Title: Understanding Program Resource Management through Earned Value Analysis
1Understanding Program Resource Management through
Earned Value Analysis
- Reading the Abba Charts
- Wayne Abba
- PMI WDC Tool Time, July 18, 2006
Abba Consulting
2Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
3Resource Management
- Earned Value Management 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 subcontractors, government FTEs, support
contractors - Managed in dollars, hours, or any measurable unit
- Cost and schedule data summarized directly from
contracts and programs for management and
reporting at all levels
4EVM Terminology and Resource Management
- - Approved baseline time-phased plan for
resources to be consumed (e.g. 100 hours) - - Work accomplished in terms of planned
resources(e.g. 100 hours) - - Actual cost of the resources consumed(e.g.
120 hours) - - Reconcilable to accounting system
- Budgeted Cost for Work Scheduled
- Budgeted Cost for Work Performed
- Actual Cost of Work Performed
Assume basic understanding Earned Value
Management Concept and Terminology
5Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
6EVM Trend Analysis Cumulative
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
7EVM Trend AnalysisCost/Schedule Variances
ManagementReserveConsumption
Favorable
Schedule Variance at Completion
0
Unfavorable
Cost Variance at Completion
Time
Schedule Slip
Cost Variance ---
Schedule Variance
8Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
9DoD Experience
- A-10
- A-12
- B-1
- B-2
- C-17
- DDG-51
- F-18
- F-22
- C-130H J
- Chinook
- Apache
- Longbow
- Blackhawk
- Kiowa
- Seahawk
- Comanche
- T-45
- T-46
- CVN-68
- SSN-21
- SSN-688
- SSN-774
- T-AOE-6
- LHD-1
- Crusader
- M1
- M2/M3 FVS
- MK-48 ADCAP
- MK-50 ALWT
- SSBN-726
- CG-47
- MH-53
- V-22 Osprey
- P-3 Orion
- RCAS
- LIF Hawk
- B-1 Engines
- F-414-GE-400 Engines
- Chem. Demilitirization
- D-5 TRIDENT II
- Javelin
- Pershing II
- FAMECE/UET
- Satellites
- AN/BSY-2
- THAAD
- ABL
- GBL
- Aggregate overrun 5.5 on 115 largest DoD
contracts (3.0B on 84.8B _at_ 60 complete),
adjusted for over target baselines a/o 4/30/2000
OUSD(ATL)ARA/AM, 1/16/01
10Earned Value Analysis
- Earned Value Analysis Understanding the
relationships among the EVM data elements - EVM discipline provides confidence
- Contractor and PM management systems are adequate
- Data are summarized from the Control Account
level, where technical/schedule/cost integration
occurs - Use the data for management and oversight
- Data quality becomes self-policing
- Ask questions be an informed, critical consumer
11Planned Resource Consumption
Program Budget M
40
Management Reserve
35
30
25
Resources
BCWS (Planned Value) Time-Phased Plan for
Consumption of Resources Typical S Curve
20
15
10
5
?
F
M
A
M
J
J
D
A
N
S
O
Time
12Integrated Baseline Review (IBR)Does Planned
Resource ConsumptionMake Sense?
Program Budget
Resources
Front Loaded
Normal
400
End Loaded
300
200
100
Time
M
F
13Baseline Extremes Front-Loaded
- Rapid start
- Most resources to be consumed early in plan
- Questions
- What is basis for plan?
- Are resources available?
- Do IBR and review supporting documentation
14Baseline Extremes End-Loaded
- Slow start
- Most resources to be consumed late in plan
- Questions
- What is basis for plan?
- Is schedule realistic?
- Do IBR and review supporting documentation
15Normal Baselines
- Normal S curve for planned value
- Questions
- Is scope fully and mutually understood (using
WBS)? - Does the baseline capture all work?
- Labor resources
- Are in-house resources available and adequate?
- Are contractor resources available and adequate?
- Material resources
- Are contracts awarded/planned?
- Is the schedule logical and complete?
- Risk management
- Is Management Reserve adequate given expected
risk?
16Normal Baselines contd
- Management System
- Does management system meet ANSI EVMS guidelines?
- Are managers trained?
- Are EVM techniques objective?
- Is Level of Effort scope properly categorized?
- The Bottom Line
- Does the program have an executable plan that
integrates scope, planned cost and schedule
resources and risk? - If no, go slow better to do it right than to
fail
17Time - Based Planning Horizons
Rolling Wave 2
Rolling Wave 3
Rolling Wave 1
ProgramBudget
Resources
Initial detail planning (6 Months)
400
300
- Future work in planning packages
- Detail planning based on calendar
- Arbitrary
200
100
Time
S
D
M
J
D
M
J
S
18Event - Based Planning Horizons
Critical Design Review
Preliminary Design Review
ProgramBudget
Resources
Initial detail planning
- Future work in planning packages
- Detail planning based on technical objectives
- Facilitates event-based reporting incentives
- Better integration of technical, schedule and
cost performance and risk management
400
300
200
100
Time
S
D
M
J
D
M
J
S
19Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
20Earned Value Analysis Scenarios
The Ideal
Portfolio Management
Early Warning Indicators
Know How to Get Help
21Schedule Slips
- Problem indicators
- Early, large and unfavorable schedule variance
- Front-loaded baseline
- Zero variance
- Too good to be true
- Slow resource consumption
- Cant get there from here
22Unfavorable Schedule Performance
Time Now
Prog Budget
BCWS (Planned Value)
Schedule Slip
Resources
400
Schedule Variance
BCWP (Earned Value)
300
200
100
Time
?
