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GEIA EIA-748-B Earned Value Management Systems


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GEIA EIA-748-B Document Information:

Title
Earned Value Management Systems

Government Electronics & Information Technology Association

Publication Date:
Jun 1, 2007

Scope:

INTRODUCTION

An Earned Value Management System (EVMS) for program management will effectively integrate the work scope of a program with the schedule and cost elements for optimum program planning and control. The primary purpose of the system is to support program management. The system is owned by the organization and is governed by the organization's policies and procedures. The principles of an EVMS are:

• Plan all work scope for the program from inception to completion.

• Break down the program work scope into finite pieces that can be assigned to a responsible person or organization for control of technical, schedule, and cost objectives.

• Integrate program work scope, schedule, and cost objectives into a performance measurement baseline plan against which accomplishments may be measured. Control changes to the baseline.

• Use actual costs incurred and recorded in accomplishing the work performed.

• Objectively assess accomplishments at the work performance level.

• Analyze significant variances from the plan, forecast impacts, and prepare an estimate at completion based on performance to date and work to be performed.

• Use EVMS information in the organization's management processes.

The essence of earned value management is that, at some level of detail appropriate for the degree of technical, schedule, and cost risk or uncertainty associated with the program, a target planned value (i.e., budget) is established for each scheduled element of work. As these elements of work are completed, their target planned values are "earned". As such, work progress is quantified and the earned value becomes a metric against which to measure both what was spent to perform the work and what was scheduled to have been accomplished.

Schedule variances, which cannot be seen in a stand-alone budget versus actual cost tracking system, are isolated and quantified, and the cost variances are true cost variances that are not distorted by schedule performance. This provides for early identification of performance trends and variances from the management plan, and allows management decision making while there is adequate time to implement effective corrective actions. Without earned value, one can only compare planned expenditures with how much has been spent, which does not provide an objective indication of how much of the planned work was actually accomplished.

For the benefits of earned value to be fully realized, comprehensive planning at the outset, combined with the establishment and disciplined maintenance of a baseline for performance measurement, are required. This combination of comprehensive planning, baseline maintenance, and earned value analysis yields earlier and better visibility into program performance than is provided by non-integrated methods of planning and control. This enhances overall program management value through decisions based on the use of EVMS information.

The intent is to provide management information using the organization's resources and a scaled EVMS application that achieves the program requirements and is compliant with the EVMS principles. EVMS scalability is viewed as spectrum employing the principles of EVMS as fundamental to all programs and the EVMS guidelines (Section 2) as applicable to large complex and/or high risk programs. This scalability allows any program, regardless of size and complexity, to realize the benefits of earned value management.

Note: In the context of this standard, a program is a group of related projects supporting a mission that are managed in a coordinated way to obtain benefits not obtained from managing them individually. As the management principles are the same to achieve success the two terms, program and project, are used interchangeably in this standard.

Note: In the context of this standard, organization is used as a generic term and may include but is not limited to: public and private corporations and companies; Federal government agencies, departments and activities; state and local government entities; Federally Funded Research and Development Centers (FFRDC) and similar organizations, educational institutions, and non-profit entities that are likely to be owners of earned value management systems.

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