Title: Understanding Earned Value Management
1Understanding Earned Value Management Analysis
Federal Acquisition Conference
Exposition Washington, DC June 19-20, 2007
Wayne Abba (703) 658-1815 abbaconsulting_at_cox.net
2Understanding Earned Value Management
- EVM Resource Management
- Resources are labor, material and other direct
and indirect costs required to execute the
program - FAA applies EVM at Program level to include prime
and sub contractors, government FTEs and support
contractors - Managed in dollars, hours, or any measurable unit
- Government accounting systems may not support
EVM-based program/project management
3Ensuring Planned Resources are AdequateUsing an
Integrated Baseline Review (IBR)
400
300
200
100
Program/Contract IBR is critical planning process
4EVM and Baseline Discipline
- Effective performance management requires
disciplined baseline management - Initial baseline reflects go-ahead decision
- Scope, schedule, resources, risk
- Approve program/contract baseline changes to
- Revise work scope (increase or decrease)
- Restore meaningful performance management
- Manage funding reductions (salami slices or
prioritized cuts?) - Balance scope, schedule, cost, risk assumptions
- Do not approve baseline changes to
- Get to Green
- Eliminate cost and schedule variances
5Understanding Earned Value Analysis
- Earned Value Analysis Understanding the
relationships among the EVM data elements - EVM discipline provides confidence that
- Contractor and PM management systems are adequate
to provide effective monitoring and control - Data are summarized from the Control Account
level, where technical/schedule/cost integration
occurs - When data are used for management and oversight
- Data quality becomes self-policing
- Allows Management to ask questions and be
informed, critical consumers
EVM data should inform decisions but cannot
make decisions
6Cumulative Trend Analysis
Time Now
Prog Budget
Management Reserve
ACWP (Actual Cost)
Resources
BCWS (Planned Value)
Cost Variance
400
Schedule Variance
BCWP (Earned Value)
300
200
100
Time
?
M
F
Approx. Time Variance
Standard graphics for all programs
7Cost/Schedule Variance Trend Analysis
ManagementReserveConsumption
Favorable
Schedule Variance at Completion
0
Unfavorable
Cost Variance at Completion
Time
Schedule Slip
Cost Variance ---
Schedule Variance
8Evaluating Future Performance
Time Now
Favorable
0
PM Varianceat Completion
Unfavorable
Time
Cost Variance -----
- When/how will performance improve?
- Review at appropriate time
- Tie PM evaluation to predictability
9EVA and Funds Management
Time Now
Prog Budget
BCWS (Planned Value)
Resources
400
ACWP (Actual Cost)
Approved/Planned Funding
300
200
BCWP (Earned Value)
100
Time
D
M
10EVA and Profitability Analysis on Flexibly Priced
Contracts
Time Now
Cost Variance levels cf
Favorable
Min/MaxFee
0
Cost Sharing
Unfavorable
Contractor Loss
Time
11EVA and Profitability Analysis on Flexibly Priced
Contracts
Cost Variance levels cf
Time Now
Favorable
Min/MaxFee
0
Cost Sharing
Unfavorable
Contractor Loss
Time
12EVM/A and Effective Contracting
- Program and Contract WBS
- Essential to get it right this is Job 1
- Contract type
- Do I have to do EVM on FFP? is the wrong
question - Evaluate risk and complexity EVM is scalable
- Purpose of EVM/A
- Excellent management
- Objective, timely reporting Early Warning to
inform decisions - Linking incentives to reported Cost/Schedule
Performance Indices (CPI/SPI) can cause
undesirable behavior - If used link to observable outcomes such as
Preliminary/ Critical Design Review and Contract
completion
13Summary
- Understand EVM/A and Resource Management
- From a single database, use EVM to
- Manage the program
- Measure program performance
- Take appropriate management actions
- Report to senior management and to customers
- Fix the problem, not the blame
- Encourage timely problem identification and
objective reporting - Incentivize desirable behavior, not undesirable
behavior - Dont necessarily equate program and PM
performance - Develop organizational history and IQ
- Resources
- FAA Bob Rovinsky/Keith Kratzert
- Project Management Institutes College of
Performance Management EVM Community of
Interest (CoEye) - National Defense Industrial Associations Program
Management Systems Committee