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Finish on Time Every Time: Optimize Work Planning and Master Scheduling

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说明

Lean construction defines the “should” aspect of CPM (critical path method) master scheduling and the “can, will, and did” elements of weekly work planning. The challenge is that the master schedule is created by scheduling experts, where the weekly work planning happens in the field with the superintendent and the trades. The Skanska team will share how they maximize the master schedules to provide a project-level view of the time and resources requirements, and how they utilize short-term work plans to enable their construction teams to deliver projects on time and reduce waste with collaborative project planning and daily progress monitoring. This talk will highlight that the key for better project planning is the effective connectivity and data flow between long- and short-term schedules for different stakeholders on the project. With the introduction of both Schedule and Work Plan in Autodesk’s Build software, customers will have the tools to manage both project level schedules and weekly work plans in the unified platform.

主要学习内容

  • Learn about the benefits of data flow, connectivity, and improved communication around short-term and long-term schedules
  • Learn best practices to determine the granularity in the master schedule versus the detail needed at the work-planning level
  • Learn how teams maximize Work Plan in Autodesk Build for remote and in-person collaboration during planning sessions
  • Learn how to arm project teams by sharing, communicating, and connecting the long-term schedule in Autodesk Build

讲师

  • Shani Sharif 的头像
    Shani Sharif
    Shani Sharif is a Computational Design and Digital Fabrication expert. She currently is Sr. Product Manager for Work Plan at Autodesk Construction Solutions and also serves as an AEC advisor on the Robotics and 3D Printing for Construction research teams. Shani holds a Ph.D. degree in Architecture (Design Computation) from Georgia Tech, a SMArchS degree in Computation from MIT, a Master of Architecture from Shahid Beheshti University, and a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Tehran. Before joining Autodesk, Shani was a researcher at Georgia Tech’s Digital Building Lab and MIT Media Lab, where she was engaged in BIM-focused projects such as developing the Masonry Unit Database for the BIM for Masonry initiative. She also initiated and taught Robotic Fabrication courses at Georgia Tech and Complex Geometries at Wentworth Institute of Technology. Shani is a scientific reviewer for journals such as Automation in Construction and Construction Robotics.
  • Michael Zeppieri
    As a change agent in our legacy industry of construction, Michael is actively driving Skanska’s innovation and digitalization strategy. He has more than fifteen years of leadership experience across aerospace, manufacturing, ecommerce, technology and the military. Michael holds a Bachelor of Science (BS) degree in Engineering Management from West Point and dual Master of Business Administration (MBA) and Construction Management (MS) degrees from MIT. He previously held operations and IT management positions while at Boeing, and US Army active duty leadership positions as a combat Engineer platoon leader, executive officer and general’s aide. Currently, Michael develops and provides enhanced client facing service offerings that integrate our existing VDC capabilities within the domains of asset management, augmented reality, laser scanning and data science. Additionally, Michael serves as a vice-chair on Skanska's National Lean Committee and is the Lean Champion for the Boston office.
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Transcript

SHANI SHARIF: Hello, everyone. Welcome to our Autodesk University class, "Finish on Time Every Time-- Optimize Work Planning and Master Scheduling." My name is Shani Sharif I'm a Senior Product Manager at Autodesk. And today, I'm joined by my colleague David Kadyshawich, Product Manager at Autodesk and two planning and scheduling industry experts from Skanska USA, Michael Zeppieri, Director of Emerging Technology and Sherif Agha, Senior Director of Planning.

In the class today, we will be discussing how a schedule fits into construction life cycle, Skanska's approach to scheduling on projects, how they build out their master schedule and then incorporate the work plan, tips and tricks to optimize and connect the master schedule and work plan, and finally, how teams can leverage technology to do so. It is important to first understand how a schedule fits into the overall construction project life cycle.

Long-term master schedule and short-term work plans are living project documents. Although the master schedule is defined in the earliest stages of a project, as the work starts, the construction teams collaboratively define the details of each construction phase on the job side. And as the project goes on, the team updates the master schedule based on the data from the actual project progress. Now, I'm going to hand it over to Sherif and Michael, as they walk you through how this actually works in real life.

SHERIF AGHA: Thank you, Shani. Now, I will share the high-level view of how we approach scheduling at Skanska. For us at Skanska, we start each project by building out the master skill, which is the first step in the planning process. It's supposed to provide the roadmap for the projects from start to end, the path that the team should follow to get this project completed. And it's supposed to be the result of the overall collaboration between the team members, the different stakeholders, and putting the plan together.

The master schedule is important because we look at the project from a very high level at that point. Imagine we're looking at a project from a 10,000 feet view. And you're trying to determine the project approach, thinking about constructability, thinking about phasing, thinking about the most important milestones that will get you from the start to the end. This is how the team should approach building a master schedule. But as we all know, the plan that you put together for the project at the beginning might end up changing.

As the project progresses, things will happen. There may be roadblocks. There may be bottlenecks. There may be design changes. There may be unforeseen site conditions. Many things could happen that require the team to take a different direction.

