Forum Discussion
Reporting Aggregated Resources in MS Project
It would help to know what version of Project you are using. Each "offering" of Project has a different way of providing the information you want. For example, if you are using a desktop version of Project and have all your resources in a resource pool file, it is a simple matter of configuring the Resource Usage view in the pool file to get the report you want. If each file has its own resources (i.e. no pool) then, depending on your version, there are various ways to produce the report (e.g. Visual Reports, VBA, etc.)
John
- richie9648Apr 12, 2023Copper Contributor
John-project Thanks for the response
I am using the desktop version of Project professional 2019. We dont have a resource pool created although that is what I would ideally like to do as its easier to manage. Is there a guide of how this can be done ?
Thanks
- John-projectApr 12, 2023Silver Contributorrichie9648,
Take a look at the following article for setting up a resource pool:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-and-share-a-resource-pool-in-project-desktop-64a2416e-b811-4ddf-b039-e0347e233581
John - Apr 12, 2023richie9648 --
In addition to the Help article to which John refers you, if your projects already contain resources (which it sounds like they do), open each project and confirm that each resource name is spelled identically across all of your projects. For example, if you have M Cobb in one project and Mickey Cobb in another project, and they both represent the same person, rename M Cobb to Mickey Cobb. After aligning your resource names, save each project.
Then create a new blank project, apply the Resource Sheet view, and save the MPP file using a name like Shared Resource Pool. Leave this file open, along with each of your projects. In each project, click Resource > Resource Pool > Share Resources. In the Share Resource dialog, select the "Use resources" option, and in the From pick list, select the name of the blank resource pool file. Select the "Pool takes precedence" option and then click the OK button. Microsoft Project will miraculously copy all of the resources from that project into the blank resource pool file. Save the changes to both the project and the shared resource pool file. Close that project but leave the shared resource pool file open.
Continue the process outlined in the paragraph above until you have connected every project (referred to as a "sharing file") to the shared resource pool file. At the end of this process, you will have fully populated the shared resource pool file with all of your resources.
Whenever you open the shared resource pool file and you apply the Resource Usage view, you will be able to see and analyze resource utilization information and resource availability information for each of the resources in that file. Also, you will probably want to insert the Project column into the Resource Usage view so that you can see the names of the projects in which each resource is working.
Hope this helps.