The First Planner System: How Pre-Construction Sets Up the Takt Production System and Last Planner
Here are the numbers, and they are not good. Only 48 percent of construction projects finish on budget. Only 8 percent finish on budget and on time. And only half a percent 0.5 percent finish on budget, on time, the way the owner actually wanted. The average project runs more than 60 percent over budget, and as of a widely cited 2015 study, the average project in the United States finished 58 days behind substantial completion. These are not opinions. They are documented outcomes from a broken system and the book How Big Things Get Done makes the data undeniable.
The fix is not in the field. The fix is not in the weekly work plan or the look-ahead or the daily huddle. Those tools can only work when the ground beneath them is solid. The fix starts months before the first crew ever steps on site, in a disciplined, structured pre-construction process that the Takt Production System calls the First Planner System.
What Is the First Planner System?
The Last Planner System is named for the last people in the planning cycle the foremen, the trade partners, the crews who actually do the work and commit to the weekly plan. The First Planner System is what has to exist before the Last Planner System can function. First planners are the GC project delivery team the PM, the superintendent, the project engineers who plan the project before NTP, set the conditions for success, build the macro-level Takt plan, start long-lead procurement, and do the critical review work that determines whether the project will actually flow before anyone puts a shovel in the ground.
Without a functioning First Planner System, the Last Planner System has no foundation. You cannot ask trade foremen to commit to weekly work plans when the milestones are unrealistic, the long-lead items have not been initiated, and nobody has reviewed the plan for fatal flaws before the first wagon started rolling. The trade partners will absorb the failure. They always do. That is not a trade partner problem. That is a First Planner System problem.
The Design Timeline and When Builders Must Get Involved
Most construction teams arrive at NTP and start planning from there. That is too late. The design process conceptual design, schematic design, design development, construction documents creates the constraints that will govern everything that happens in the field. By the time NTP arrives, the system selections have been made, the floor plates are set, the procurement lead times are baked into drawings nobody has reviewed for constructibility, and the schedule the owner is expecting was built without anyone asking whether the production system can actually deliver it.
The time to get involved is at design development when systems are being selected, when there is still an opportunity to give designers build specs that favor installation over complexity, when influence over the final plan set is still possible. A superintendent and a PM who are on the project at design development can shape what gets built. A team that arrives at NTP inherits whatever got designed. The First Planner System is the discipline of showing up early enough to matter.
The Six Key Pre-Construction Items Every Project Must Have
There are 23 items in a complete First Planner System pre-construction timeline. Six of them are non-negotiable the ones without which no Takt Production System rollout and no Last Planner System implementation can succeed:
- Conditions of satisfaction know exactly what the owner wants, confirmed in writing, before any planning begins. This is not assumed. This is asked, documented, and verified. You are in the customer service business, not manufacturing, and guessing what the customer wants is not a strategy.
- Macro Takt plan the overall project schedule with accurate, buffered milestones. Unrealistic milestones are the root cause of trade stacking, chronic overtime, unsafe work, and the exact outcomes the statistics describe. The macro plan must be reviewed, validated against production rates, and built with buffers so that the train of trades is never pushed beyond sustainable capacity.
- General conditions and general requirements the project budget for staff, logistics, trailer, fencing, and the infrastructure that supports the field. If the GC budget is wrong, the trade partners feel it. Every time.
- Long-lead early procurement initiated as early as possible, never waited on. Switchgear, curtain wall, elevators, specialty equipment identify what could be late before there is any certainty that it will be late, and start the process anyway. Artificial intelligence tools can now generate probable long-lead item lists from building type and program before the plan set is complete. There is no excuse for a late switchgear discovery in month ten of a twelve-month project.
- Interactive norm-level plan pull plan the first phases with the trades before NTP for the early scopes, then phase by phase for the rest. The norm-level production plan, built collaboratively with the trade partners, is the base document from which every look-ahead, weekly work plan, and day plan will be filtered.
- Preparation to start strong the first 90 days before and immediately after NTP, including site setup, safety systems, visual management, orientation, and the standing meeting cadence that will carry the project from the first zone to the last.
The Fresh Eyes Meeting and the Pixar Review
One of the highest-leverage activities in the entire First Planner System is the fresh eyes meeting a structured review of the production plan before the project is built, specifically designed to tear the plan apart while changes are still free. Not to celebrate the plan. To break it. Every assumption that cannot survive a fresh eyes meeting is a problem that would have shown up in the field at full cost.
