Originally posted by Chew
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Look at it from the perspective of the unfinished work. If the group is 88% successful, that means they are 12% unsuccessful.
Adding six more workers is a 25% increase over the 24 original. Your unfinished tasks should improve by 25%. She 25% more workers should clear 25% of the unfinished work.
12 x 25% = 3
88% + 3% = 91%
Instead of 117 finished tasks, you would finish 121.
I am assuming that you might talking about clearing cases. The unfinished tasks are the issue because putting together a criminal case it’s not like picking up a certain number of items and you know where they are located. In those cases you are looking for an unknown. The unknown is the problem in clearing a task, not merely how many tasks a person can complete.
If 24 investigators can complete 117 out of 133 tasks/cases, that comes out to about five cases per investigator. If it was that simplistic, six more investigators 10 five cases would be 30 more cases saw. That means your unit could clear up to 147 cases a year. The problem is not how many cases can be cleared by each investigator but how much time till they have to find the unknown that they are digging for. So I think the key is a 12% unsolved rather than the cases per investigator.
Now if you are not talking about murder investigations…… I have no clue as to the answer.

Now if you were building boats and each person could complete five boats a year, it should be obvious that six more people could complete 30 more boats. That is not realistic in criminal investigations When you were building something, you know where the pieces are located. You just simply walk over and get them and put them together. That is where you could increase to 110% or 147 new boats as some of the other mathematical equations indicate.
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