We act quickly to mitigate that impact. At this point, the master schedule becomes an especially important tool because it helps the team analyze, qualify, and quantify the effect of that impact on the plan and then put together a mitigation plan to stay on track. But to do this and to do it well, you have to start with a good master schedule. You have to start with a plan that was well thought and a plan that was put together by the team and not just by one person.

So looking back many years ago, the perception used to be that the schedulers, and the planner and the scheduler's job was to take responsibility of building the project plan on their own. They were supposed to take the drawings, go into a room, and then work on building the schedule and the plan, ask questions when needed, but then come out of the room with a fully-completed schedule. I would refer to that as building the schedule in a silo.

I would say that this is not the best recipe for success when it comes to putting together a project plan and a project schedule because the most important rule in building a project plan is to get the buy-in and commitment of all the stakeholders. So the role of the typical planner and scheduler, in my view, should be more of a facilitator, someone who brings everybody together, use their own knowledge, of course, and skills-- but bring together the superintendent, the project manager, the project engineer.

And if we have three partners that are on board early in the project, they bring them together as well and collaboratively work together to build a plan. That will ensure there is input from everyone on the team. Everyone can challenge the plan. Everyone can provide feedback. And everyone would have buy-in into the plan. So this process of building the master schedule will go more smooth when you have a plan that meets everyone's expectations.

So the process sounds easy. And it sounds smooth. But there are some pitfalls that if you fall into, it will hurt the overall product that you're trying to build. So as I mentioned, if you're building a schedule in a silo with no buy-in from the project stakeholders, that will not generate a plan that everyone agrees upon. If you end up having multiple versions of the schedule and you're planning to show one to the subs to drive them to finish early and show one to the owner that meets the contractual duration, that will erode the trust that everyone will have in the plan.

If you create a master schedule that's way too much detail at the beginning of the project, when you end up transitioning to starting construction and trying to start short-term planning, the too much detail in the master schedule will confuse everyone, and the team will end up just putting a rubber stamp on the schedule saying, OK, we agree with the details. But they will not have a chance to put their feedback because they did not collaborate on building that schedule.

And they will end up not collaborating on building out a short-term plan either. So if you follow the process to the tee, and you try to avoid those pitfalls, and you end up with a good, sound, well-thought project plan and schedule, you can still face a lot of challenges as you start the process of using that plan as a planning tool and execution tool for the job. Depending on how you set up your enterprise planning system and scheduling system, not everyone might have access to the scheduling tool. So you might end up communicating the schedule to them in a PDF format.

You might end up having multiple versions of that PDF format floating around. Not having access to the tool that you use to plan the project, people might not have a good idea and a good understanding of the logic that goes inside the schedule and the logic that connects those activities together and tasks together. If people don't have access to the planning tool, then there might be issues in having a smooth progress tracking and updating process as you go through construction.

So all these challenges can affect the efficiency and the accuracy of the planning process, both with the master schedule and with the short-term plan. So as we transition to talk about the short-term planning, I would like to bring in my colleague, Michael, now to talk about how short-term planning integrates with master planning as part of the overall planning process.

MICHAEL ZEPPIERI: Thanks, Sherif. As Shani mentioned during introductions, my name is Michael Zeppieri. I am director of emerging technology with Skanska USA Building. I've been in the construction industry and with Skanska for eight years. The emerging technology team is a group that's focused on evaluating technology that is disrupting our industry and looking for ways to apply those technologies in a way that delivers value to our project teams and also our clients.

Additionally, I'm a Lean Facilitator for Skanska. It just so happens that prior to coming to Skanska, I had been exposed to lean thinking and in a variety of different industries and in different roles and gained an appreciation for how lean thinking delivers value. And when I came to construction, it was at a time when lean thinking was starting to gain prevalence in this industry. And I love all the lean tools. I'm really passionate about lean construction.

But my favorite of all of them is pull planning and the Last Planner System, there's something about the energy of a job site trailer that I really enjoy. I love working with the skilled trades, and superintendents, and project teams to come together and develop that optimal work plan, but more importantly, expose the risks that could have had an adverse impact had they not been exposed. So what I'm going to do today is share with you some of my experience as a lean facilitator and practitioner.

I'm going to start by sharing with you some of the common pitfalls that teams make when they approach pull planning and the Last Planner System. I'm going to share with you some of the best practices and things that I've learned that make for a good work plan. And then, I'm going to talk a little bit at the end about how I think digitalization and automation can enhance the entire process. So as Sherif mentioned in his portion of the presentation, the master schedule and weekly worth planning are not separate activities.

Those two things need to integrate and interface with one another. And there's a dynamic where the master schedule informs your weekly work planning. And then, what you discover, or learn, or discuss during the weekly work planning process informs the master schedule. So it's a very dynamic cycle. Some of the mistakes that I've seen project teams make is, one, only getting into the discipline of work planning when their schedule has already started to slide.

pull planning isn't going to stop the bleeding once it's started. But it can prevent the bleeding from happening in the first place if you get into the discipline of doing it and making it part of the way that you work. The other common mistake that I see is that people use the terms pull planning and the Last Planner System synonymously. And while they are related, they are two very different things. And it correlates to the Deming cycle, the lean cycle of plan, do, check, act.

