ........................................................................................................ 30
Status Values ....................................................................................................................................... 31
Releases Browse ..................................................................................................................................... 32
Releases Main Tree View ........................................................................................................................ 34
Engineering Release Header ................................................................................................................... 35
Engineering Release Lines ....................................................................................................................... 37
Engineering Release Documents ............................................................................................................ 41
Releases Main Tree View Buttons .......................................................................................................... 42
Integrating Task Planning With Engineering Release Lines .................................................................... 44
How They Look In Job Management and Control ............................................................................... 49
Engineering Release Line Dependencies ................................................................................................ 49
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 3
Task Planning
Task Planning is designed for the reporting of labor for salaried employees that you would like to charge
to jobs or general ledger accounts. The most common types of salaried labor that you might want to
charge to jobs or accounts are engineering and project management. You can charge this salaried labor
in the labor collection module. The only difference is that in the labor collection module you will have to
enter a work center (unless the charge is to a work order operation), whereas in Task Planning you
don’t.
Task Planning has two other capabilities that you may find useful, Tasks and Integration with
Engineering Releases.
For shop type work, the work order system with it’s structure of work orders with operations fits very
well. However, for engineers, the work to be done can probably be defined better by a listing of the
individual tasks to be done. An example might be the preparation of a drawing, or the design
calculations for a hydraulic system. In the Task Planning system, these are called Tasks, and, once the
task is entered, the employee can enter time against the task. When the task is entered, the estimated
time to do the task can also be entered, as well as the job or release to which the task is to be charged.
When the employee reports time against the task, he or she can also enter an estimate of the time
required to finish the task. This provides a running estimate of the time required to complete the task.
In Task Planning, there are two different types of tasks, project tasks and individual tasks. Project tasks
do not have a specific person linked to them. An individual task must have a specific person linked to it.
Individual tasks may be linked to project tasks, and more than one individual task may be linked to a
single project task. Labor must be reported at the individual task level.
A project task is a broader scope of work, such as doing all the general arrangement drawings for a job.
This might be broken down into individual tasks by drawing. The Engineering Releases module allows
you to define the incremental releases of engineering work on a job. So an Engineering Release is an
even broader scope of work than a project task. All the work on an Engineering Release is considered to
have the same timing, meaning that all the work is expected to be completed and released at the same
time. An Engineering Release may be made up of different types of work, but they have the same
timing. An Engineering Release consists of the header for the release, which describes the general
nature of the work being released, and Engineering Release Lines, which is a description of each type of
work on the release.
The other capability mentioned above is Integration with Engineering Releases. With this option on, the
Project Task record will have a one-to-one relationship to an Engineering Release Lines record. Also
note that the Project Task has user defined field and user text capability. This will be accessed from the
Engineering Release Lines screen so that it can be maintained from the Project Task screen or from
Engineering Release Lines.
This user guide is generally divided into two section, Task Planning and Releases. In the Task Planning
section, the use of Task Planning without Engineering Releases is described. In the Releases section, the
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 4
Engineering Releases functionality and it’s integration with Task Planning is covered. The Releases
section is the same as the section of the same name in the Parts and Change Control User Guide.
Setting Up for Task Planning
Go to System Utilities, System Configuration, Shop Floor Control, and Production. There is a Task
Planning section at the bottom of the screen. The first setting, Allow Task Reporting Without Tasks,
should be checked. The other setting, Integrate With Engineering Release Lines, should be checked if
you want to use the Engineering Releases functionality and integrate it with Task Planning.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 5
Table Entries
Department Codes (Table 0009)
The burden account for Task Planning transactions comes from here. The employee is associated with a
department in the Employee Master.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 6
Standard Job Cost Categories (Table 2005)
Table 2005 (Standard Categories) contains the standard cost categories that are automatically assigned
to every new job. When you first add a job and access the Job Budgets screen, you will see that the
categories in table 2005 are automatically displayed. You can then define the sales estimate and current
estimate for each of these categories. Through the Job Budgets screen, you may add or delete
categories for the specific job as necessary.
Entries in table 2005 look like this.
All categories in table 2005 must exist in either table 2006 (Labor Categories) or table 3001 (Material
Categories).
There is a special function for selecting standard job cost categories that you may want to consider. It
allows you to have different sets of standard categories depending upon the type of job. See the section
“Default Cost Categories” in the Job Accounting User Guide for more information.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 7
Labor Cost Categories (Table 2006)
Table 2006 (Labor Categories) contains all categories that are charged by the collection of labor. Each
entry consists of the following.
