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Information Technology Project Management

Juan Gonzales was a systems analyst and network specialist for the waterworks department of a major Mexican city. He enjoyed helping the city develop its infrastructure. His next career objective was to become a project manager so he could have even more influence. One of his colleagues invited him to attend an important project review meeting for large government projects, including the Surveyor Pro project, in which Juan was most interested.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
262 views

Information Technology Project Management

Juan Gonzales was a systems analyst and network specialist for the waterworks department of a major Mexican city. He enjoyed helping the city develop its infrastructure. His next career objective was to become a project manager so he could have even more influence. One of his colleagues invited him to attend an important project review meeting for large government projects, including the Surveyor Pro project, in which Juan was most interested.

Uploaded by

r15di
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 7.

Project Cost Management


Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you will be able to:

Develop a justification for project cost management and its


importance in achieving project success
Explain basic project cost management principles, concepts, and
terms
Describe the process of planning cost management
Discuss different types of cost estimates and methods for preparing
them
Using an example of an information technology (IT) project, list and
describe the processes of determining a budget and preparing a cost
estimate
Justify the use of earned value management and project portfolio
management to assist in cost control
Describe how project management software can assist in project cost
management
Discuss considerations for agile/adaptive environments

Opening Case
Juan Gonzales was a systems analyst and network specialist for the waterworks
department of a major Mexican city. He enjoyed helping the city develop its
infrastructure. His next career objective was to become a project manager so he could
have even more influence. One of his colleagues invited him to attend an important
project review meeting for large government projects, including the Surveyor Pro project,
in which Juan was most interested. The Surveyor Pro project was a concept for
developing a sophisticated information system that included expert systems, object-
oriented databases, and wireless communications. The system would provide instant,
graphical information to help government surveyors do their jobs. For example, after a
surveyor touched a map on the screen of a handheld device, the system would prompt
the surveyor to enter the type of information needed for that area. This system would
help in planning and implementing many projects, from laying fiber-optic cable to
installing water lines.

Juan was very surprised, however, that the majority of the meeting was spent discussing
cost-related issues. The government officials were reviewing many existing projects to
evaluate their performance and the potential impact on the government’s budget before
discussing funding for any new projects. Juan did not understand many of the terms and
charts being presented. What was this “earned value” they kept referring to? How were
they estimating what it would cost to complete projects or how long it would take? Juan
thought he would learn more about the new technologies the Surveyor Pro project would
use, but he discovered that the cost estimates and projected benefits were of most
interest to the government officials at the meeting. It also seemed that considerable
effort would go toward detailed financial studies before any technical work could even
start. Juan wished he had taken some accounting and finance courses so he could
understand the acronyms and concepts people were discussing. Although Juan had a
degree in electrical engineering, he had no formal education in finance and little
experience with it. However, if Juan could understand information systems and
networks, he was confident that he could understand financial issues on projects as well.
He jotted down questions to discuss with his colleagues after the meeting.

The Importance of Project Cost Management


IT projects have a poor track record in meeting budget goals. A 2011 study published in the
Harvard Business Review examined IT change initiatives in almost 1,500 projects and reported
an average cost overrun of 27 percent. Cost overrun is the additional percentage or dollar
amount by which actual costs exceed estimates. The study was considered the largest ever to
analyze IT projects. The projects ranged from enterprise resource planning to management
information and customer relationship management systems. Most projects incurred high
expenses, with an average cost of $167 million; the largest project cost $33 billion.*

The most important finding in the study, however, was the discovery of a large number of
gigantic overages when analyzing the project overrun data. One in six of all projects studied
contained a “black swan”: a high-impact event that is rare and unpredictable, but not
improbable in retrospect. These IT black swan projects had an average cost overrun of 200
percent and a schedule overrun of almost 70 percent. “This highlights the true pitfall of IT
change initiatives: It’s not that they’re particularly prone to high cost overruns on average, as
management consultants and academic studies have previously suggested. It’s that an
unusually large proportion of them incur massive overages—that is, there are a
disproportionate number of black swans. By focusing on averages instead of the more
damaging outliers, most managers and consultants have been missing the real problem.”*