Your weekly work planning is the planning and the doing. Most project teams can achieve that with their skilled trades and get to a plan that they can execute to. But the real value of pull planning is exposed when you get into the check in the act, getting into the root cause analysis of why the schedule slipped or why a commitment didn't make, making sure that when you identify a risk or a roadblock during the work plan, that you're actually mitigating it to its logical conclusion such that it doesn't impact the project team and the schedule.

So they're used synonymously, but there's a difference between the two. So those are some of the common pitfalls that I see when people approach the concept of work planning. So now, let's talk a little bit about some of the best practices of how you execute a good pull plan. And my approach this has changed over the years. And it's largely been informed by some great mentors and some great coaches that I've had the luxury of-- that I've had the benefit of working with over the years. So first and foremost, construction is a people business.

And getting to a good work plan is about people. And the key people that you need to interface with to drive this process is, one, the superintendent. The superintendent is absolutely key to successful work planning. But a superintendent isn't necessarily going to see value in the pull planning process because most superintendents, they intuitively know what the optimal work plan is. It's in their head. And what you want to do is, you want to get what's in their head on the board and let the skilled trades massage that plan such that it takes into account their optimal handoffs and what they need to execute the work.

So most superintendents, they see pull planning-- I don't want to say as a waste of time-- but it's not a good use of their time. Where superintendents tend to see value, however, is in the check and the act part of the cycle. When they see that this entire process allows them to run a more efficient foremans' meeting, the light goes on, and they start to see the value. Most superintendents are phenomenal firefighters. They have spent their entire careers fighting fires on job sites.

But what if you can, instead of making them as firefighters, what if they could prevent the fires from happening in the first place? And when they see the value of mitigating risks before they happen and allowing them to leverage their expertise in more value-added ways, that's when you get the buy-in from the superintendent.

Now, that's not to say that the superintendent shouldn't be present and engaged during the pull plan, but you typically-- the superintendents start to engage on the pull planning after they see the value delivered during the discipline of the work planning in the last planner system. So getting the superintendent on board is absolutely key. The second thing I've learned is, you need to get a couple of project engineers engaged in the process. When I first started as a facilitator, I would parachute into a job site.

I'd set up the pull plan. I'd execute the pull plan. I'd give them their list of roadblocks. We would digitize the sticky nodes into something that they could hand to the master schedule. And then, they'd go away.

And I'd go facilitate at the next job. And I'd come back. And I'd sometimes be disappointed to see that they didn't really execute or leverage what we had discovered or taken the time to build during the pull plan. What I've learned is that you need a couple of project engineers that understand the process, are passionate about it, they want to be lean facilitators. And you coach and mentor them so that they can complement the superintendent and drive the process when the facilitator goes away.

So taking the time to mentor and coach members of the project team to execute the process, I have found, is a good use of time and really enables the success of implementing the process. Lastly is, you want to get your foremen on board. In the Boston Market, there's a couple of foremen that I have encountered in a number of different jobs. And one of my favorite things is when one of the foremen walked at the front of the room when they see me.

And they grab the sticky notes and the pen immediately, and they start to engage, or even better yet, help me facilitate and start to engage with some of the other foremen. So now, I'm going to talk about some things that I think where technology and digitalization can really enhance the pull planning and the last planner process. So going back to what Sherif mentioned and what I discussed at the beginning of my presentation is there's a natural interaction between the master schedule and the work planning process.

The work planning process is informed by the master schedule. The master schedule is what must be done. It sets some contractual, rigid cadence to the job. The work planning is what happens in between. So there's a bidirectional integration between those two worlds.

So in an ideal world, because what you often see is that the master schedule sometimes gets to the granularity of work planning. And sometimes in pull planning, the pull planning process tries to replicate the master schedule. And what you end up having is two sets of books. And you don't want two sets of books. What you want is one set of books that are informed by each other. So through digitalization, through APIs, if you could-- as a pole planner, what would be great for me as a facilitator, is if I can inherit some of the logic and I could-- it's almost like a coloring book.

Tell me what the lines are. Because if you leave it up to me to just draw whatever I want, I may not draw the master schedule. So give me the coloring book. Show me the lines. But then, let me color in between the lines. And if I happen to color outside of the lines, there's a trigger that then informs the schedule that says, oh, well, why did they have to color outside of the lines? I told them, here are the lines.

Draw me this. Why did you go outside the lines? So that's, to me, the integration between the two. So they have to inherit logic. And I don't see it necessarily as a Gantt chart reconciliation.

