Controlling and Monitoring Major Projects

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Controlling and Monitoring Major Projects
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P3469

Dubai (UAE)

07 Dec 2025 -18 Dec 2025

7800

Overview

Introduction:

Controlling and monitoring major projects refer to the institutional framework that governs project execution through structured systems of tracking, analysis, and periodic reporting to ensure that time, cost, and organizational objectives are met efficiently. This area represents a strategic pillar in the management of large scale projects, requiring precise integration of schedules, human and material resources, financial allocations, and analytical systems. This training program presents a comprehensive institutional perspective for developing advanced control systems aligned with the evolving requirements of major projects at different stages. It also focuses on organizational models and control structures that enable participants to build accurate monitoring systems and professional dashboards using the latest institutional approaches.

Program Objectives:

By the end of this program, participants will be able to:

  • Analyze advanced institutional structures for monitoring and control in major projects.

  • Evaluate scheduling systems and link them to project execution stages and actual performance.

  • Classify cost and resource monitoring tools and apply earned value methodologies.

  • Explore institutional reporting mechanisms and dashboard structures.

  • Utilize integrated control systems covering all stages of major projects.

Target Audience:

  • Project and Program Managers.

  • Planning and Control Officers.

  • Cost and Resource Engineers.

  • Performance and Risk Analysts.

  • Senior Administrative Staff working on large scale projects.

Program Outline:

Unit 1:

Institutional Foundations of Project Monitoring and Control:

  • Core concepts of monitoring and control in major projects.

  • Organizational frameworks supporting control functions.

  • Relationship between corporate governance and control structures.

  • Functional scopes of schedule, cost, and resource control.

  • Real project examples illustrating institutional applications.

Unit 2:

Scheduling Structures and Control:

  • Techniques for developing complex schedules for major projects.

  • Role of professional software in supporting scheduling functions.

  • Key steps used for linking schedules with actual execution plans.

  • Time performance indicators for detecting and controlling deviations.

  • Periodic updating methodologies for critical schedule monitoring.

Unit 3:

Cost Control Frameworks:

  • Financial models for cost control in major projects.

  • Cost structures and their link to work elements and operational scopes.

  • Financial tracking mechanisms and variance analysis.

  • Key cost performance indicators in project environments.

  • How to apply Earned Value Management (EVM) to costs and schedules.

Unit 4:

Resource Monitoring Systems:

  • Organizational structures for monitoring human and material resources.

  • Allocation mechanisms aligned with schedule requirements.

  • Efficiency analysis process of resource utilization in large projects.

  • Strategies for addressing operational resource gaps.

  • Institutional systems for tracking resource performance.

Unit 5:

Institutional Reporting Systems:

  • Methodologies for preparing comprehensive institutional performance reports.

  • Key performance indicators for schedule and cost control.

  • Structuring financial, schedule, resource, and risk progress reports.

  • Communication channels between execution teams and senior management.

  • Techniques for ensuring full coverage of monitoring reports.

Unit 6:

Interactive Dashboards:

  • Institutional concepts of dashboards in project environments.

  • Steps for designing advanced dashboards and integrating operational data.

  • Key steps used for merging time and cost data into unified dashboards.

  • Role of visual analytics in supporting management decisions.

  • Institutional dashboard preparation methodologies for monitoring teams.

Unit 7:

Risk and Deviation Control:

  • Structures for identifying and tracking operational and financial risks.

  • Analytical tools for detecting schedule and cost deviations.

  • Integrating risk control within institutional monitoring frameworks.

  • Rapid response planning and early warning reporting structures.

  • Escalation mechanisms for critical risks to senior stakeholders.

Unit 8:

Institutional Integration of Control Systems:

  • Linking scheduling, cost, resource, and risk systems under one framework.

  • Institutional challenges in achieving cross functional integration.

  • Strategies for combining traditional and digital tools.

  • Leadership roles in enabling effective institutional coordination.

  • Importance of building centralized databases for unified control functions.

Unit 9:

Performance Indicators and Continuous Improvement:

  • Methodologies for designing performance indicators.

  • Performance analysis techniques for identifying structural gaps.

  • Internal and external review systems to ensure control quality.

  • Global models for continuous improvement in monitoring systems.

  • Linking performance indicators to project strategic objectives.

Unit 10:

Institutional Governance of Project Control:

  • Governance structures supporting project control functions.

  • Mechanisms for ensuring compliance with international standards.

  • Coordination models between control bodies and execution units.

  • Comprehensive institutional review systems for transparency.

  • Case analysis of major international projects in multiple sectors.

Unit 11:

Information Systems Integration in Control:

  • Technical frameworks supporting institutional monitoring and control.

  • Linking operational and project management systems.

  • Database architectures and real time analytics.

  • IT governance roles in ensuring data accuracy.

  • Integration models with institutional decision support systems.

Unit 12:

Institutional Evaluation of Control Systems:

  • Institutional tools for evaluating monitoring system effectiveness.

  • Maturity measurement methodologies for control functions.

  • Benchmarking against global models and best practices.

  • Organizational development approaches based on evaluation outcomes.

  • Periodic review mechanisms for control structures.

Unit 13:

Applied case studies in major projects in oil and gas, power plants and nuclear energy:

  • Applied case studies in major projects in oil and gas, power plants and nuclear energy.

  • Structured analysis of control systems at each stage.

  • Examination of reporting and dashboard practices.

  • Integration of schedule, resources, and costs into a unified framework.

  • Critical lessons in project management, risk mitigation, and stakeholder engagement.