An hours category to which the hours are charged
A description of the category
A type charge that tells whether the category pertains to hourly or salaried labor. Type charges
are as follows.
o Hours worked by hourly labor: type charge LH
o Hours worked by salaried labor: type charge EH
A cost category to which the dollar amount of labor is charged
A burden cost category to which burden dollars for the labor are charged
A burden credit account: If you use the Burden Overhead Adjustments function to charge
burden to selected jobs, this account is credited for the charge (the labor WIP accounts for the
specified jobs are debited).
A burden percentage value: If you use the Burden Overhead Adjustments function, the labor
dollars for selected transactions charged to the hours category are multiplied by this
percentage. The resulting amount is then charged to selected jobs as additional burden. Refer to
the “Burden Overhead Adjustments” section in the Job Accounting User Guide for additional
information.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 8
A sample entry in this table might appear as follows.
The LH type charge pertains to the hours category, LABOR HRS. Because the category LABOR COST is in
the cost category field, it is automatically assigned a type charge of LC (labor cost). If the hours category
has a type charge of EH, then its associated cost category is assigned a type charge of EC
(engineering/salaried labor cost).
Using the above example, when you collect labor for an employee or work center and you charge the
labor to the LABOR HRS category, the dollars associated with the labor are automatically charged to
LABOR COST. If a burden rate is defined for the employee or work center, the burden dollars are
charged to LABOR BRDN. (If you do not define a burden category, burden dollars are charged to the cost
category. For example, if LABOR BDN does not exist, burden dollars are charged to LABOR COST.)
If the LABOR HRS category is entered in table 2005 so that it is a standard job cost category, the LABOR
COST and LABOR BDN categories are automatically created for the job based on the information in table
2006.
If you use Burden Overhead Adjustments, the Burden amount calculated for this category will be based
on a percentage of 8% and will be credited to account 2120-8982. For example, if you selected
transactions for the category that totaled $200.00, then $16 would be credited to 2120-8982.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 9
Task Labor Collection Accounts (Table 4001)
The general ledger accounts that you may want to charge to must be set up in Table 4001.
The Type field is for defining the type of charge that it is. The values that you can use are as follows:
Type Code Description
H Holiday
I Sick Pay
J Jury
O Personal Time
P Primary
S Secondary
U Unreported
V Vacation
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 10
Employee Levels (Table 4003)
The hourly rate for hourly employees is in the Employee Master. Salaried employees (Pay Type = S)
work differently. Each salaried employee has a Level Code in the Employee Master, and this Level Code
refers to entries in table 4003.
The Level Rate is the rate that will be charged, and Burden Rate is the burden rate that will be charged.
If the Burden Rate Is Percentage box is not checked, then the Burden Rate is in dollars per hour. If the
box is checked then Burden Rate is a percentage and is multiplied by the Level Rate to get the hourly
rate to charge for burden.
Payroll Number and Payroll Acceptance Code are fields that may be used if you want Jobscope to create
an extract program for your payroll system.
Do not delete Level Code 99. It must be there for hourly employees.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 11
Costing Labor Transactions
Labor Subledger
Every time you enter a labor transaction in Task Planning, the system writes a record in the Labor
subledger. This subledger record is a record in the database table PPHRTRX. This table is referred to as
the Hourly Transaction File. The dollar amounts in the record are as follows.
Labor Dollars – Unlike labor collection for hourly employees, the system assumes that this
amount is not the amount due the employee. For standard rate costing, this amount is based
on the Hourly Rate value in the Employee Master. For actual rate costing, this amount is based
on the Level Rate in Table 4003 for the Employee Level in the Employee Master.
Burden Dollars – The amount that will be job charged and posted to the designated burden
account for the employee’s department. This account comes from table 0009. The burden rate
is defined for the employee’s level code in Table 4003. The credit account is the burden account
defined from Table 0009 and the debit account is the WIP account for the job in Table 0012.
The system does not charge burden for labor transactions to a general ledger account.
Rate Variance Dollars – The difference between the rate for the level code in Table 4003 and the
rate used to cost the job. If the cost type for the job uses a standard rate rather than actual
rate, then the rate at which the job is costed may be different from the employee’s rate in Table
4003. For additional information on rate variance, refer to the “Variance Entries” section in this
document.
