terms - project cost management terms Flashcards
Actual cost (AC)
The actual amount of monies the project has spent to date.
Analogous estimating
An approach that relies on historical information to predict the cost of the current project.
It is also known as top-down estimating and is the least reliable of all the cost-estimating approaches.
Bottom-up estimating
An estimating approach that starts from zero, accounts for each component of the WBS, and arrives at a sum for the project.
It is completed with the project team and can be one of the most time-consuming and most reliable methods to predict project costs.
Budget estimate
This estimate is also somewhat broad and is used early in the planning processes and also in top-down estimates.
The range of variance for the estimate can be from –10 percent to +25 percent.
Commercial database
A cost-estimating approach that uses a database, typically software-driven, to create the cost estimate for a project.
Contingency reserve
A contingency allowance to account for overruns in costs.
Contingency allowances are used at the project manager’s discretion and with management’s approval to counteract cost overruns for scheduled activities and risk events.
Cost aggregation
Costs are parallel to each WBS work package.
The costs of each work package are aggregated to their corresponding control accounts.
Each control account then is aggregated to the sum of the project costs.
Cost baseline
A time-lapse exposure of when the project monies are to be spent in relation to cumulative values of the work completed in the project.
Cost budgeting
The cost aggregation achieved by assigning specific dollar amounts for each of the scheduled activities or, more likely, for each of the work packages in the WBS.
Cost budgeting applies the cost estimates over time.
Cost change control system
A system that examines any changes associated with scope changes, the cost of materials, and the cost of any other resources, and the associated impact on the overall project cost.
Cost management plan
The cost management plan dictates how cost variances will be managed.
Cost of poor quality
The monies spent to recover from not adhering to the expected level of quality.
Examples may include rework, defect repair, loss of life or limb because safety precautions were not taken, loss of sales, and loss of customers.
This is also known as the cost of nonconformance to quality.
Cost of quality
The monies spent to attain the expected level of quality within a project.
Examples include training, testing, and safety precautions.
Cost performance index (CPI)
Measures the project based on its financial performance.
The formula is CPI = EV/AC
EV: Earned value (the physical work completed to date and the authorized budget for that work, the percentage of the BAC (budget at completion) that represents the actual work completed in the project
AC: actual cost (actual amount spent to-date)
Budget at Completion (BAC)
The sum of all budgets established for the work to be performed.
To-Complete Performance Index
A formula to forecast the likelihood of a project to achieve its goals based on what’s happening in the project right now.
There are two different flavors for the TCPI, depending on what you want to accomplish.
-If you want to see if your project can meet the budget at completion, you’ll use this formula:
TCPI = (BAC – EV)/(BAC – AC)
-If you want to see if your project can meet the newly created estimate at completion, you’ll use this version of the formula:
TCPI = (BAC – EV)/(EAC – AC)
(see also: PMBOK 6 ed. - Figure 7-13)
Cost variance (CV)
The difference of the earned value amount and the cumulative actual costs of the project.
The formula is CV = EV – AC.