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delays

Delays are periods in which a planned event or process takes longer to complete than originally scheduled. In many contexts, a delay represents a lag between a target time and the actual time at which an action occurs or a result is delivered. Delays can be intentional or unintentional and may reflect a temporary setback or a longer-term postponement.

Common domains and causes

In transportation, delays refer to late departures or arrivals, including air, rail, and road travel. Causes

Measurement and impact

Delays are typically measured in units of time and can be analyzed through metrics such as average

Mitigation

Common mitigation strategies include schedule buffers, risk assessment, contingency planning, process improvements, redundancies, and real-time monitoring

include
weather,
equipment
failures,
air
traffic
congestion,
and
incidents
on
the
route.
In
manufacturing
and
logistics,
delays
affect
production
schedules,
procurement,
and
delivery
lead
times,
arising
from
supplier
disruptions,
machine
downtime,
demand
volatility,
or
transportation
interruptions.
In
construction
and
project
delivery,
schedule
slippage
occurs
when
milestones
or
the
critical
path
are
extended
due
to
funding
gaps,
permitting
delays,
or
adverse
weather.
In
information
technology
and
communications,
delays
describe
latency
and
buffering,
where
data
packets
or
media
streams
take
longer
than
expected
to
reach
a
destination,
caused
by
network
congestion,
processing
load,
or
hardware
limitations.
delay,
delay
distribution,
and
end-to-end
latency.
Delays
affect
efficiency,
costs,
reliability,
and
customer
satisfaction,
and
in
some
cases
pose
safety
or
contractual
risks.
to
reduce
the
likelihood
or
impact
of
delays.