Efficiency Variance – For Task Planning transactions, this will always be zero.
The Category value in the labor subledget will be the Category from the Employee Master.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 12
Burden Charges
When a labor transaction is entered in the Task Planning module, the system gets the category for the
direct side of the transaction from the Employee Master.
For the burden (overhead or indirect) side of the transaction, the system gets the burden category
corresponding to the respective LH or EH category in table 2006. If you do not want burden charged to
a separate category, leave the burden category blank in table 2006. This will charge both burden and
direct labor costs to the same category (from the work center master).
The system gets the burden rate from the level code in Table 4003. If the Burden Rate is Percent box is
not checked, then the value in the Burden field is a dollars per hour value. If the Burden Rate is Percent
box is checked, then the value in the Burden field is a percentage, which the system multiplies times the
value in the Standard field, resulting in a dollar per hour value.
Burden amounts are charged to the job and posted to Work in Process. The Labor subledger does not
include a credit account for burden. The subledger only stores one debit and one credit account. When
batches are automatically created for posting to the general ledger, the burden account for the
associated work center is used as the burden credit account. A subledger record involving burden will
therefore create four postings to the general ledger (two to the labor WIP account, one to the accrued
payroll account (from the Employee Master) and one to the burden credit account in the Table 4003.
Additional burden amounts can be charged to jobs through the Burden Overhead Adjustments option in
Job Accounting. This is described in more detail in the Job Accounting User Guide.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 13
Employee Master
Employees are set up in the Employee Master in the Resources module. You can read more about the
Employee Master in the Resources User Guide. The information here is the minimum you need to get
started with task planning.
The required fields are labeled in Bold. The Level is a Level Code from table 4003. If the employee is
hourly, use Level 99. Salaried employees should use another level code. The Hourly Rate is the
employee’s payroll rate, and will be used in the task planning calculations.
The Account Number is the accrued payroll account. The Idle Account is used by the Datacap system,
and you won’t need it if you are not using Datacap.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 14
Using the Task Planning Module
Task Planning Mode
The Task Planning module has two modes of operation, Task Planning and Labor Collection. In Task
Planning mode, the toolbar at the top has six selections.
Task Planning/Reporting
In this screen, you can create a task and charge to it all in the same transaction, or you can access a
previously entered task and report labor against it. One important thing to note here is that, if you plan
to use project tasks, you can only link individual tasks to project tasks when the individual task if first
entered, so be sure to get your project tasks in first.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 15
Charging to a Previously Entered Task
When you enter an employee number and tab, the grid at the bottom of the screen lists all tasks for that
employee, sorted by task number. You will need to either know the task number (they are sorted by
task number) or recognize it from the description. Double click on a previously entered task in the grid
to bring it to the screen for a new labor entry. Enter the hours you are reporting in the Hours Worked
field. Update the Hours Remaining field to the number of hours you estimate are remaining on the task
and click on OK or Apply.
You can use the Delete Completed Task selection on the toolbar to delete completed tasks so that they
will not display in the grid. Deleting a task will not delete the labor transaction records nor the costing,
just the task itself. You can also manually delete a task as you complete it. Just make the final labor
entry and click on Apply. That will charge the job or account. Then, double click on the task in the grid
to bring it to the screen, and click on the Delete Task icon at the top of the screen.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 16
Entering A New Task
Start by entering the Employee Number. You can also browse for the employee by clicking on the
browse button beside the Employee Number. The system will assign the next task number for the
employee.
In the Description field, enter a description of the task. On the line with Release-WO and Account, you
tell the system where you want the time charged. You can charge to a Release, or a Release/Work
Order, or an Account. You can browse for the release and work order. The accounts that are valid for
task planning will display in the dropdown (from Table 4001). If you are charging to a Release or
Release/Work Order, you may not select an account. The system will get the debit account for the
transaction from the Labor WIP entry in Table 0012. The credit account will be the Account Number
(accrued payroll) in the Employee Master.
If the job is a C/SCSC job, then you must enter a valid Cost Account (16 characters). If the job is not a
C/SCSC job, you can enter any value in the Cost Account field.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 17
If the task is to be linked to a Project Task, enter the Project Task, or leave it blank.
Date Expected is the date that you expect the task to be complete. Date Complete is the date the task is
actually complete.
Hours Estimated is the total number of hours estimated to perform the task.