A
M
J
J
J
F
M
A
23Unfavorable Schedule Performance
Time Now
Schedule Variance at completionis zero
bydefinition-even if programcompleteslate
Favorable
0
Unfavorable
Time
Schedule Variance
Schedule variance should supplement real
schedule analysis
24Cost Overruns
- Problem indicators
- Early, large, unfavorable schedule variance
- Time is money
- Unfavorable cost variance
- Front-loaded baseline
- Zero variance
- Too good to be true
- Excessive resource consumption
- Cant get there from here
25Unfavorable Cost Performance
Time Now
Prog Budget
Management Reserve
ACWP (Actual Cost)
Resources
BCWS (Planned Value)
Cost Variance
400
BCWP (Earned Value)
300
200
100
Time
?
M
F
26Unfavorable Cost Performance
Time Now
Favorable
0
Unfavorable
Time
Cost Variance ---
27Evaluating 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
28Evaluating 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
29A-12 Contract Front Loaded
- Large unfavorable variances
- Connect the dots
- Front-loaded Baseline
- (or completion date is wrong)
- No work planned 93 96?
30A-12 Contract Actual Cost vs. EAC
- Contractor and PM EACs both imply no cost
accrual for several years during key
manufacturing/test phases - Realistic EAC off the chart
31Excessive Optimism
- Problem indicators
- Future performance predicted to be significantly
better than historical performance - Variance trend analysis
- Cost Performance Index compared toTo Complete
Performance Index (CPI vs TCPI) - Actual trend and implied future trend diverging
- One of most powerful EVA techniques
- Independent EV analysis balances PM bias
32A-12 Contract Optimistic EACs
- Contractor estimates program will begin to
underrun - PM estimates all problems will be resolved
and no new problems will occur - Realistic EAC variance off the chart
33Super Hornet Cumulative Trends
- Cost-type contract
- Significant cost risk
- No variances
- Too good to be true?
- No scope change
- Effective planning
- IPTs used EVM effectively
- Excellent performance
34Super Hornet Variance Trends
- Substantial Management
- Reserve
35Past vs. Future Efficiency CPI vs. TCPI
Time Now
TCPI
EAC Efficiency Index
CPI Cum
CPI Current
gt1.0
1.0
lt1.0
Time
36Confidence in EstimateCan program complete at
PMs current estimate?
Adapted from USAF
37Zeroing in on the EAC
Contract Budget PM Estimate Independent
High Independent Low
20.8M 20.8M 23.3M 22.0M
19 20 21 22
23
Contract FAA XXX Contractor FAA
Contractor as of April 2006
Adapted from USAF
38Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
39EVA and Funding Status
Time Now
Prog Budget
BCWS (Planned Value)
Resources
400
ACWP (Actual Cost)
Approved/Planned Funding
300
200
BCWP (Earned Value)
100
Time
D
M
40Profitability Analysis on Flexibly Priced
Contracts
Cost Variance levelsrelated to
Time Now
Favorable
Min/MaxFee
0
Cost Sharing
Unfavorable
Contractor Loss
Time
41Profitability Analysis on Flexibly Priced
Contracts
Cost Variance levelsrelated to
Time Now
Favorable
Min/MaxFee
0
Cost Sharing
Unfavorable
Contractor Loss
Time
42Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
43Baseline Discipline
- Effective performance management requires
disciplined baseline management - Initial baseline reflects go-ahead decision
- Scope, schedule, resources, risk
- Approve 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
44Baseline Discipline
Time Now
Program Budget
BCWS
ACWP
Resources
- No Variances
- Lack of definition and discipline
- Baseline schedule growth preclude
measurement
400
300
BCWP
200
100
Time
A
J
45Rebaselining
- When the original baseline becomes unrealistic as
a basis for management and measurement, it may be
necessary to establish a new baseline - A question of degree what is unrealistic?
- Challenge assumptions
- Issues
- Visibility to original baseline
- Reporting to stakeholders
46Establishing a New Baseline
Time Now
Program Budget
Management Reserve
Resources
ACWP
- Baseline no longer meaningful to manage
performance
400
BCWS
300
200
BCWP
100
Time
?
A
D
47Establishing a New Baseline
Time Now
Revised Budget
Program Budget
Original Budget
Management Reserve
NewBaseline BCWS
Resources
ACWP
400
- Single Point Adjustment
- Eliminates variances
- Establishes new baseline including Reserve if
needed
BCWS
300
200
BCWP
100
RevisedSchedule
?
A
D
48Establishing a New Baseline
Time Now
Favorable
0
Unfavorable
Time
49Establishing a New Baseline
Time Now
Favorable
0
- Single Point Adjustment
- Eliminates variances
- Establishes new baseline including MR if
needed - History is lost
- Temptation to get to Green
Unfavorable
Time
50Establishing a New Baseline
Time Now
Favorable
0
Unfavorable
Time
51Establishing a New Baseline
Time Now
- Complete program picture
- Preserves historical visibility
- Identifies added baseline amount including MR
if needed - Changes chart dynamic by measuring future
performance against anticipated overrun
Favorable
0
Budget forVariance
Unfavorable
Budget forFuture Work
0
Time
52Agenda
- Earned Value Management and Resource Management
- Essential Data Elements and Graphics
- Earned Value Analysis
- EVA Scenarios
- EVA and Funding Status
- Baseline Management
- Summary
53Summary
- Pulling it all together
- 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 - Dont necessarily equate program performance with
managers performance - Develop organizational history and IQ
54Program Baseline, Funding and Program Performance
are Reported in the OMB-300 Tables
55(No Transcript)