Title: Earned Value Management
1USING EARNED VALUE MANAGEMENT FOR BETTER CONTRACT
ADMINISTRATION
November 4, 2004
2What is Earned Value Management?
- Its a Management Tool
- A snapshot in time.
- Compares where the project is now with (1)
previous work accomplished and (2) where the
project was planned to be. - Early warning system to detect deficient or
endangered progress.
3EVMS Is Important to Effective Contract
Administration
- EVMS gives early warning of potential problems.
- As the Contracting Officer (CO), you are a member
of the Integrated Project Team. - Its YOUR job, as the CO, to protect the
Governments rights if performance does not show
satisfactory progress! - You must work with the other IPT members and the
contractor to avoid or mitigate performance
problems.
4Survey says..
- over 800 DoD programs show that ......
- no program has ever improved their performance
better than the performance at the 15 complete
point - which means that performance will only get worse
despite the assurances of the contractor and
others! -
No one pays enough attention in the early stages!
5The Earned Value Process
Define the Work
Plan the Work
Work the Plan
Collect Results
Measure Performance
Change Control
Analyze Deviations
TakeCorrective Action
ExternalChanges
6Basic Principles of EVM
- Break down the work scope into discrete,
measurable elements and assign responsibility - Plan and integrate the scope, schedule and cost
into a time-phased plan and control changes to
the plan. - Objectively assess progress and accomplishments
- Use actual costs
- Analyze variances from the plan
- Use the information to manage
7Why Use Earned Value Management?
- Ensures a clear definition of work prior to
beginning that work - Presents a logical plan for accomplishing the
work - Provides an objective measure of accomplishments
- Early and accurate identification of trends and
problems - Accurate picture of contract status
- cost, schedule, and technical
- Basis for course correction
- Supports mutual goals of contractor and customer
- bring project in on schedule and cost
8Earned Value Management measures progress
Progress movement towards a goal
- to measure progress, there must be a standard
against which the movement may be compared - EVMS establishes that standard as the
Performance Measurement Baseline and measures
progress against that baseline.
9Key questions that EVM answers
We analyze past performanceto help us control
the future
PAST PRESENT
FUTURE
Are we on schedule? Are we on cost? What are the
significant variances? Why do we have
variances? Who is responsible? What is the trend
to date?
When will we finish? What will it cost
at the end? How can we control the trend?
The Two Key Questions
1. Did we get what we wanted for what we
spent? 2. At the end of the project, is it likely
that the cost will be less than or equal to the
original estimate?
10What do we measure progress against?
- Performance measurement baseline
- budget is spread over . . .
- time, to accomplish the scope of
- work against which progress can be measured
- Earned Value is a key concept
- how much progress did I make against my original
plan? - expressed in dollars or hours
11Ways of Earning Value
- Should be a quantitative and discrete whenever
possible - Discrete tangible end product
- e.g. delivery of a specification, vendor parts
contract awarded, foundation completed - Should be integrated with with success criteria
or technical measures - e.g., successful completion of clean-up, a
specific test, reliability growth curve
12Traditional Management Systems
In these systems, you budget work and then record
actual expenditures. Example I budget 5
widgets at 100 hrs per widget. At the end of the
month 400 hrs had been expended.
GREAT! I'm 100hrs under budget
But what does this mean? Is this really the true
status of work? What did I accomplish?
13Many management systems measure expenditures not
work
Well, Ive spent 400 hrs , Does that mean Ive
accomplished 400 hrs of Work?
- Actual Cost is not an indication of work
progress, only an indication of hours/money
spent. -
14Management Using Earned Value
Earned Value is an objective measure of how
much work has been accomplished.
Example I plan to build 5 widgets this
month. Each widget should take 100hrs. I will
measure Earned Value based on widgets
completed
At Month End...
Budget Plan
Earned Value
Actual
500
300
400
(3 Widgets 100 hrs)
15Earned Value adds new dimension to traditional
tracking systems
Oh boy! I better figure out what
is going on. I've got 200hrs worth of
work to catch up on, and I've
already overspent by 100 hrs.
16Using Performance Data for Decision-making
- Behind Schedule
- - How critical is schedule?
- - Can I afford to work overtime to recover?
- - Can I do tasks concurrently?
- - Are there technical innovations which could
speed up the process? - - Am I gold plating instead of just meeting
requirements? - - Should I do a schedule risk assessment to
project impact to program? - Over Cost
- - Can I reschedule tasks? (Time phasing)
- - Is there a less costly facility I can use?
- - Are there tasks which can be deleted?
- - Should the element be added to my risk
management profile?
17Five Basic Performance Questions Answers
18Analysis Techniques
- Sort on significant variances
- eliminate almost complete, just starting, etc.
- Graph and analyze trends
- Look at comparative data
- e.g. cumulative performance vs. projected
performance - Examine written analysis by contractor
- does it answer why?
- adequacy of corrective action plans
- Analysis of schedule trends, critical path
- Analysis of EAC realism
what are the drivers? what can we do about them?