Hours Worked is the number of hours to be reported as having been worked. If you are entering a new
task, but do not have hours to report, then leave it at zero.
Hours Remaining is your estimate of how many hours are now remaining to complete the task.
The Category will default from the Employee Master.
The Control Hours field will maintain a running total of the hours entered for the employee in the
current session.
View Entries
The View Entries button ( ) will display the screen below. These are the entries you have
made during the current session.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 18
Inquiry
You can use the Inquiry button( ) to look at labor transactions previously entered. This
Inquiry does not list Tasks, but rather labor entries against the tasks and all other labor entries,
regardless of the source. When you click on it, the Inquiry screen displays.
Enter the selection criteria for the transactions you want to see and click on Find. A screen will display
the selected transactions.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 19
Print Plans
Print Plans is a good way to find out a task number when you are ready to report but don’t remember
the task number. You can print a range of task numbers, or check All Non-Completed Tasks, and get a
listing.
This is what it looks like.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 20
Project Planning
First of all, if you have Integrate with Engineering Release Lines checked in System Configuration, you
can’t enter Project Tasks from this screen. If you try to do it, you will get this message when you try to
enter a task.
If you have Integrate with Engineering Release Lines unchecked, the entry of the project task will look
like this. Hours Estimated and Remaining represent the total of all the individual tasks that you will link
to this project task. The system doesn’t total the individual tasks, since this is a higher level estimate.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 21
When you are entering a new Project Task, give it a number. Normally, you would number them 001,
002, etc. Enter a Description, and select a Date Expected that is the date that you expect the project
task to be complete. Optionally, you can define a Predecessor task, which is another project task on the
same release which must be completed prior to starting this one. This does not affect system
processing, but is for your information.
With the project task entered, you can then enter individual tasks and link them to the project task.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 22
This is what a project task might look like when you have several entered for a release. The Totals for
Release column shows the totals of Hours Estimated, Hours Worked, and Hours Remaining for the entire
release.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 23
Shift Project Task Dates
You can work with Date Expected, Date Complete, and Hours Remaining on the Project Planning screen,
but you might find it more convenient to do it on the Shift Project Dates screen. When you enter or
browse for the Release, and tab out of the field, the project tasks for the release display in the grid.
Double click on one and it’s data will display so that you can work with it.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 24
Delete Completed Tasks
You can delete tasks individually on the Task Planning/Reporting screen, or, you can use the Delete
Completed Tasks selection to delete all individual tasks completed on or before a selected date. This
will delete the task, but the labor charged to the task and it’s associated job cost will remain.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 25
Copy Project Tasks
You may have the situation in which the Project Tasks are always the same for a certain type of job. As
an example, the job we have been working with, A116124, always has three project tasks, as you can
see in the Shift Project Tasks Dates screen several pages back. The individual tasks may be different
because some design details are different, but the higher level project tasks are always the same. If this
is the case, you can use the Copy Project Tasks selection to copy these project tasks to a new job or
release.
You probably will want to leave Date Complete blank. If you do put a date in the field, it will be copied
to the Date Complete field for all the copied tasks, indicating that they are complete. If you leave it
blank, as shown here, the Date Expected dates on the project tasks on the From Release will be copied
to the new project tasks, and the Date Complete on the copied tasks will be blank.
After copying, you can use the Shift Project Task Dates selection to update the Date Expected values,
and the hours.
This does not copy any individual tasks.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 26
Labor Collection Mode
Labor Collection Mode allows you to charge salaried labor to jobs (releases) or accounts without
individual tasks. You can designate a project task if you want to, or, you can simple charge the job or
account. In the example below, we have charged to a project task.
As you enter transactions, they list in the grid below. This shows you what you have entered, but you
cannot recall one and change it. If you make a mistake, like entered 80 hours instead of 8 hours, simply
enter a new transaction with -72 hours.
The Week Ending date will default to the current date.
The Employee Hours is the total hours entered for the employee during the session. The Control Hours
is the total hours for all employees entered during the session.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 27
Releases
In Jobscope, the term “Releases” can have two different meanings, engineering releases or production
releases. An engineering release is a body of engineering work that is released from engineering when it
is ready. A production release is a body of production work that needs to be produced together, usually
so that all the work on a production release can be shipped at the same time. You can work with
production releases in the Job Management and Control module.
