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Setting tolerance limits for statistical project control using earned value management
Institution:1. Department of Administrative Sciences, Metropolitan College, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, USA;2. Department of Decision Sciences, School of Business, The George Washington University, 2201 G Street, NW, Funger Hall, Suite 415, Washington, D.C. 20052, USA;1. Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, Ghent University, Tweekerkenstraat 2, 9000 Ghent, Belgium;2. Technology and Operations Management Area, Vlerick Business School, Reep 1, 9000 Ghent, Belgium;3. Department of Management Science and Innovation, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
Abstract:Project control has been a research topic since decades that attracts both academics and practitioners. Project control systems indicate the direction of change in preliminary planning variables compared with actual performance. In case their current project performance deviates from the planned performance, a warning is indicated by the system in order to take corrective actions.Earned value management/earned schedule (EVM/ES) systems have played a central role in project control, and provide straightforward key performance metrics that measure the deviations between planned and actual performance in terms of time and cost. In this paper, a new statistical project control procedure sets tolerance limits to improve the discriminative power between progress situations that are either statistically likely or less likely to occur under the project baseline schedule. In this research, the tolerance limits are derived from subjective estimates for the activity durations of the project. Using the existing and commonly known EVM/ES metrics, the resulting project control charts will have an improved ability to trigger actions when variation in a project?s progress exceeds certain predefined thresholdsA computational experiment has been set up to test the ability of these statistical project control charts to discriminate between variations that are either acceptable or unacceptable in the duration of the individual activities. The computational experiments compare the use of statistical tolerance limits with traditional earned value management thresholds and validate their power to report warning signals when projects tend to deviate significantly from the baseline schedule.
Keywords:Project management  Scheduling  Risk  Simulation
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