Estimating Flashcards
what are the 4 types of estimating
- analytical - bottom up
- comparative estimating
- parametric estimating
- three point estimating
they can be used independently or in combination
what are the 5 key characteristics of analytical estimating (bottom up)
- based on WBS
- all individual lower level tasks in WBS estimated separately then rolled up to produce project estimate
- laborious and requires a correct WBS (accurate data)
- most accurate - sometimes known as definitive
- aimed for accuracy of 5%
what are the 5 key characteristics of comparative estimating
- called top down or historic estimating
- uses experience from similar previous projects
- takes overall cost/time for similar projects and adjusts for size and complexity
- danger previous projects were inefficient or badly managed - varying circumstances
- can be used at task level to support bottom up - quick to produce
what are the 4 key characteristics of parametric estimating
- uses mathematical model or formula to produce estimates based on input parameters
- usually based on historical data - significant amounts required
- examples are sqm or lines of code
- industry norms (heuristics) must be kept up to date i.e. inflation
what are the key characteristics of three point estimating
- accepts uncertainty and considers 3 estimates for activity
- most likely - optimistic - pessimistic
- 3 estimates used for weighted average (PERT)
- provides an increased level of confidence in provided estimate
- can be used by software to calculate criticality of a single task or quantify overall risk exposure
- part of monte carlo analysis
what is the formula for single estimate value or PERT duration
estimated value = (optimistic + 4 * expected + pessimistic)/6
what is the estimating funnel
the way in which accuracy improves over the project lifecycle
what are the 4 phases of the estimating funnel
- concept - ‘ballpark’ - accurate estimates difficult due to lack of information - +/-50%
- design - used in business case approval - accuracy improves as planning process starts - +/-20%
- definition - baseline cost/duration for project - more detailed planning produces better results - +/-10%
- implementation - used to delegate work and asses progress - can see how good estimates were and can re-estimate future work - +/-5%
what are 3 prerequisites for comparative estimating
- project must have estimates comparable to previous projects
- actual data from previous projects need to be available
- circumstances around previous estimate correctly recorded for valid comparison
what are 2 prerequisites for bottom up estimating
- needs to be a complete WBS identifying all the work of the project
- needs to be accurate estimate for each lower level task (work package)
what are 2 prerequisites for parametric estimating
- work must be suitable for parametric estimating - elements of scalable work i.e. brick laying
- must be standardised data based on actuals - time for bricklayer to lay 100 bricks
what are 5 sources of estimating errors in projects
- optimism/pessimism - human or psychological factors may cause bias
- social/political pressure - pressure from management, client, peers may influence estimator to provide ‘acceptable’ estimate
- experience - lack of technical expertise of estimating skills
- unclear scope - clear understanding of project requirements needed for accurate estimating
- source data - comparative/parametric estimating require quality data - inflationary factors or incorrect assumptions will cause flaws