In October 2003 Petermans Securities won an 18-month labor-intensive product development contract awarded by Boma Industries. The award was a cost reimbursable contract with a cost target of €2.66 million and a fixed fee of 6.75 percent of the target. This contract would be Petermans' first attempt at using formal project management, including a newly developed project management methodology.
Petermans had won several previous contracts from Boma Industries, but they were all fixed-price contracts with no requirement to use formal project management with earned value reporting. The terms and conditions of this contract included the following key points:
• Project management (formalized) was to be used.
• Earned value cost schedule reporting was a requirement.
• The first earned value report was due at the end of the second month's effort and monthly thereafter.
• There would be two technical interchange meetings, one at the end of the sixth month and another at the end of the twelfth month.
Earned value reporting was new to Petermans Securities. In order to respond to the original request for proposal (RFP), a consultant was hired to conduct a four-hour seminar on earned value management. In attendance were the project manager who was assigned to the Boma RFP and would manage the contract after contract award, the entire cost accounting department, and two line managers. The cost accounting group was not happy about having to learn earned value management techniques, but they reluctantly agreed in order to bid on the Boma RFP. On previous projects with Boma Industries, monthly interchange meetings were held. On this contract, it seemed that Boma Industries believed that fewer interchange meeting would be necessary because the information necessary coul ...