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INTRODUCTION
1.1 PURPOSE OF THE STANDARD FOR EARNED VALUE MANAGEMENT
This standard provides a perspective of earned value management (EVM) that is consistent with current practice. This update to the former practice guide broadens the perspectives regarding the choices and decisions about the optimal approach for the planning and delivery of projects. This in turn supports the ability of the project team and their stakeholders to tailor their planning, management, and delivery implementation framework accordingly. This standard provides guidance on the use of EVM in agile, hybrid, and predictive contexts.
The PMI Lexicon of Project Management Terms [1]1 defines EVM as a methodology that combines scope, schedule, and resource measurements to assess project performance and progress. An earned value management system (EVMS) is a set of principles, methods, processes, practices, and tools for managing project performance. When EVM is used in concert with the Process Groups, Knowledge Areas, and processes defined in A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOKÂź Guide) [2], the project manager, the broader project team, and relevant stakeholders will be able to understand project progress and gain insight into future performance based on the analysis and interpretation of project performance information. The use of EVM improves the overall project delivery process through increased insight into efficiencies, opportunities, risk management, and better project outcomes.
This standard was developed with the project manager, project team, and stakeholders as the primary beneficiaries. The purpose of this standard is to provide information and guidance for the project team to help identify and implement practices and processes that enhance and improve project delivery.
This standard has been guided by the following principles:
âScope, schedule, and cost are three interrelated aspects of a single, integrated performance measurement baseline (PMB). The PMB is defined in the Lexicon as the integrated scope, cost, and schedule baselines used to manage, measure, and control project execution.
âTraditionally, earned value (work performed) is defined in monetary terms, but it may be expressed in other units that are more relevant for a specific project (units of time, story points, etc.). The units selected would depend on the nature of the project and the priorities of the sponsoring entity.
âThe use of EVM is relevant to all service delivery and product development projects, irrespective of the use of predictive or iterative adaptive approaches. Vocabulary and graphical conventions vary, but the core principles and meanings are consistent and apply independently of development life-cycle choices.
âPlan performance assessment and the causal analysis of variances to plan are key elements of the EVM implementation and inform the development of recovery plans, as appropriate.
âBaseline changes are formally documented and approved.
âProject forecasting is informed by the analysis of past performance as well as monitoring of the project environment.
âPerformance information is used to manage and report performance on the project.
1.2 STRUCTURE OF THIS STANDARD
This standard addresses the Initiating, Planning, Executing, Monitoring and Controlling, and Closing Process Groups in an EVM context. The structure of this standard is intended to be compatible with the PMBOKÂź Guide concepts and principles when a more structured EVM approach is desired by the project team. Additional interpretation of the PMBOKÂź Guide is provided, when needed, to illustrate the intent of this standard. Subsequent sections are:
âSection 2. Initiating
âSection 3. Planning
âSection 4. Executing, Monitoring, and Controlling
âSection 5. Closing
The appendixes included in this standard are:
âAppendix X1. Development of The Standard for Earned Value Management
âAppendix X2. Contributors and Reviewers of The Standard for Earned Value Management
âAppendix X3. Application of Earned Value Management (EVM) at the Portfolio and Program Levels
âAppendix X4. Performance Management Example
1.3 WHAT IS EARNED VALUE MANAGEMENT (EVM)?
1.3.1 EVM OVERVIEW
For purposes of extending the thought leadership and use of EVM across the profession, it is useful to extend the PMB concept to a sophisticated approach for project integration management. This in turn is based on a time-phased, integrated performance management baseline that incorporates project scope, schedule, and resource measurements to assess project performance and progress. EVM helps to identify the causes of deviations from the baseline that may need recovery planning. Moreover, EVM informs the process for estimating project outcomes based on both past performance and current project conditions.
It is possible to represent status and projections in each of the cost, schedule, and scope aspects of the project. Historical practice has translated all expressions of status versus baseline to a financial value, including schedule impacts. Representation in the time dimension of the baseline is a key element of earned schedule (ES). Likewise, reflecting project progress in terms of scope is often done using burn charts and backlog in agile or hybrid environments.
The application of earned value analysis in the early phases of a project increases the usefulness of the scope, schedule, and cost baselines by adding performance measurement. Once established, this integrated baseline underpins the understanding of project performance during the complete project life cycle. A comparison of actual performance and realization of value against the integrated baseline provides:
âFeedback on the projectâs current status compared to baseline, and
âInsight into future performance.
EVM permits a project to be measured by progress achieved and enables the estimation of probable outcomes to make timely and useful decisions using objective data. At any time during any project phase, earned value analysis informs answers to the following questions:
âWhat has been achieved with the resources that have been applied?
âWhat is the anticipated endpoint position?