In this section, we are talking about engineering releases. The fundamental idea about engineering
releases is that they formalize the process of defining what engineering work needs to be done, and
where it stands in the overall process. The system allows you to formally define each piece of
engineering work (an engineering release line) as Released, Sent to Manufacturing Engineering (ME), ME
Complete, Sent to Production Planning and Control (PPC), and PPC Complete. You can also have the
system copy an engineering release line directly into a production release line.
Engineering releases are made up of three things, the release header, the release lines , and release
documents. For each release, there is only one header, and it provides a general description of the
work, and identifies the job number for which the work is being done. There may be one or many
engineering release lines. The engineering release lines describe the actual work that is to be done. The
release documents are documents, usually drawings and specifications, or a list of the drawings and
specifications, associated with the release.
The purpose of Releases mode of Parts and Change Control is to help you to formally manage the
engineering process. Let’s consider some examples of how you might use it. Your business probably
falls into one of the following categories, or some combination of the three.
You design everything that you sell from the ground up
You have standard designs, but every order requires a complete engineering review to
determine that the standard is suitable for the customer order, and you frequently do some
design changes for the customer order
Everything you sell is standard, and your engineering effort goes into design of the standard
products
For the case in which you design everything that you sell from the ground up, you would create one or
more releases for each customer order, and the release lines would be the final and sub assemblies that
you need to fulfill the order. You might look at it another way, and say that each release line would be a
drawing or set of drawings that is required. You also might make the assemblies as release lines, and
the drawings too. These releases would be tied to the customer job.
If you have some standard designs, but engineering review and redesign is common, then you might
create a engineering release for the standard items that do not need additional work, and then approve
the release, which tells manufacturing which items they can proceed with immediately. The items that
need design work might go on a separate engineering release. As in the first case, these releases would
be tied to the customer job.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 28
In the case of all standard products, you would probably want to open a job to collect the costs for the
design work, and the engineering releases would be tied to that job.
You don’t have to use engineering releases in order to make the rest of Jobscope work. It exists to help
you manage the engineering and engineering release processes.
Another thing you might want to consider when thinking about managing the engineering effort is Task
Planning. Task Planning in Jobscope provides a way of managing engineering assignments and work
loads, and for salaried employees to charge their time to jobs or general ledger accounts. Task Planning
is described in detail in the manual for the Task Planning module. Task Planning may be integrated with
engineering releases. This is described in the “Integrating Task Planning with Engineering Release Lines”
section of this manual.
Engineering Releases in Design Data Management
The same functionality described in this section is available in a separate module called Design Data
Management. Design Data Management also has the Drawings mode. You may want to have people
who only need to get to Engineering Releases and Drawings data use Design Data Management instead.
The functionality is the same except where the Releases mode of Parts and Change Control has a button
at the top of the main view to “Move to PPC”, a similar button in Design Data Management is “Move to
ME”.
Engineering Releases in Job Management and Control
The Job Management and Control module has an Engineering Releases mode, and it does the same
things plus some other functions. It can display an exploded view of an assembly, it can create a job line
item from an Engineering Release Line, and it can display MRP information for the parts on an assembly.
In addition, the “Release Check Off” button on that main view can mark all the Release Lines on the
Release as Released. Finally, Engineering Releases mode in Job Management and Control has some
limited work order creation capability.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 29
Getting Started
The first thing you need to do in getting started with the engineering Releases mode is decide if you
want to use it or not. It takes some effort to maintain, but it can provide a single place where the status
of the engineering effort can be available for all to see. If your engineering process control is not formal
enough to make the Engineering Change Notice (ECN) mode important, then you probably don’t need
engineering releases either. If you do plan to use the ECN mode, then you may also want the single
point control provided by the Engineering Releases functionality.
Once you decide to use Engineering Releases, then you need to decide if you also want to use Task
Planning, and if you want to integrate Task Planning with Engineering Release Lines. If you consider
your engineering time as overhead, and you don’t want to charge it to jobs, then you won’t need Task
Planning. If you want to charge engineering time to jobs, then you will probably want to use Task
Planning. If you plan to use Task Planning and Engineering Releases, then it makes sense to integrate
the two.
You will need to think through how you will number your engineering releases, and how you will keep
track of the next number. The system does not automatically number engineering releases. A simple
scheme of numbering them from 00001 consecutively, or perhaps with a prefix consisting of the year
and then a consecutive number, such as 201100001 may be adequate. If you try to get too fancy, it may
get confusing.