I almost see it as like an alert system, where if you're doing something during a pull plan that breaks the master schedule, an alert that informs you in the moment that, hey, if you execute to that plan, you just broke your critical path. It's really about risk mitigation. To me, that's what the real benefit of pull planning is, risk mitigation. So you need to be able to light up the plan like a Christmas tree and be able to understand where that risk is hiding.

And sometimes, you don't see that in the sticky notes, just a volume of sticky notes on the wall. You're focused on sequence, but you're not necessarily seeing the risks underneath the water. One of the analogies that I use when I teach lean to our project teams is the analogy of a river. When you're navigating a river-- let's say you're on a kayak. And you're going down the river. You can see the stones, or the rocks, or the obstacles that are above the water.

And you can navigate around them. But the ones that you can see aren't the ones that are going to damage and sink you. It's the ones beneath the water that you can't see. So to me, the discipline of work planning is not only, are you mapping the obstacles that you can see, but you're actually lowering the waterline so that you could see the boulders or the obstacles that are hidden beneath the surface, the ones that you don't even know are there, but the ones that are going to impact your journey the most if you were to hit them.

So to me, through digitalization, through alerts and other things, those things that you as a practitioner or as a worker may not inherently see, business roles and automation would absolutely expose. So that's one area. And this transitions to the second bullet, here, on the slide. And that's actionable insights. To me, the value of work planning isn't to replicate the master schedule.

The value of work planning is to leave that pull plan with the list of actions that people need to take. Those actions could be the work plan itself. These are the commitments of what I'm going to deliver and when. But more importantly, here are the risks or things that we need to mitigate, that if we don't mitigate them, it's going to prevent me from starting my work and starting my sequence. In all honesty-- I think I mentioned this earlier-- the most value that I see in the pull planning process is that risk mitigation, exposing those boulders that you can't see.

And that's what I enjoy the most about it. It's almost like a puzzle and solving for a puzzle. So having actionable insights that the superintendent-- going back to what I said about getting people engaged. The superintendent, like I said, may not necessarily appreciate the pull planning process. They may see it as redundant or something that they already inherently know. But they do appreciate having things that they can execute to, having actions that they can take.

And what better way to use their time than to mitigate risks as opposed to putting out fires, as I mentioned earlier. This goes to the next bullet, which is tracking roadblocks. There is a discipline in and of itself around risk mitigation. And with that, comes accountability. I've seen pull plans where we inherit or build a list of roadblocks.

And everyone sees the roadblocks. But we don't take the next natural step of, then, assigning who's responsible for mitigating those roadblocks. Those are work planning activities in and of themselves. Some project teams will approach roadblocks as a spreadsheet to track, but they don't assign accountability to them. And you have to assign accountability to the roadblocks the same as you would any other activity or task in the construction sequence.

It's absolutely critical that there's accountability behind tracking the roadblocks. And then, the last thing that I'd love to see is a better use of BIM and visualization to enhance the pull planning process. Now, at Skanska, we have some great VTC managers. And when I have the luxury of sitting down with them to do a 4D sequence to enhance a pull plan, it's great to pull up the model and show the sequence or the phase that we're pulling to. Buit even doing that in BIM, its broad brushstrokes.

You're not really gaining an appreciation for the more granular intricacies of assemblies and working on job sites. And it's difficult because you don't have the work plan. So how can you visualize something that you don't have yet? What I would love-- and the mental model that I use-- is a set of LEGO instructions. Every single brick, brick by brick-- if you look at a set of LEGO instructions, it illuminates and it shows you where that brick is going to sit because it's not only the assembly, but it's also taking into consideration some of the logistics.

For any of you that have built a LEGO structure, if you build the walls first and then you try to get your fingers in and put the furniture, it ain't going to work. It's like there's a sequence of an optimal way of doing it. And then, there's the painful way of doing it. You want the optimal way.

So I would love to have a way to correlate every single step of the work plan that then allows you to take an object in BIM, and break it down into subcomponents, and be able to illuminate the sequence step by step because that's where you start to really optimize the sequence. The other thing that I would love to see is, could we use some of the thinking of things like generative design to the work planning process? Are there ways to optimize the schedule in a way that the human mind can't even conceive?

What I love about generative design is some of the asymmetrical organic structures that the computer simulation suggests or comes up with, something that the human mind would never gravitate to. We tend to think of things very linearly and very symmetrically. And I love the asymmetry and the organic nature of what comes out of a generative design. So could you use a generative design algorithm to leverage machine learning, and artificial intelligence, and technology to optimize the sequence in a way that the human mind can't conceive?

And then, could you use visualization to help the human operators wrap their mind around a sequence that's being recommended that maybe they've never tried before? And I know within the confines of building a building, there's only so much room for creativity. Pull planning tends to be very predictable, especially for repeatable sequences. If you're fitting out a building.

And it's like an apartment building, and every apartment is the same, there's like a natural sequence. You almost get into an assembly line cadence. So the cars aren't coming down the assembly line. The rooms are fixed. The cars are fixed. But the sequence is the same.

