An important aspect of controlling costs on a Job or project is to know not only the costs already booked to a job, but also those costs to which you are already committed through purchase orders you have placed with suppliers. These job commitments become costs as purchase orders are delivered and suppliers submit invoices for payment.
Earned value is simply the budgeted cost of whatever work you have completed.
Committed cost comes under actual cost calculation.
Regards,
Manu
Member for
22 years 10 months
Member for22 years10 months
Submitted by Naveed Tariq, … on Wed, 2005-12-14 04:43
Thank you for your response. Although I know this forum specializes in planning and scheduling, I am pretty sure there are professionals with experience in the cost control area. I would appreciate any brief idea of what cost commitment is. I also would like to know if the use of cost commitment excludes the use of earned value (and viceversa). Thank you again.
Member for
22 years 11 months
Member for22 years11 months
Submitted by Bernard Ertl on Mon, 2005-10-24 10:43
Member for
20 yearsRE: Cost Budgeting vs. Cost Estimating
Hi Carmen
An important aspect of controlling costs on a Job or project is to know not only the costs already booked to a job, but also those costs to which you are already committed through purchase orders you have placed with suppliers. These job commitments become costs as purchase orders are delivered and suppliers submit invoices for payment.
Earned value is simply the budgeted cost of whatever work you have completed.
Committed cost comes under actual cost calculation.
Regards,
Manu
Member for
22 years 10 monthsRE: Cost Budgeting vs. Cost Estimating
An estimate is a best guess/projection of the eventual cost.
Budget is the distribution of estimate over time. (Monthly cash flows)
You can use this definition for both resource and cost.
Cheers!!
Member for
20 yearsRE: Cost Budgeting vs. Cost Estimating
Thank you for your response. Although I know this forum specializes in planning and scheduling, I am pretty sure there are professionals with experience in the cost control area. I would appreciate any brief idea of what cost commitment is. I also would like to know if the use of cost commitment excludes the use of earned value (and viceversa). Thank you again.
Member for
22 years 11 monthsRE: Cost Budgeting vs. Cost Estimating
An estimate is a best guess/projection of the eventual cost.
A budget is the amount of money available/approved to get the job done.
The budget is usually based upon an estimate, but may be higher or lower.
Bernard Ertl
InterPlan Systems