Obviously, IT projects have room for improvement in meeting cost goals. This chapter
describes important concepts in project cost management, particularly planning cost
management, creating good estimates, and using earned value management (EVM) to assist
in cost control.
What Went Wrong?
The United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS) IT modernization program was
called “the greatest IT disaster in history” by one London columnist. This 10-year
program, which started in 2002, was created to provide an electronic patient records
system, appointment booking, and a prescription drug system in England and Wales.
Britain’s Labor government estimates that the program will eventually cost more than
$55 billion, a $26 billion overrun. The program has been plagued by technical problems
due to incompatible systems, resistance from physicians who say they were not
adequately consulted about system features, and arguments among contractors about
who’s responsible for what.* A government audit in June 2006 found that the program,
one of the largest civilian IT projects undertaken worldwide, was progressing despite
high-profile problems. In an effort to reduce cost overruns, the NHS program would no
longer pay for products until delivery, shifting some financial responsibility to prime
contractors, including BT Group, Accenture, and Fujitsu Services.* On September 22,
2011, government officials in the United Kingdom announced that they were scrapping
the National Programme for Health IT. Health Secretary Andrew Lansley said that the
program “let down the NHS and wasted taxpayers’ money.”*

What Is Cost?
A popular cost accounting textbook states, “Accountants usually define cost as a resource
sacrificed or foregone to achieve a specific objective.”* Webster’s dictionary defines cost as
“something given up in exchange.” Costs are often measured in monetary amounts, such as
dollars, that must be paid to acquire goods and services. (For convenience, the examples in
this chapter use dollars for monetary amounts.) Because projects cost money and consume
resources that could be used elsewhere, it is very important for project managers to
understand project cost management.

Many IT professionals, however, often react to cost overrun information with a smirk. They
know that many of the original cost estimates for IT projects are low or based on unclear
project requirements, so naturally there will be cost overruns. Not emphasizing the
importance of realistic project cost estimates from the outset is only one part of the problem.
In addition, many IT professionals think that preparing cost estimates is a job for
accountants. On the contrary, preparing good cost estimates is a demanding, important skill
that many professionals need to acquire, including project managers.

Another perceived reason for cost overruns is that many IT projects involve new technology
or business processes. Any new technology or business process is untested and has inherent
risks. Thus, costs grow and failures are to be expected, right? Wrong. Using good project cost
management can change this false perception.

What Is Project Cost Management?


Recall from Chapter 1 that the triple constraint of project management involves balancing
scope, schedule, and cost goals. Chapters 5 and 6 discuss project scope and schedule
management, and this chapter describes project cost management. Project cost
management includes the processes required to ensure that a project team completes a
project within an approved budget. Notice two crucial phrases in this definition: “a project”
and “approved budget.” Project managers must make sure their projects are well defined,
have accurate schedule and cost estimates, and have a realistic budget that they were
involved in approving.

It is the project manager’s job to satisfy project stakeholders while continuously striving to
reduce and control costs. There are four processes for project cost management:

1. Planning cost management involves determining the policies, procedures, and


documentation that will be used for planning, executing, and controlling project cost. The
main output of this process is a cost management plan.

2. Estimating costs involves developing an approximation or estimate of the costs of the


resources needed to complete a project. The main outputs of the cost estimating process
are activity cost estimates, basis of estimates, and project documents updates.

3. Determining the budget involves allocating the overall cost estimate to individual work
items to establish a baseline for measuring performance. The main outputs of the cost
budgeting process are a cost baseline, project funding requirements, and project
documents updates.

4. Controlling costs involves controlling changes to the project budget. The main outputs of
the cost control process are work performance information, cost forecasts, change
requests, and project management plan updates, and project documents updates.

Figure 7-1 summarizes the inputs, tools and techniques, and outputs of project cost
management.
Figure 7-1. Project cost management overview

Source: PMBOK® Guide – Sixth Edition. Project Management Institute, Inc. (2017). Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with permission of PMI.

To understand each of the project cost management processes, you must first understand the
basic principles of cost management. Many of these principles are not unique to project
management; however, project managers need to understand how these principles relate to
their specific projects.

Basic Principles of Cost Management


Many IT projects are never initiated because IT professionals do not know how to develop a
financial justification for them. Important concepts such as net present value analysis, return
on investment, and payback analysis were discussed in Chapter 4, Project Integration
Management. Likewise, many projects that are started never finish because of cost
management problems. Most members of an executive board have a better understanding of
financial terms than IT terms, and are more interested in finance. Therefore, IT project
managers need to be able to present and discuss project information both in financial terms

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