You can get repeatable work. But what about some of the atypical sequences that you often see on job sites, where there isn't a natural progression? Could you use technology to develop a progression that optimizes the sequence? I don't know. But that's something I'd love to explore. So that concludes my portion. I'm now going to turn it back over to Sharif.

SHERIF AGHA: Thank you, Michael. Now, let's talk a little bit about how we can make sure that the long-term plan and the short-term plan are connected and/or a part of the overall integrated planning process for the project.

We probably mentioned this before, but I want to stress on this again that it's very important to view the master schedule and the short-term plan as part of an integrated process that would help take the team throughout the different phases of the planning, from creating the master schedule, to doing phase pull planning, look ahead plan, weekly work planning, and then, the daily check-ins. The master schedule provides the team with the foundation that they need to build the short-term plan. It provides them with the critical milestones, with the phasing of the project, with how those phases are interconnected and logically tied.

It's very important to find the balance between the master schedule and the short-term plan because the level of detail in the master schedule should be enough to understand the overall plan of the job and make the team confident in their ability to get the job done on time. But it shouldn't be too detailed because if it has too much details, then it will overreach to the short-term plan, and it will lead the team to go into autopilot and not really focus on building a short-term plan that has good buy-in, and that's built with collaboration, and that the handoffs are defined between different stakeholders in different trade partners.

So some of the best practices that we can look at when we talk about short-term planning is that the pull plan should inherit the milestones and the general logic of the master schedule. The master schedule should inform the pull planning phase, but without constraining it. It should inform what should happen. The pull is where the trades then take that, and they start confirming what they can do and what they will do. So what they should do.

But they need to collaboratively work together to plan and decide what they can do, and then confirm what they will do. At this point in the process, there needs to be a feedback loop that ties back to the master schedule to ensure that whatever the team plan to do and did not impact the critical path of the job or did not create any additional risk as a result of that work plan. The planner and scheduler should assess the risk from anything that was executed, anything for the bit part of the work plan.

If something didn't happen according to that plan, did it have any impact on the critical path on the master schedule? And they also should assess any patterns that they can see in the root causes of things not happening according to plan because that could be indicative of systematic problems on the job.

DAVID KADYSHAWICH: Thank you, Michael and Sherif. So technology can help mitigate the challenges described and sometimes even help implementing the best practices. In Autodesk we, understand the need of construction industry for both long-term and short-term schedule solutions. And we're taking action. When it comes to master schedule, we heard many of the same frustration from our customer, no one place of truth. So there are multiple versions of the same schedule floating around the project.

And it's really hard to make sure your team works off of the same most-updated schedule. Consumption-- most people on the job site do not have access to the schedule software. And even if they do, it can be very intimidating to work with P6, Asta, MSP. So most team members have the project schedule as a shared PDF and print it out as a booklet. We saw team members who were going around with markers, trying to mark the information in this huge PDF booklet to make sure they get the information they need.

So not all companies are like Skanska, trying really hard to make the master shorter and balancing it with really good short-term planning. The master can sometimes get to thousands of activities. And project members really struggle to get the information they need out of it. System connectivity-- we often heard people asking to connect schedule activities to other key information objects in the system, things like issues, BCOs, LFI, submittals, floor plans-- they are all deeply connected to schedule activity.

And change in one will almost necessarily affect the other. And last but not least, another big frustration is communication. So getting information all the way from the field up to the master and get it back to the field as an updated schedule is a long process. We heard people talking about two weeks from activity completed all the way to most updated schedule in the site. So communication around future activities is inefficient and frustrating process, creating a lot of misalignment and overhead from the team.

To start addressing those needs, we build schedule tool, now available for everyone in BIM. With schedule tool, you can easily import schedule into the system. And once your P6, or Asta, or MSP is in, you can keep updating it with new versions, making sure everyone in the project has access to your most updated schedule. And you can see it anyone you want. Each and every schedule in the schedule tool can have different permissions.

So one can be set to everyone in the project. And the other one can be most restricted, and only chosen members in the project have access to it. Now, you can save time and find information faster, search thousands of schedule items or filter by date, resource, or any other activity code or outline code imported from the schedule. You can now create and share unique views and find information you need from the schedule quickly.

This is also true from the mobile. You can see what's happening this week, next week, or next month, search, filter, and get all the schedule information you need from anywhere. Connect schedule activities to LFI, submittals, forms, issues, and much more. Project members can now find schedule-related information inside the activity itself. And of course, all this information will be kept there when the new version comes in.

And in the communication style of staff-- leverage, comments, and mentions start a trend with people that matter and solve schedule problems way before they get into the look ahead. And with that, I want to move it back to Shani, that will show us how technology can help also shorten planning and to show us how everything can start getting connected.

SHANI SHARIF: We have heard Michael and Sherif discuss many benefits of short-term planning. And for us at Autodesk, we especially had customers coming to us looking for a technology solution to help with the process. For many customers, what they need is the ability to conduct short-term planning sessions remotely. These sessions are meant to be collaborative. But if you couldn't make it out to the job site for that session, you missed out.

