Cost estimates

A quantitative assessment of the likely costs to complete project work at the activity, work package, or project level. Estimates may be single-point values or ranges and should state the method, assumptions, data sources, and confidence.

Key Points

  • Quantifies expected costs for defined scope items, often with ranges that reflect uncertainty.
  • Common methods include analogous, parametric, bottom-up, three-point estimating, and vendor bid analysis.
  • Should cover direct and indirect costs, fixed and variable costs, and one-time and recurring expenses.
  • Include contingency for known-unknown risks; management reserve is controlled by leadership and not embedded in activity estimates.
  • Quality depends on clear scope, reliable data, expert judgment, and documented estimating basis.
  • Refined iteratively as information improves and risks are addressed (progressive elaboration).

Purpose of Analysis

The goal is to develop credible, decision-ready cost figures that enable budgeting, trade-offs, and funding approvals.

  • Support creation of the cost baseline and cash flow forecasts.
  • Inform make-or-buy, scope, schedule, and risk-response choices.
  • Provide a defensible basis for stakeholder negotiations and approvals.
  • Enable contingency planning and reserve allocation.

Method Steps

  • Define estimate scope: identify activities/work packages from the WBS and clarify assumptions and constraints.
  • Select estimating approach per item: analogous, parametric, bottom-up, three-point, or vendor bids.
  • Gather data: historical information, productivity rates, resource rates, quotes, and risk data.
  • Estimate at the lowest practical level; document methods, assumptions, data sources, and calculation logic.
  • Incorporate risk: apply ranges or three-point values and calculate contingency based on risk analysis.
  • Aggregate to higher levels (work package, control account, project) and check for omissions or double-counting.
  • Review with SMEs and stakeholders; refine and baseline when appropriate, then update as changes occur.

Inputs Needed

  • Scope baseline, WBS, and WBS dictionary.
  • Resource requirements and resource rate information.
  • Project schedule or activity list with durations and sequencing.
  • Risk register and risk analysis results.
  • Historical data, lessons learned, and organizational estimating policies.
  • Market rates, vendor quotes, and procurement information.
  • Assumptions, constraints, and stakeholder cost expectations.

Outputs Produced

  • Activity or work package cost estimates (single values or ranges with confidence levels).
  • Documented estimating basis (methods used, data sources, assumptions, constraints, and range/accuracy).
  • Recommended contingency reserves tied to identified risks.
  • Updates to risks, assumptions, and lessons learned based on estimating insights.

Interpretation Tips

  • Prefer ranges with stated confidence over single-point values, especially early in the project.
  • Check if estimates include or exclude contingency, indirect costs, taxes, and inflation.
  • Validate drivers (e.g., labor hours, productivity, materials) and compare with benchmarks or past projects.
  • Watch for optimism bias; use three-point or reference class data to counter it.
  • Align estimates to the WBS to ensure full scope coverage and traceability.
  • Update estimates as scope or risk changes to keep the cost baseline realistic.

Example

For a work package requiring 200 labor hours at 60 per hour and materials at 4,000, the deterministic estimate is 200 × 60 + 4,000 = 16,000. Using three-point data for labor hours (O = 180, M = 200, P = 240), the expected hours are (180 + 4×200 + 240) / 6 = 203.3 hours, giving 203.3 × 60 + 4,000 ≈ 16,200. If risk analysis indicates a 10% contingency, the range could be 16,200 ± 10%.

Pitfalls

  • Using a single-point estimate without stating its range or confidence.
  • Ignoring indirect costs, overhead, taxes, or currency effects.
  • Relying on outdated rates or poor-quality historical data.
  • Double-counting scope or reserves when aggregating estimates.
  • Failing to involve appropriate subject matter experts and suppliers.
  • Not documenting assumptions, leading to disputes and rework.

PMP Example Question

A project manager presents an activity estimate as 50,000 ± 20% with 75% confidence. What should the manager provide to best support stakeholder review of this estimate?

  1. A detailed schedule network diagram.
  2. The documented estimating basis, including methods, data sources, and assumptions.
  3. A change request to add management reserve to the estimate.
  4. A procurement plan with selected vendors.

Correct Answer: B — The documented estimating basis, including methods, data sources, and assumptions.

Explanation: Stakeholders need to understand how the estimate was developed and what it includes to judge credibility and risk. The estimating basis clarifies approach, inputs, ranges, and confidence.

AI for Project Managers — Build Plans Faster, Lead Better

Turn messy inputs into structured project plans in minutes. If you are a project manager tired of spending hours on documentation, this course shows you how to use AI to work faster while staying fully in control.

This is not a generic AI course. You will learn how to use AI as a practical co-pilot to build real project artifacts—charters, WBS, schedules, risk registers, and executive reports—using structured, reliable prompt frameworks.

You will also learn how to keep your project aligned across scope, schedule, cost, and risk, and how to interpret performance data like Earned Value Management to support better decisions and communication.

Everything is designed for immediate use. You get ready-to-use prompt templates and workflows you can apply right away in your projects. Watch the video to see how it works and start building your first AI-supported project plan.



Become an AI-First Agile Leader!

HK School of Management empowers you to master AI as your most powerful co-pilot—without the complexity. Transform your agile leadership with practical, prompt-based workflows and proven strategies designed for real-world scrum challenges. For the price of lunch, you get the tools to automate mundane tasks, refine backlogs with precision, and drive unprecedented efficiency in your team. Backed by our 30-day money-back guarantee—zero risk, real impact.

Learn More