19Contractors Variance Analysis
- Should address significant variances
- Separate discussion of cost and schedule
variances - Clear description of reason for variance
- Quantity variances (e.g., price vs. usage)
- Be specific, not general
- Include corrective action
- Technical, schedule, and cost impacts
- Impact to estimate at completion
- Should be written by the individual controlling
the work!
A big hammer for a big variance!
20What is a significant variance?
- variance (e.g., gt10)
- variance (e.g., gt50,000 at the control account
level) - critical path element
- risk/complexity
- impact to other elements
- Top 10, Top 20, etc.
- contractor defined
21Using Performance Data To Validate Estimates
- New estimates at completion take on more meaning
when you employ performance information - To recover from a CPI of .5, the project would
have to work at an efficiency greater than 1. - The Estimate At Completion (EAC) can be
predicted by the performance index - The overrun will never be less than it is at the
15 complete point!
22Why do we need accurate EACs?
- Variance at Completion vs. Contractor Loss
- Positive VAC
- EAC lt BAC underrun contractor gain
- Negative VAC
- EAC gt BAC share area contractor partial loss
- EAC gt ceiling overrun contractor loss (100)
- Government develops top level EAC for comparison
- government should limit progress payments if EAC
is greater than ceiling - government needs accurate forecast of fund
requirements - May still have time to change the final outcome
23EARNED VALUE PROBLEM INDICATORS
- GOAL To Verify That Effective Variance Analysis
Processes Are Applied - To Identify, Correct, And Report
Problems - POTENTIAL PROBLEM INDICATORS
- Zero variances
- Monthly trends turning negative or downward
- Schedule variances generally indicate cost will
follow - Actuals gt Latest Revised Estimates (LRE)
- BCWP increases with no increase in ACWP
- Negative data elements
24DOE EVM Requirements
- OMB Requirement (A-11)
- Use of EVM on acquisitions of capital assets
- Report performance annually
- Certify contractors system
- DOE Requirement (DOE M 413)
- Use of EVMS on projects gt20M
- Report performance monthly
- Certify contractors system
25Applicability of EVM to DOE Contracts
- Program applicability
- All programs including NNSA
- Contract applicability
- Acquisition contracts providing assets and
capabilities, including - Prime contracts, subcontracts
- Applies to all contract types
- Cost plus, fixed price, time and materials
- Services contracts providing development
integration
26Pending EVMS FAR Case Requirements
- For Major Acquisitions
- EVMS compliant with ANSI/EIA 748
- Certified for EVMS compliance
- Integrated Baseline Review (IBR)
- Manage performance through analysis of EV data
- Continued surveillance to ensure continued
compliance
27The First Step - Integrated Baseline Review
- Determines that the Performance Measurement
Baseline is responsive to the scope of work
required - Joint assessment of
- Coverage of SOW
- Scheduling of work
- Resource allocation
- Earned Value methodologies
- Technical content of PMB
- Realism and Risks
- Should be done pre-award but no later than 180
days post-award (FAR Clause may influence
requirement)
28The Contractors EVMS
- Describes system in sufficient detail to
determine compliance - Includes prior Certification/Acceptance
- If no EVMS in place, Contractor must submit a
comprehensive plan for compliance - System description
- Necessary modifications
- Compliance map
- Process descriptions
- Recent evaluation or self assessment results
- Identify major subcontracts for application of
criteria - Verify baseline integrity is maintained
- Contains plan and procedures for surveillance and
self assessment
29Contractors Surveillance Plan Contents
- Methods and techniques
- Inclusion of new scope
- Customer coordination
- Schedule
- Analysis
- Ensure that reliable and timely, cost, schedule
and technical performance information is generated
30What Are My Responsibilities Regarding the EVMS?
- Contracting Officers Preaward Responsibilities
as a Member of the IPT - Identify application of Earned Value Management
System in acquisition plans, solicitations and
contracts - Define reporting and electronic submission
requirements - Define evaluation criteria for source selections
- Factor EVMS into contract management planning
31What Are My Responsibilities Regarding the
EVMS?(continued)
- Contracting Officers Post Award Responsibilities
as a Member of the IPT - Integrate performance monitoring with EVMS into
Award/Incentive plans - Monitor performance with IPT using the EVMS
- Act when performance is at risk (communication
with contractor, show cause and cure notices,
etc.) - Evaluate the contractors EVMS implementation
plan - Evaluate the contractors EVM systems for
compliance with the standard - Conduct Integrated Baseline Reviews to ensure all
the work scope is included in the baseline
32Want to know more?
- DOE Project Management Career Development Program
has a longer course on EVM - The Defense Acquisition University has a
continuous learning module on EVM - Participate on teams led by DCMA to conduct
certification reviews of DOE contractors EVMS - Access the OECM website for tutorials on EVMS
- Attend the Integrated Program Management
Conference (held every Nov in Tysons Corners)