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BTS730 Cost Management
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Average cost overrun: –1995 CHAOS study: 189% of the original estimates –2001 study: 145%
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Cost Management Cost Management disasters (p265): –IRS…> $50 billion cost to taxpayers –UK National Health Service…$26 billion overrun
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Cost Management Processes Cost estimating: estimating costs and resources needed to complete a project Cost budgeting: allocating cost estimate to work items over time intervals to establish a baseline for measuring performance Cost control: controlling changes to the project budget/financial health
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Cost of Software Defects (table 7.1, text)
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Cost Management Basic Principles
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Cost Estimating (table 7.2, text)
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Cost Estimating Techniques –Top Down (analogous): use the actual cost of a previous, similar project as the basis for the new estimate –Bottom-up: estimate individual work items and roll up to get a total estimate –Parametric: use parameters to estimate project costs (e.g. lines of code/function points, I/O, files etc.)
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Cost Estimating Problems Complexity, Time: many estimates are done in a hurry before fully understanding the system. Lack of Experience: people doing the estimating don’t have much experience in $ Bias towards under-estimation: a human trait; and people also tend to estimate at their skill level Estimates “to order”: sometimes managers don’t really want “the truth” but an estimate that would help them win a bid…etc. PMs must stand by estimates
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Sample Cost Estimate (fig 7-2 text)
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Cost Budgeting Allocating $ to “items” over time and creating a cost “baseline” Cost baseline is a time phased budget used to measure and monitor cost performance.
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Cost Budgeting See figure 7-4 (5 th ed) in text for sample baseline –(p282, 5 th edition)
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Cost Control Activities include: –monitoring cost performance –ensuring that only appropriate project changes are included in a revised cost baseline –informing project stakeholders of authorized changes to the project that will affect costs Earned value management (EVM) is an important tool for cost control
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Difficulties Controlling Costs? Examples p. 284
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Cost Control: EVM EVM: a project performance measurement technique; it integrates scope, time, and cost data Uses a baseline (original plan plus approved changes), to determine how well the project is meeting its goals Actual and planned cost figures are used.
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Cost Control:EVM Planned Value (PV): $ planned to be spent on an activity for a given period Actual Cost (AC): total $ incurred on an activity for a given period Rate of Performance (RP): ratio of actual work completed to % of work planned to have been completed at any given time. Earned Value (EV): estimate of the value of the work completed. –EV = PV (to date) x RP
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Cost Control :EVM Example –After week 1: PV = $10,000 AC = $15,000 Only 50% of the work planned for week 1 has been completed. EV = PV x 50% = 10,000 x 50% = $5,000
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Cost Control: EVM Cost Variance (CV): EV – AC $5,000 - $15000 = -$10,000 Schedule Variance (SV): EV – PV $5,000 - $10,000 = -$5,000 Cost Performance Index (CPI): EV/AC $5,000/$15,000 = 33% (.3) Schedule Performance Index (SPI): EV/PV $5,000/$10,000 = 50% (.5)
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