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Earned Value Management (EVM) is a project management methodology that employs a set financial of metrics integrates schedule, costs, and scope to measure project performance. Based on planned and actual values, EVM predicts the future and enables project managers to adjust accordingly.

EVM is used on the cost and schedule control and can be very useful in project forecasting.

⤵️ SOME PROMINENT ORGANIZATIONS USING EVM

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titleSome Prominent organizations using EVM metric
  • NASA

  • Project Management Institute (PMI)

  • Society of Cost Estimating and Analysis

  • Defence Acquisition University

  • Federal Acquisition Institute

  • Acquisition Management (UK)

Source: https://www.projectsmart.co.uk/earned-value-management/earned-value-management-explained.php

Earned Value Management Core Elements

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Metric’s Components

Planned Value (PV)

Planned value is the budgeted cost for work scheduled (BCWS). PV varies based on the scope of work in consideration and the point where you’re at in the overall schedule.

PV = Total project cost * % of planned work

For example, the PV for complete project which is expected to run for 5-month is $25,000:
PV for the complete project = $25,000
PV at 2 months = $25,000 * 40% = $10,000

Actual Costs (AC)

Actual costs, also known as actual cost of work (labor cost - CAPEX and OPEX combined) performed (ACWP), plus any overhead charged to the project (e.g. marketing materials, hardware, software licenses, travel expenses, customer dining, etc.)

Here is how Jira-based project management system allows you to track all the costs within a single project and assign them to a pre-configured accountTime & Costs Tracking in a Single Project, which results in real time spreadsheet of project actual costs - https://wmdemo.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/BPS/pages/11763839/Filter+View

Earned Value (EV)

EV = Total project cost * % of actual work

It was expected to complete a certain amount of work and budgeted accordingly. But a discrepancy from your estimate occurs, for example, after a few weeks down the line. EV indicates which of the two potential reasons contributed more: budgeted overspent or work output lagging behind the planned?

Variance Analysis

Planned value, actual cost, and earned value numbers are vital to variance calculations. At this point, the project manager wants to know how far off we are from the project baseline. This can be determined through schedule and cost variance.

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titleAn example of variance dashboards for project labor costs based on timesheet data

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BPS:Billable Time Status. Planned vs Logged
BPS:Billable Time Status. Planned vs Logged

Schedule Variance (SV)

SV = EV – PV

Schedule variance is a quantitative indicator of your divergence from the initial planned schedule. A negative SV indicates that we are behind schedule, a positive SV indicates that we are ahead of schedule and zero means that we are exactly on schedule.

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titleExample of dashboard showing variance in time estimate by assignee by project
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BPS:Time Overrun by Assignee
BPS:Time Overrun by Assignee

Cost Variance (CV)

Cost variance is a quantitative indicator of your divergence from the initial planned budget. A negative CV indicates that we are over budget, a positive CV indicates that we are under budget and zero means that we are exactly on budget.

CV = EV – AC

Performance Indexes and Schedule Performance Index

Another way of looking at project performance, apart from performance variance and schedule variance respectively.

Cost Performance Index (CPI)

CPI gives a sense of project performance from a cost perspective.

CPI = EV/AC

CPI > 1 indicates the project is under budget and CPI < 1 indicates the project is over budget.

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More related dashboards
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Dashboards:Dark Mode Wallboards
Dashboards:Dark Mode Wallboards