1.3.2 A SYSTEMS VIEW OF EVM
Practitioners are often involved with change initiatives and project-based work in a complex environment with overlapping and conflicting interests. For practitioners to comprehend such situations and be in a position to anticipate behaviors and performance trends, it is necessary to analyze portfolios, programs, and projects as systems. In addition to examining and understanding the parts of the system individually, practitioners also analyze and understand the whole system in question. It is important to be aware of the causes and effects of the interactions of the systemâs parts or components. In other words, practitioners need to understand interdependenciesâthe interactions between components of the system as well as the interrelationships between components of the system and its organizational environment. Project managers should have (a) a good understanding of the business and/or use case, (b) the connection of project performance with the organizational strategy and environment, and (c) the ability to communicate the plan to the team.
EVM is one of the most effective performance measurement and feedback tools for the project management discipline. The earned value (EV) concept relates budget, actual cost, and actual work progress in one integrated system that provides a reliable projection of future project performance. This fundamental principle may be extended to portfolios and programs. Feedback is critical to the successful management of any portfolio, program, or project. Timely and targeted feedback enables practitioners to identify issues early and inform the project delivery process.
Without reliable inputs of planned value (PV), actual cost (AC), and earned value (EV, EVM is unlikely to succeed. To gather these inputs, practitioners should carefully scope, budget, and schedule, and then monitor a project throughout the entire project life cycle as described in detail in both the PMBOKÂź Guide and the Agile Practice Guide [3]. In brief, projects using EVM should:
âFirst identify the work content and requirements using a work breakdown structure (WBS).
âPlan the project to form a PMB. Carefully monitor the progress of actual work and the costs associated with this progress so that EV and AC data can be obtained.
âManage projects through integrated change control, which directly impacts the project scope, budget, schedule, and the associated PMB. When changes are managed properly, the PMB remains a constant and traceable source of information with high integrity to manage and assess project performance.
EVM emphasizes the importance of other key considerations necessary for successful project management. These include organizational structure, cost collection methodologies, and the process for managing project changes. EVM provides organizations with a thoughtful methodology to integrate the management of project scope, schedule, and resources. This standard uses the term project scope to mean the work performed to deliver a product, service, or result with the specified features and functions. EVM can be used to answer questions that are critical to the success of every project, such as:
âAre we delivering more or less work than planned?
âWhen will the project finish?
âWhen is the project likely to be completed?
âAre we currently over or under budget?
âWhat is the remaining work likely to cost?
âWhat is the entire project likely to cost?
âHow much will the project be over or under budget at the end of the project?
âHow much effort is required to complete the project?
âWhat is driving the significant cost and/or schedule variances?
A fundamental concept of EVM is that patterns and trends of accomplished performance, when compared against a sound baseline, produce reliable forecasts of a projectâs future performance.
1.3.3 EVM AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT
The practice of EVM is consistent with good project management as outlined in the PMBOKÂź Guide and the Agile Practice Guide. Table 1-1 maps the processes from the PMBOKÂź Guide by Project Management Process Groups and Knowledge Areas (the section numbers listed are from the PMBOKÂź Guide). EVM is applicable to all of the Project Management Process Groups and Knowledge Areas described in the PMBOKÂź Guide and can be used to amplify the project management practice.
As a performance management methodology, EVM adds some critical practices to the project management processes. These practices occur within the Process Groups of Initiating, Planning, Executing, and Monitoring and Controlling and are related to the goal of measuring, analyzing, forecasting, and reporting project cost and schedule.
Measuring, forecasting, and continually improving project performance are the foundational requirements that underpin EVM. The additional effort invested for a proper and right-sized EVMS can deliver a positive return on that investment.
EVM requires accurate and reliable information. EVM performance measures used in conjunction with the projectâs WBS provide the objective data and information needed to produce sound information for good project management decision making. Variance analysis metrics, in absolute value or percentages, and cost/schedule efficiency indices are used most often. With an EVMS, the project team may be held accountable for reporting, diagnosing, and explaining the causes of past performance of the project using EVM analysis data and information. The project team may also be responsible for making forecasts of the possible outcomes for the project or project phase, which entails explaining the cost, schedule, and at-completion variances, as well as devising effective interventions aimed at improving performance.
A properly designed and implemented EVMS that meets the particular requirements of an organization may yield considerable benefits in measuring productivity and improved forecasting in all project-based work. Decades of research have proven that the application of EVM principles and practices are positive predictors of project success. For projects in which the application of EVM processes are not part of a contract, practitioners may want to be innovative toward optimizing the implementation with an eye toward schedule, costs, and benefits. In such projects, practitioners may plan an EVM process that complies with the foundational requirements while capturing a...