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Feel The Burn: Making Project Decisions Based On Burn Rate

   

Author: Patrick Gray

Every project manager dreads the day when he or she has to make the long walk to the executive sponsors office to ask for more money. Unforeseen delays, scope changes and excessive consulting costs are often cited as reasons for the increase, and shallow excuses that these costs could not be divined when the projects budget was originally developed abound.

Legitimate or not, these costs are frequently approved. Whats another 5% to preserve the millions already invested? What becomes unjustifiable is when these budget increases become a recurring ritual, and project costs and timelines double or triple over original estimates. Even more shocking is that justifications are often based on fuzzy math, with elusive man day estimates and the like serving as justification.

Many executives and project managers have some vague idea of a projects burn rate, which boils down to a calculation of the cost to run the project for a given period of time. What is lacking in this figure is usually a comprehensive analysis that provides burn rate information down to a granular level, providing the cost side of a cost-benefit analysis. Its easy to take consulting costs for the last month, divide by working days and produce a burn rate, but to use burn rate as a legitimate project management tool requires a more complex model.

At a minimum, burn rate analysis should include the following:

  • Consulting and contractor cost calculations on a per-team or functional area basis. Consulting costs can vary widely based on a particular skill set or area of expertise, so a universal average simply does not cut it. This figure should be based on the smallest unit of measure tracked in your project plan, generally a daily or weekly average. Be sure to include any additional costs that may be incurred through overtime work.
  • Cost for salaried employees working on the project. All too often, these resources are considered freebees as the project does not write a check each month to an outside vendor. However, pulling fulltime resources onto a project incurs replacement costs to fill their former position which should be included in a burn rate calculation.
  • Travel expenses for both contractors and fulltime employees may generally be calculated based on a project average. More sophisticated analysis can track these costs on a per-team basis, and include additional adjustments for working weekends or schedule changes that might incur additional travel costs.
  • Facilities costs such as additional real-estate, workspace setup and technology requirements should be factored into the burn rate on a per-person basis. Ive visited projects where spiraling resource requirements have necessitated renting modular office space, or constructing new facilities in old warehouses, etc. All significant costs not properly accounted for in burn rate analysis.

After gathering the required information to cover the basic points above, a model can be built for the entire project, tying costs to headcount on a daily or weekly basis. With this model a new financial urgency can be injected into a project. If a key manager makes a decision that extends the project by one week, no longer is there some vague understanding of what that decision will cost. With a through burn rate analysis, an accurate price tag can be placed on any decision that will affect a projects timeline. With accurate costs known in advance, executives and project managers can focus on determining what benefit will be derived from a scope or timeline decision with full knowledge of the financial repercussions of that decision.

Author Bio:

Patrick Gray

Patrick Gray is the founder and President of the Prevoyance Group, located in Harrison, NY. Prevoyance Group focuses on providing Project Performance consulting, which combines project management and process improvement to ensure large IT projects deliver organizational value. Past clients include Gillette, Pitney Bowes, OfficeMax and several other Fortune 500 and 1000 companies.

Patrick graduated from Boston College with a triple major from the Carroll School of Management. After spending his youth ?anchored? to the East Coast of the United States, Patrick?s consulting career has allowed him to work in and explore the rest of the US and much of Europe. His recent work has focused on international projects, and he has led implementations for foreign subsidiaries of several US companies. Patrick frequently speaks for large audiences during client engagements, and once had the opportunity to speak at a former Royal Manor House near Windsor Castle.

Always investigating new methods to improve project performance, Patrick has a Six Sigma Black Belt certificate from Villanova University and is a member of the Project Management Institute. He has published several articles and has been quoted numerous times in major publications such as the New York Times, InfoWorld and Business 2.0.

Also active outside the consulting world, Patrick is also a co-founder and member of the Board of Directors of Connected Minds, an organization dedicated to capturing often neglected perspectives of historical events. Rather than present history through the words and writings of its ?greatest figures,? Connected Minds captures history through video and audio recordings of everyday people who lived through these events.

You can also reach this article by using: Feel The Burn: Making Project Decisions Based On Burn Rate, Companies & Business
 
 
 

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