Next, to reduce the manual process that Michael spoke about-- the manual data delivery, data entry, and work plan distribution after the planning session. We heard from many that team members have spent as much time transferring this sticky note data from the pull planning session to an electronic work plan as they spent in the actual planning session. And finally, an easier way to track construction progress and monitor how things are going compared to the plan-- for many teams, tracking metrics such as vehicle plan percent complete was a manual process that was not updated in real time.

Work Plan in Autodesk Build provide users with many key features to perform their short-term planning requirements. First, collaborative planning-- import, crate, or copy existing activities and collaboratively build out work plans during in-person and remote planning sessions. Second, shared access-- work plan provides instant access to work plans, commitments, and progress to all project team members via our web or mobile application. Third, constraint management-- identify and remove roadblocks before the work happens, tag activities as roadblocks, create a constraint log, and monitor resolution.

Fourth commitment tracking-- document commitments made by each stakeholder during weekly work planning sessions. As work progresses, track actual [INAUDIBLE] commitment on web or mobile application. And finally, key performance metrics dashboard-- leverage pre-built dashboards to track construction progress against targets and identify common root causes for incomplete activities. We probably sound like broken records, but the importance of view master schedule and short-term plan as an integrated process is critical, especially as you connect the two.

The master schedule provides teams with the phasing, structure, and milestones. As Mike mentioned, from there, the team uses the phase, structure, and milestone as the foundation for the short-term plan. As we mentioned before, finding the balance is important because if the master schedule is too detailed, teams go into autopilot and don't focus on that short-term plan, the collaboration, and the handoffs to make it successful. But if they are overly focused on the short-term plan and lose sight of the master schedule, then delays impact the short-term plan, teams may not see the ripple effect of what gets broken in the master schedule.

To solve this problem, we are connecting a schedule and work plan tools in Autodesk Build. At the start of a project, rather than creating all work plan activities independently, we can start by reading the data from the master schedule and start from there. From the uploaded master schedule file, milestone and select key activities will be pushed to work on. In the work plan, users can modify these selections to match their project requirements.

Next, the superintendent can select a milestone to conduct a collaborative pull planning session with all the construction team members to create a short-term plan. Project members can define and sequence their own tasks to meet the milestone. Next, all the tasks created in the planning session are added to the work plan. All these tasks are linked to the right milestones. Once the planning session is over and the construction starts, if based on the actual project progress-- a connected milestone should move-- the superintendent can make the required adjustments.

But the system will highlight that this milestone is out of sync from the master schedule and will automatically generate a change suggestion to the owner of the master schedule. Scheduler can review the milestone changes and update the master schedule changes accordingly. Once the changes to the master schedule are performed, the schedule file is updated.

These changes will be reflected in work plan, triggering a notification that a change was made based on the suggestion from the work plan to the master or indicating that the work plan might be out of sync due to other changes to the schedule updates. I know we have covered a lot of material today.

But hopefully, you have learned the importance of integrating short-term plan with the master schedule, some best practices and pitfalls to avoid, and how leveraging technology can help you create more efficient processes, and at the end of the day, finish on time, every time. While the project roadmap may not look exactly as what it looked like from the beginning of the trip, but hopefully, it has less detours, turn around, and backtracking. Thank you for listening to our talk. And we look forward to your questions and continue the conversation in the future. Have a great day.

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第三方服务

详细了解每个类别中我们所用的第三方服务,以及我们如何使用所收集的与您的网络活动相关的数据。

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绝对必要 – 我们的网站正常运行并为您提供服务所必需的

Qualtrics
我们通过 Qualtrics 借助调查或联机表单获得您的反馈。您可能会被随机选定参与某项调查,或者您可以主动向我们提供反馈。填写调查之前,我们将收集数据以更好地了解您所执行的操作。这有助于我们解决您可能遇到的问题。. Qualtrics 隐私政策
Akamai mPulse
我们通过 Akamai mPulse 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Akamai mPulse 隐私政策
Digital River
我们通过 Digital River 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Digital River 隐私政策
Dynatrace
我们通过 Dynatrace 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Dynatrace 隐私政策
Khoros
我们通过 Khoros 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Khoros 隐私政策
Launch Darkly
我们通过 Launch Darkly 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Launch Darkly 隐私政策
New Relic
我们通过 New Relic 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. New Relic 隐私政策
Salesforce Live Agent
我们通过 Salesforce Live Agent 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Salesforce Live Agent 隐私政策
Wistia
我们通过 Wistia 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Wistia 隐私政策
Tealium
我们通过 Tealium 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Tealium 隐私政策
Upsellit
我们通过 Upsellit 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Upsellit 隐私政策
CJ Affiliates
我们通过 CJ Affiliates 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. CJ Affiliates 隐私政策
Commission Factory
我们通过 Commission Factory 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Commission Factory 隐私政策
Google Analytics (Strictly Necessary)
我们通过 Google Analytics (Strictly Necessary) 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Google Analytics (Strictly Necessary) 隐私政策
Typepad Stats
我们通过 Typepad Stats 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Typepad Stats 隐私政策
Geo Targetly
我们使用 Geo Targetly 将网站访问者引导至最合适的网页并/或根据他们的位置提供量身定制的内容。 Geo Targetly 使用网站访问者的 IP 地址确定访问者设备的大致位置。 这有助于确保访问者以其(最有可能的)本地语言浏览内容。Geo Targetly 隐私政策
SpeedCurve
我们使用 SpeedCurve 来监控和衡量您的网站体验的性能,具体因素为网页加载时间以及后续元素(如图像、脚本和文本)的响应能力。SpeedCurve 隐私政策
Qualified
Qualified is the Autodesk Live Chat agent platform. This platform provides services to allow our customers to communicate in real-time with Autodesk support. We may collect unique ID for specific browser sessions during a chat. Qualified Privacy Policy