As you will see as you read further, you can do the same functionality in Design Data Management, and
you can do the same functionality plus some other things in Job Management and Control. You need to
decide which of these modules each user will use. Don’t turn them loose to use one module one day,
and another module the next to do the same thing. This will lead to errors. For the users that you trust
with a broad range of capabilities, use Job Management and Control. If you want a user limited a little
bit, have he or she use one of the others.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 30
Configuration Settings
In System Utilities, under System Configuration, then Shop Floor Control and Production, you will see the Production screen. The “Integrate with Engineering Release Lines” box will turn that functionality on. If you turn it on, you will probably also want to turn the companion function, “Allow Task Reporting Without Tasks” on also.
This is the only configuration setting you need for Engineering Releases. Table Entries for Releases Mode
There are no table entries required for Engineering Releases.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 31
Status Values
The Engineering Release header screen has a place for a single character Status. It could be 1, 2, 3, etc., or A, B, C, etc. You may not have a use for this, but if you do, you should establish these values up front. As an example, you might use the following:
A – Release created, no work started
B – Work started, no lines released
C – Some but not all lines released
D – All lines released, design engineering complete
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 32
Releases Browse
If you click on Open on the toolbar, the Engineering Release browse screen displays.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 33
Here you can browse for an existing engineering release. In this example, the year is a prefix in the
Release Number format, so entering 2015% in the Release Number field will select all Releases for 2015.
The status value of A has also been used as a filter for the selection. Highlight the release in the Search
Results box and click on OK or simply double click on it.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 34
Releases Main Tree View
The main tree view shows the Engineering Release header and the Engineering Release Lines, in this
case three lines. You can highlight a line and double click on Engineering Release Lines in the collection
to display that line. To display documents, double click on Engineering Release Documents.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 35
Engineering Release Header
To open an Engineering Release header, click on Engineering Releases in the collection.
This is the Engineering Releases header screen.
To create a new Release, the following required fields need to be populated:
Note: All required fields are marked in bold.
Release Number – A combination of numbers and letters up to 25 characters. The automatic
assignment of numbers by entering NEW is not provided for Engineering Releases. You need to
develop a numbering scheme.
Job Number – Here you need to enter a valid job number. The ( ) beside the field will
allow you to browse for it.
All other fields are not required but provide extensive information about the Release:
Opened By – the system will fill in the user id of the user that created the Release
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 36
Description – You can enter a description of the work on the release. In this case, one release is
being used for the standard items on the job (to tell manufacturing that they are ready to go
without engineering changes) and another is used for the special engineering work
Date Opened – The system will write the date the Release was entered, but you can change it
Approved – This would most likely refer to some sort of approval within design engineering, but
it could be whatever you like
Date Approved - The system will write the date the Approved box was checked, but you can
change it
Released – This means the work is released from engineering
Date Released - The system will write the date the Released box was checked, but you can
change it
Comment – You can enter whatever you like here
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 37
Engineering Release Lines
You can double click on Engineering Release Lines in the collection to open the Engineering Release
Lines screen. The screen below is how it looks with the integration with Task Planning turned off (you
can see it turned on later in this document).
To create a new Release Line, the following required fields need to be populated:
Note: All required fields are marked in bold.
Line Number – This is a simple number that determines the order in which the lines appear on
the main display. The system will number them for you
Location Code – The dropdown will display a selection from table 0010
All other fields are not required but provide extensive information about the Release Line:
Description – This is for information that you want to communicate. In this case, the Release
Line is saying that the standard unit is okay for production on this job.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 38
Part Number – In this case, we are saying that this part number is ready to go. If this Release
Line was for design work, a drawing might be used instead
Part Revision – The system will write the current revision, but you can change it
Drawing Number – You can select a drawing using the ( ) beside the drawing number field
Drawing Revision – The system will write the current revision, but you can change it
Released – This button indicates that the release line has been released from the engineering
department
Released Date – The system will write the current date, but you can change it
Released By – The system will write the user id of the person who released the line
Purchased Item – You can designate that this item is to be purchased
Exported To Job – The Engineering Releases mode in Job Management and Control has the
capability to export an Engineering Release Line to a Job Line Item. When it does that, it will
check this box on.