The concept behind this is sometimes called the Pixar process after the practice described in How Big Things Get Done of reviewing and reworking a project on paper before resources are committed. Pixar does not start rendering a film and then discover that the story has a fatal flaw in month eighteen of production. They find the flaw early, on paper, and fix it before anyone touches a frame. Construction teams that run fresh eyes meetings do the same thing: they find the fatal flaws while the fix is cheap. Teams that skip the review find them when the first wagon hits the problem zone and there is no flexibility left in the plan to absorb it.
The fresh eyes meeting should include trade partners wherever possible especially the early trades and a second session should be run as later trades come on board. The goal is not to protect the plan. The goal is to make it right before anyone builds from it.
How the First Planner System Enables the Last Planner System
Here is the connection that makes everything in the Takt Production System work. The norm-level production plan built collaboratively in pull planning sessions with the trades becomes the base from which the six-week look-ahead is filtered. The look-ahead is not created from scratch. The weekly work plan is not created from scratch. They are filtered from a coordinated production plan that already reflects the trades’ production rates, zone sizes, and sequence commitments. That is only possible if the pull planning happened, which is only possible if the First Planner System created the conditions for it.
Without the conditions of satisfaction, the project is building the wrong thing. Without the macro Takt plan with accurate milestones, the foremen are being asked to commit to a reality that does not exist. Without long-lead procurement initiated on time, materials are not on site when the wagons arrive. Without the fresh eyes meeting, the first zone hits a problem nobody saw coming. Without the First Planner System, the Last Planner System is being asked to execute a plan that was never set up to succeed and the trade partners absorb the failure while the industry wonders why the statistics never improve.
We are building people who build things. The GC project delivery teams that run a disciplined First Planner System that arrive at design development, initiate long-lead procurement before anyone says it is too early, pull plan with the trades before NTP, and tear the plan apart in a fresh eyes meeting before the first crew steps on site are the teams whose trade partners can actually plan, commit, and flow. If your project needs superintendent coaching, project support, or leadership development, Elevate Construction can help your field teams build the First Planner System that sets up every Last Planner tool to work the way it was designed.
A Challenge for Builders
On your current or next project, answer three questions before NTP. Have the conditions of satisfaction been documented and confirmed with the owner in writing? Has the macro Takt plan been reviewed by the superintendent and the leading trade partners for milestone accuracy not just submitted to the owner? And have the long-lead items been identified and initiated, regardless of how complete the plan set is? If any answer is no, those are the gaps that will show up in the field at the worst possible moment. Close them now, while the fix is free.
As Jason says, “Plan it first, build it right, finish as you go.”
On we go.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the First Planner System and who are the first planners?
The First Planner System is the structured pre-construction effort that sets up the Takt Production System and Last Planner System before the first crew mobilizes. First planners are the GC project delivery team the PM, superintendent, and project engineers who establish the conditions of satisfaction, build the macro Takt plan, initiate long-lead procurement, pull plan the early phases with trades, and review the production plan for fatal flaws before anyone builds from it.
Why does long-lead procurement need to start before the plan set is complete?
Because the lead time for switchgear, curtain wall, elevators, and other critical equipment does not wait for the plan set to be finished. A procurement delay that surfaces in month ten of a twelve-month project is a delay that was visible in month one it just was not acted on. The First Planner System initiates procurement for probable long-lead items as soon as the building type and program are known, using whatever information is available, so the pipeline is moving before the design is fully resolved.
What is a fresh eyes meeting and why does it matter in pre-construction?
A fresh eyes meeting is a structured review of the production plan before the project is built, specifically designed to surface fatal flaws while changes are still cheap. Experienced reviewers who were not involved in building the plan stress-test every assumption sequence, zone sizing, milestone timing, trade dependencies and flag risks that insiders cannot see. Running this review before the first wagon starts is the difference between a plan that works and a plan that was only tested in the field at full cost.
If you want to learn more we have:
-Takt Virtual Training: (Click here)
-Check out our Youtube channel for more info: (Click here)
-Listen to the Elevate Construction podcast: (Click here)
-Check out our training programs and certifications: (Click here)
-The Takt Book: (Click here)
Discover Jason’s Expertise:
Meet Jason Schroeder, the driving force behind Elevate Construction IST. As the company’s owner and principal consultant, he’s dedicated to taking construction to new heights. With a wealth of industry experience, he’s crafted the Field Engineer Boot Camp and Superintendent Boot Camp – intensive training programs engineered to cultivate top-tier leaders capable of steering their teams towards success. Jason’s vision? To expand his training initiatives across the nation, empowering construction firms to soar to unprecedented levels of excellence.