Critical Chain Project Management is a method to deliver projects faster and with fewer surprises. It focuses on resource constraints, buffer management, and realistic task behaviour. The aim is to protect the project finish date rather than padding every task.
CCPM was introduced by Eliyahu M. Goldratt as an application of the Theory of Constraints. Traditional critical path methods often ignore shared resources and encourage local safety in each task. CCPM removes hidden safety from tasks, accounts for resource contention, and places explicit buffers where they matter most.
CCPM improves delivery predictability and often shortens lead time. It creates a common language for risk using buffer health rather than guesswork. Teams gain focus by protecting the constraint and by avoiding multitasking. Success depends on stable task definitions, honest durations, and visible buffers that drive action, not blame.