Quantity – You can enter a quantity value, or leave it blank
MS Project Id – If you have Microsoft project files stored in SQL Server, you can link them with
this field and the following
MS Task Id – See above
Sent to ME – This means that the line has been sent to Manufacturing Engineering for the
addition of routings and other manufacturing data. The date field beside it will default to the
current date, but you can change it
ME Complete – Check this when Manufacturing Engineering has completed it’s work
Sent to Production Planning and Control (PPC) – This indicates that the line has been forwarded
to PPC to be exported to a line item on the job
PPC Complete – PPC has finished with it
Comments – You may use this as you like
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 39
The Grid View button ( ) at the top will display a grid view of all the lines on the release as
shown below.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 40
The Used On button ( ) at the top allows you to define used on relationships between
engineering release lines if you are using the integration with Task Planning function. The screen looks
like this.
The Engineering Releases Line Dependencies mode in Job Management and Control will display these
dependencies.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 41
Engineering Release Documents
The Engineering Release Documents function in the collection allows you to link electronic documents to
Engineering Release Lines. Highlight the line on the main display and double click on Engineering
Release Documents.
The system will write the Release and Release Line. You must use the ( ) button to browse to the
document and save. The other button will display the document.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 42
Releases Main Tree View Buttons
A number of buttons appear at the top of the Releases Main Tree View, as shown below.
New
Clicking on this button displays the Engineering Releases header screen where you can enter a new
release. This is described in the Engineering Releases Header section
Open
Clicking on this button displays the Releases Browse. This is described in the Releases Browse section
Send To PPC
If you highlight an Engineering Release Line and click here, this screen will display. If you click on Yes,
the system will check ME Complete and Sent to PPC both on with the current date.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 43
Legend
This is the legend.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 44
Integrating Task Planning With Engineering Release Lines
In Task Planning, there are two different types of tasks, project tasks and individual tasks. Project tasks
do not have a specific person linked to them. An individual task must have a specific person linked to it.
Individual tasks may be linked to project tasks, and more than one individual task may be linked to a
single project task. Labor may be reported at the individual task level, or at the project task level.
What this functionality does is create a Project Task every time you create an Engineering Release Line,
so that you can use the Task Planning system to charge salaried labor to the Project Task/Engineering
Release Line.
This is the Project Task screen. Note that we have a Date expected, Date complete, Description, Hours
Estimated, and Hours Remaining fields. All these may be maintained from the Engineering Release Lines
screen.
With this option on, the Project Task record will have a one-to-one relationship to an Engineering
Release Lines record (unless some project tasks have been directly entered here). Also note that the
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 45
Project Task has user defined field and user text capability. This will be accessed from the Engineering
Release Lines screen so that it can be maintained from here or from Engineering Release Lines.
This is the Task Planning screen. This allows an individual to charge labor to a project task without an
individual task (this is an option in System Configuration). User’s will charge their labor here if there is
no individual task, or on the Task Planning/Reporting screen if there is an individual task (see next page).
In this case, employee 008 is charging to Project Task 001 on job A116299.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 46
This is the same screen except here we are adding an “Individual Task”. Whereas a project task might
have a number of employees working on it, an individual task has a specific employee defined. Note
the Project Task field, which allows this task to be linked to a project task. Labor may be reported here
by entering hours in the Hours Worked field. The estimate values here do not roll up to the project task.
The project task estimates are maintained directly on the Engineering Release Lines screen.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 47
This is the Shift Project Dates screen. Dates may be changed here, or on the Engineering Release Lines
screen.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 48
This is the Engineering Release Lines screen with the integration turned on. The estimate and remaining
hours, description, date expected, and date complete values in the Project Task record will be displayed
and maintained here. The actual hours will be displayed here. If this integration functionality is being
used (turned on in Startup), then entry of a record here will create a Project Task record and the Line
Number and Project Task number fields will serve to link them. Hours Estimated and Date Expected
fields will be added here as mandatory fields, and the data will be written to the Project Task.
Task Planning
JOBSCOPE Page 49
Notice that with the integration turned off, the Engineering Release Lines screen only has the following
icons for New and Delete.
With the integration turned on, they look like this.
The UDF and User Text icons provided here will update the Project Planning UDF and User Text.
How They Look In Job Management and Control
This is the Engineering Releases mode of Job Management and Control. You can see the engineering
release lines, with the project and individual tasks associated with them.
Engineering Release Line Dependencies
You can establish “Used On” relationships between Engineering Release Lines. This is discussed in the
Job Management and Control manual.
August 25, 2015