Read this chapter, which discusses the planning phase of the project lifecycle. What are some of the pain points in this part of the project management process? What tools do project management professionals typically use to plan projects?
Budget Planning
Every project boils down to money. If you had a bigger budget, you could
probably get more people to do your project more quickly and deliver more.
That's why no project plan is complete until you come up with a budget
(Figure 18). But no matter whether your project is big or small, and no matter
how many resources and activities are in it, the process for figuring out the
bottom line is always the same.
Figure 18: Defining the priority of a budget!
It is important to come up with detailed estimates of all the project costs.
Once this is obtained, add up the cost estimates into a budget plan. It is now
possible to track the project according to that budget while the work is
ongoing.
A lot of times you come into a project and there is already an expectation of
how much it will cost or how much time it will take. When you make an
estimate really early in the project and you don't know much about it, that
estimate is called a rough order of magnitude estimate (or a ballpark
estimate). It's expected that this estimate will become more refined as time
goes on and you learn more about the project. Here are some more tools and
techniques used to estimate cost:
- Determine resource cost rates: People who will be working on the
project all work at a specific rate. Any materials you will use to build
the project (like wood or wiring) will be charged at a rate too. This just
means figuring out what the rate for labor and materials will be.
- Vendor bid analysis: Sometimes you will need to work with an
external contractor to get your project done. You might even have
more than one contractor bid on the job. This tool is all about
evaluating those bids and choosing the one you will go with.
e Reserve analysis: You need to set aside some money for cost
overruns. If you know that your project has a risk of something
expensive happening, better to have some cash lying around to deal
with it. Reserve analysis means putting some cash away just in case.
- Cost of quality: You will need to figure the cost of all your quality
related activities into the overall budget, too. Since it's cheaper to find
bugs earlier in the project than later, there are always quality costs
associated with everything your project produces. Cost of quality is
just a way of tracking the cost of those activities and is how much
money it takes to do the project right.
Once you apply all the tools in this process, you will arrive at an estimate for how much your project will cost. It's always important to keep all of your supporting estimate information, too. That way, you know the assumptions you made when you were coming up with your numbers. Now you are ready to build your budget plan.