Project Cost Management According to the PMBOK

The Project Management Body of Knowledge

Poor project cost management is one of the easiest ways to make a project go awry.  Hence, good project management requires a firm grasp on the concepts and techniques in project budgeting and cost control.  Thankfully, the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) gives us a strong foundation in this area.

Project Cost Management is the fourth of 10 project management knowledge areas within the PMBOK.  It contains 4 processes.  Three of these occur in the planning process group as they involve the determination of the project budgets.  The last one occurs in the Monitoring and Controlling process group as it involves controlling project budgets during project execution.

Project Cost Management - PMBOK Knowledge Area

Plan Cost Management

The first of the processes within the knowledge area is called Plan Cost Management.  It involves the production of a cost management plan, which is a component of the overall project management plan.  This document describes how the project costs will be planned, structured, and controlled.

It can feature elements such as the level of accuracy and precision, control thresholds, and rules of performance measurement for earned value management.

Inputs

  • Project Management Plan
  • Project Chaarter
  • Enterprise environmental factors
  • Organizational process assets

Tools and Techniques

  • Expert judgment
  • Analytical techniques
  • Meetings

Outputs

  • Cost management plan

Estimate Costs

This process represents the tasks involved in determining the monetary resources needed to complete the project activities.  Most of the time it involves bottom up estimating, that is, determining the monetary resources for each project task and rolling it up into an overall project estimate.  However, a top down approach is usually quicker and less accurate but can be appropriate for the circumstances.  Each task is estimated using techniques such as  analogous, parametric, and three-point estimating.

Inputs

  • Cost management plan
  • Human resource management plan
  • Scope baseline
  • Project schedule
  • Risk register
  • Enterprise environmental factors
  • Organizational process assets

Tools and Techniques

  • Expert judgment
  • Analogous estimating
  • Parametric estimating
  • Bottom-up estimating
  • Three-point estimating
  • Reserve analysis
  • Cost of quality
  • Project management software
  • Vendor bid analysis
  • Group decision-making techniques

Outputs

  • Activity cost estimates
  • Basis of estimates
  • Project documents updates

Determine Budget

This process refers to the aggregation of individual project task budgets into an overall project budget.  It refers to the production of a time-phased project cost baseline which can provide a graduated ceiling for project funding limits throughout the project.  Management reserves (overall project contingencies) are also allocated.

For small projects, the Estimate Costs and Determine Budget processes can be viewed as one single process, because a time phased cost baseline is often not necessary.

Inputs

  • Cost management plan
  • Scope baseline
  • Activity cost estimates
  • Basis of estimates
  • Project schedule
  • Resource calendars
  • Risk register
  • Agreements
  • Organization process assets

Tools and Techniques

  • Cost aggregation
  • Reserve analysis
  • Expert judgment
  • Historical relationships
  • Funding limit reconciliation

Outputs

  • Cost baseline
  • Project funding requirements
  • Project documents updates

Control Costs

Although it’s only one single process (out of 4 within the knowledge area and 47 within the PMBOK), it’s arguably the most important one.  Keeping project costs under control requires the application of earned value management.  At any point in time (usually right now) the project manager collects three pieces of information for each task within the project:

  • Planned value. The value of the work planned to be completed.
  • Earned value. The actual value of all the work completed (earned).
  • Actual cost. The actual cost of all the work completed.

Four values are then calculated which indicate the current status of the project, two from a budget perspective (CV and CPI) and two from a schedule perspective (SV and SPI).

Four more values are calculated which extrapolate the current project status to the end of the project (ETC, EAC, VAC, ad TCPI).

These values can be compiled into a project status report and distributed to stakeholders.

Inputs

  • Project management plan
  • Project funding requirements
  • Work performance data
  • Organization process assets

Tools and Techniques

  • Earned value management
  • Forecasting
  • To-complete performance index (TCPI)
  • Performance reviews
  • Project management software
  • Reserve analysis

Outputs

  • Work performance information
  • Cost forecasts
  • Change requests
  • Project management plan updates
  • Project documents updates
  • Organizational process assets updates

About Bernie Roseke, P.Eng., PMP

Bernie Roseke, P.Eng., PMP, is the president of Roseke Engineering. As a bridge engineer and project manager, he manages projects ranging from small, local bridges to multi-million dollar projects. He is also the technical brains behind ProjectEngineer, the online project management system for engineers. He is a licensed professional engineer, certified project manager, and six sigma black belt. He lives in Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, with his wife and two kids.

View all posts by Bernie Roseke, P.Eng., PMP

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