Release 141 – Forecasts That Reflect Your Reality

This release makes QSRA forecasts feel more like your projects and less like generic statistics, and turns Timeline into a place where teams can discuss work directly on the schedule.

What’s New in Release 141?
 

1. Portfolio‑trained QSRA forecasts


 

You can now choose to have QSRA forecasting learn from your own portfolio data, so predictions align more closely with how your teams actually deliver.

What’s new?

  • Forecasting can be trained on your historical portfolio, not just generic assumptions.
  • Predictions are tuned to your projects and delivery patterns, which can improve accuracy by up to 20%.
  • Completion dates and risk levels better match what really happens on site.

🎯 Use case solved: Users get forecasts that feel credible because they are grounded in their own performance, which increases confidence when setting targets and mitigation plans.

2. Timeline comments: collaborate directly on the schedule

Timeline now supports comments on activities, so conversations can live next to the work instead of in separate tools. Nodes & Links becomes a place where teams can review the plan and collaborate in the same view.

What’s new?

  • Leave comments directly on activities in Timeline.
  • Mention colleagues so they receive email notifications and can join the discussion.
  • Keep comments as the schedule updates, so decisions and context persist across versions.

Value:

  • Better async teamwork: people can ask questions, respond, and unblock each other without needing a meeting.
  • Increased transparency and accountability: decisions and rationale stay attached to the record instead of getting lost in email or chat.
  • Faster responses: mentions pull in the right people at the right time.

🎯 Use case solved: Project teams can clarify issues, capture decisions, and align on next steps without leaving the schedule.


Why These Changes Matter
 

Portfolio‑trained QSRA forecasts help teams trust the numbers because they reflect how their projects actually behave, not just theoretical models. Timeline comments bring collaboration into the schedule itself, so teams can align faster and keep context where the work lives.