Unit-II - Introduction To Cost Management Processes
Unit-II - Introduction To Cost Management Processes
Unit-II - Introduction To Cost Management Processes
SEMCOM
EVEN SEMESTER
BCOM SEMESTER-VI
Project Costing
Points to be covered:
Triple Constraint
Project Management Plan
Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
Resource Estimates
Time-Phased Budget
Triple Constraint:
The triple constraint of project management has been given many names – the Project
Management Triangle, Iron Triangle, and Project Triangle – which should give you an
idea of how important the triple constraint is when managing a project.
If you’re managing a project, then you’re working with the Triple Constraint.
Therefore, it can be easily argued that the triple constraint might be the single most
important concept in the history of project management.
When used in combination with effective project management software, it can give
you the ability to drive your projects to success.
1) Cost: The financial constraints of a project, also known as the project budget
2) Scope: The tasks required to fulfill the project’s goals
3) Time: The schedule for the project to reach completion
Basically, the triple constraint states that the success of the project is impacted by its
costs, time, and scope.
As a project manager, you can keep control of the triple constraint by balancing these
three constraints through trade-offs.
While it’s true that the triple constraint is an important part of any successful project
plan, it doesn’t determine success.
Projects are made from many parts, more than the three that make up the triple
constraint.
That’s why some project management experts have added three more constraints to
the model, to better reflect the most critical areas of a project.
Here they are:
All these scenarios apply the triple constraint for managing the project, but there are
many more possible trade-offs that can occur in a project, which also involve quality,
risk and benefit.
By using a project management dashboard, a manager can keep sight of the project as
it progresses.
Metrics such as the schedule, cost and scope of the project are easy to track.
With this information, a project manager can identify issues and adjust the triple
constraint to prevent those issues from developing into problems.
Resource Estimates:
Resources are people, equipment, places, money, or anything else that you need in
order to do all of the activities that you planned for.
Every activity in your activity list needs to have resources assigned to it.
Before you can assign resources to your project, you need to know their availability.
Resource availability includes information about what resources you can use on your
project when they’re available to you, and the conditions of their availability.
Don’t forget that some resources, like consultants or training rooms, have to be
scheduled in advance, and they might only be available at certain times.
You’ll need to know this before you can finish planning your project.
If you are starting to plan in January, a June wedding is harder to plan than one in
December, because the wedding halls are all booked up in advance.
That is clearly a resource constraint.
You’ll also need the activity list that you created earlier, and you’ll need to know how
your organization typically handles resources.
Once you’ve got a handle on these things, you’re set for resource estimation.
The goal of activity resource estimating is to assign resources to each activity in the
activity list.
There are five tools and techniques for estimating activity resources.
Expert judgment means bringing in experts who have done this sort of work before
and getting their opinions on what resources are needed.
Alternative analysis means considering several different options for how you assign
resources. This includes varying the number of resources as well as the kind of
resources you use. Many times, there’s more than one way to accomplish an activity
and alternative analysis helps decide among the possibilities.
Published estimating data is something that project managers in a lot of industries
use to help them figure out how many resources they need. They rely on articles,
books, journals, and periodicals that collect, analyze, and publish data from other
people’s projects.
Project management software such as Microsoft Project will often have features
designed to help project managers estimate resource needs and constraints and find
the best combination of assignments for the project.
Resource Management
DISCLAIMER:
This study material is prepared by Dr Khyati Jagatkumar Patel. The basic objective of this
material is to supplement teaching and discussion in the classroom in the subject. Students
are required to go for extra reading in the subject through library work.