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改善您的体验 – 使我们能够为您展示与您相关的内容

Google Optimize
我们通过 Google Optimize 测试站点上的新功能并自定义您对这些功能的体验。为此,我们将收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。此数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID 等。根据功能测试,您可能会体验不同版本的站点;或者,根据访问者属性,您可能会查看个性化内容。. Google Optimize 隐私政策
ClickTale
我们通过 ClickTale 更好地了解您可能会在站点的哪些方面遇到困难。我们通过会话记录来帮助了解您与站点的交互方式,包括页面上的各种元素。将隐藏可能会识别个人身份的信息,而不会收集此信息。. ClickTale 隐私政策
OneSignal
我们通过 OneSignal 在 OneSignal 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 OneSignal 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 OneSignal 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 OneSignal 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. OneSignal 隐私政策
Optimizely
我们通过 Optimizely 测试站点上的新功能并自定义您对这些功能的体验。为此,我们将收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。此数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID 等。根据功能测试,您可能会体验不同版本的站点;或者,根据访问者属性,您可能会查看个性化内容。. Optimizely 隐私政策
Amplitude
我们通过 Amplitude 测试站点上的新功能并自定义您对这些功能的体验。为此,我们将收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。此数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID 等。根据功能测试,您可能会体验不同版本的站点;或者,根据访问者属性,您可能会查看个性化内容。. Amplitude 隐私政策
Snowplow
我们通过 Snowplow 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Snowplow 隐私政策
UserVoice
我们通过 UserVoice 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. UserVoice 隐私政策
Clearbit
Clearbit 允许实时数据扩充,为客户提供个性化且相关的体验。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。Clearbit 隐私政策
YouTube
YouTube 是一个视频共享平台,允许用户在我们的网站上查看和共享嵌入视频。YouTube 提供关于视频性能的观看指标。 YouTube 隐私政策

