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Topic History of : Burn Rate

Max. showing the last 6 posts - (Last post first)
4 years 10 months ago #17284

Anonymous

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Dear Rahul,
one of our colleagues has indicated that the project we have funded has nearly 89% burn rate, and has provided the financial data. I will appreciate any help you can provide me in verifying the data, as I am not project person and not sure how the figures fit in with the data to arrive at 89%. If you can guide me step by step by relating the data to the formula. If you are willing to help me, I can share the data (please provide me your email)

Thank you
Regards,
Rushdhi
5 years 6 days ago #16775

Marek

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Thank you very much for full answer!!!
This is the part that I had trouble finding: 'Since the burn rate is above 1, then the project is spending the budget faster than it should, and may finish over budget."
8 years 1 week ago #7113

Rahul Kakkar

Rahul Kakkar's Avatar

Hi Michael,

Burn rate is basically a metric to assess the performance of a certain project with respect to the original budget. In short, burn rate is the rate at which the project is spending its original budget.

The burn rate is an excellent “early alarm” that the project may be over-budget. A burn rate bigger than 1 should be immediately reported to the stakeholders. Since the burn rate seldom goes down, it is extremely unwise to “hope for the better” and not to report this metric to the stakeholders.

Burn Rate = 1/CPI

Where CPI is the Cost Performance Index which is calculated the following way:

CPI = EV / AC

Looking at the above formula of calculating CPI, a more direct formula for the burn rate would be:

Burn Rate = 1/CPI = 1/EV/AC = AC/EV

This can be explained with the help of the following example:

Assuming the Earned Value of a construction project so far is $3,000,000, and the Actual Cost is $3,500,000. Then:
Burn Rate = AC/EV = $3,500,000/$3,000,000 = 1.16
Since the burn rate is above 1, then the project is spending the budget faster than it should, and may finish over budget.

Your response of EV / AC is the CPI and not the burn rate. CPI measures the cost efficiency of a project, is the budget being spent as planned?

Hope this helps.
8 years 1 week ago #7109

MIchael

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I am at the part of my training where I take as many assessments as I can find. I am identifying gaps but also putting my knowledge to the test.
I recently came across a question I am getting a lot of contradicting answers on. I am finding no consistency.

What is the equation for Burn Rate? I originally used EV/AC, which according the the mock exam I am taking is incorrect. Upon further investigation, I am finding a lot of people using EV/AC AND AC/EV or 1/CPI. It wouldn't have been that bad to process of elimination but both EV/AC and AC/EV are listed as an option to pick from.

Which is correct and if possible please go into detail as to why that is the correct answer.

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