Urgent : Delay Days

V
Vrinda M 👤 Member for 18 years

Please explain if a project has Cost Variance of 6.93% and Baseline Duration of 486 days how can we calculate the Delay days based on Early % Variance.Can somebody explain

If Planned 16.14%

   Actual    9.21%

  Cost Variance - 6.93%

S
sharief sheikh 👤 Member for 18 years 3 months

100% of cost = 484 days

6.93% of cost variance = 484/100*6.93 = 33 days.

The above correlation may not be correct but just for a rough idea.

P
Patrick Mullen 👤 Member for 6 years

The cost variance CAN be an indicator that your schedule is ahead/behind, but like Zoltan said, if you have major costs that will be incurred later in the project, then the cost variance won't tell you an accurate story. If the schedule is reporting delays, the cost variance can be a good tool to help validate if the project is truly behind, but you won't be able to accurately determine the amount of delays based on this unless you have something like a linear project with very predictable production/cashflows. 

Z
Zoltan Palffy 👤 Member for 16 years 10 months

you can't get days delayed from cost information. There is not alwasy a correlation.

for example I can be ahead on my cost becuse I billed large purchases early in the project but I have not installed anything.

why are you not looking at the total float to determine your days delyed ? 

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