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定制您的广告 – 允许我们为您提供针对性的广告

Adobe Analytics
我们通过 Adobe Analytics 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Adobe Analytics 隐私政策
Google Analytics (Web Analytics)
我们通过 Google Analytics (Web Analytics) 收集与您在我们站点中的活动相关的数据。这可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。我们使用此数据来衡量我们站点的性能并评估联机体验的难易程度,以便我们改进相关功能。此外,我们还将使用高级分析方法来优化电子邮件体验、客户支持体验和销售体验。. Google Analytics (Web Analytics) 隐私政策
AdWords
我们通过 AdWords 在 AdWords 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 AdWords 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 AdWords 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 AdWords 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. AdWords 隐私政策
Marketo
我们通过 Marketo 更及时地向您发送相关电子邮件内容。为此,我们收集与以下各项相关的数据:您的网络活动,您对我们所发送电子邮件的响应。收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、电子邮件打开率、单击的链接等。我们可能会将此数据与从其他信息源收集的数据相整合,以根据高级分析处理方法向您提供改进的销售体验或客户服务体验以及更相关的内容。. Marketo 隐私政策
Doubleclick
我们通过 Doubleclick 在 Doubleclick 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Doubleclick 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Doubleclick 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Doubleclick 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Doubleclick 隐私政策
HubSpot
我们通过 HubSpot 更及时地向您发送相关电子邮件内容。为此,我们收集与以下各项相关的数据:您的网络活动,您对我们所发送电子邮件的响应。收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、电子邮件打开率、单击的链接等。. HubSpot 隐私政策
Twitter
我们通过 Twitter 在 Twitter 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Twitter 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Twitter 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Twitter 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Twitter 隐私政策
Facebook
我们通过 Facebook 在 Facebook 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Facebook 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Facebook 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Facebook 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Facebook 隐私政策
LinkedIn
我们通过 LinkedIn 在 LinkedIn 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 LinkedIn 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 LinkedIn 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 LinkedIn 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. LinkedIn 隐私政策
Yahoo! Japan
我们通过 Yahoo! Japan 在 Yahoo! Japan 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Yahoo! Japan 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Yahoo! Japan 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Yahoo! Japan 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Yahoo! Japan 隐私政策
Naver
我们通过 Naver 在 Naver 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Naver 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Naver 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Naver 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Naver 隐私政策
Quantcast
我们通过 Quantcast 在 Quantcast 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Quantcast 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Quantcast 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Quantcast 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Quantcast 隐私政策
Call Tracking
我们通过 Call Tracking 为推广活动提供专属的电话号码。从而,使您可以更快地联系我们的支持人员并帮助我们更精确地评估我们的表现。我们可能会通过提供的电话号码收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。. Call Tracking 隐私政策
Wunderkind
我们通过 Wunderkind 在 Wunderkind 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Wunderkind 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Wunderkind 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Wunderkind 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Wunderkind 隐私政策
ADC Media
我们通过 ADC Media 在 ADC Media 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 ADC Media 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 ADC Media 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 ADC Media 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. ADC Media 隐私政策
AgrantSEM
我们通过 AgrantSEM 在 AgrantSEM 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 AgrantSEM 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 AgrantSEM 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 AgrantSEM 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. AgrantSEM 隐私政策
Bidtellect
我们通过 Bidtellect 在 Bidtellect 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Bidtellect 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Bidtellect 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Bidtellect 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Bidtellect 隐私政策
Bing
我们通过 Bing 在 Bing 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Bing 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Bing 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Bing 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Bing 隐私政策
G2Crowd
我们通过 G2Crowd 在 G2Crowd 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 G2Crowd 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 G2Crowd 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 G2Crowd 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. G2Crowd 隐私政策
NMPI Display
我们通过 NMPI Display 在 NMPI Display 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 NMPI Display 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 NMPI Display 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 NMPI Display 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. NMPI Display 隐私政策
VK
我们通过 VK 在 VK 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 VK 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 VK 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 VK 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. VK 隐私政策
Adobe Target
我们通过 Adobe Target 测试站点上的新功能并自定义您对这些功能的体验。为此,我们将收集与您在站点中的活动相关的数据。此数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID、您的 Autodesk ID 等。根据功能测试,您可能会体验不同版本的站点;或者,根据访问者属性,您可能会查看个性化内容。. Adobe Target 隐私政策
Google Analytics (Advertising)
我们通过 Google Analytics (Advertising) 在 Google Analytics (Advertising) 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Google Analytics (Advertising) 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Google Analytics (Advertising) 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Google Analytics (Advertising) 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Google Analytics (Advertising) 隐私政策
Trendkite
我们通过 Trendkite 在 Trendkite 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Trendkite 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Trendkite 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Trendkite 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Trendkite 隐私政策
Hotjar
我们通过 Hotjar 在 Hotjar 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Hotjar 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Hotjar 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Hotjar 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Hotjar 隐私政策
6 Sense
我们通过 6 Sense 在 6 Sense 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 6 Sense 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 6 Sense 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 6 Sense 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. 6 Sense 隐私政策
Terminus
我们通过 Terminus 在 Terminus 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 Terminus 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 Terminus 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 Terminus 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. Terminus 隐私政策
StackAdapt
我们通过 StackAdapt 在 StackAdapt 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 StackAdapt 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 StackAdapt 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 StackAdapt 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. StackAdapt 隐私政策
The Trade Desk
我们通过 The Trade Desk 在 The Trade Desk 提供支持的站点上投放数字广告。根据 The Trade Desk 数据以及我们收集的与您在站点中的活动相关的数据,有针对性地提供广告。我们收集的数据可能包含您访问的页面、您启动的试用版、您播放的视频、您购买的东西、您的 IP 地址或设备 ID。可能会将此信息与 The Trade Desk 收集的与您相关的数据相整合。我们利用发送给 The Trade Desk 的数据为您提供更具个性化的数字广告体验并向您展现相关性更强的广告。. The Trade Desk 隐私政策
RollWorks
We use RollWorks to deploy digital advertising on sites supported by RollWorks. Ads are based on both RollWorks data and behavioral data that we collect while you’re on our sites. The data we collect may include pages you’ve visited, trials you’ve initiated, videos you’ve played, purchases you’ve made, and your IP address or device ID. This information may be combined with data that RollWorks has collected from you. We use the data that we provide to RollWorks to better customize your digital advertising experience and present you with more relevant ads. RollWorks Privacy Policy

是否确定要简化联机体验?

我们希望您能够从我们这里获得良好体验。对于上一屏幕中的类别,如果选择“是”,我们将收集并使用您的数据以自定义您的体验并为您构建更好的应用程序。您可以访问我们的“隐私声明”,根据需要更改您的设置。

个性化您的体验,选择由您来做。

我们重视隐私权。我们收集的数据可以帮助我们了解您对我们产品的使用情况、您可能感兴趣的信息以及我们可以在哪些方面做出改善以使您与 Autodesk 的沟通更为顺畅。

我们是否可以收集并使用您的数据,从而为您打造个性化的体验?

通过管理您在此站点的隐私设置来了解个性化体验的好处,或访问我们的隐私声明详细了解您的可用选项。