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Schedule and Cost Growth

Schedule and Cost Growth. R. L. Coleman, J. R. Summerville, M. E. Dameron 35 th ADoDCAS. PMI 2002 National Conference November, 2002. Outline. Descriptive Statistics Investigating the Hypothesis Is There a Curve? Normalizing for Dollar Size Correction Factors and Their Use

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Schedule and Cost Growth

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  1. Schedule and Cost Growth R. L. Coleman, J. R. Summerville, M. E. Dameron 35th ADoDCAS PMI 2002 National Conference November, 2002

  2. Outline • Descriptive Statistics • Investigating the Hypothesis • Is There a Curve? • Normalizing for Dollar Size • Correction Factors and Their Use • Correcting EACs and Risk Models • Analysis Conclusions • Modeling Schedule Duration in Networks • How Networks Operate • Some Toy Problems

  3. Background • At the MDA* Risk Working Group of 29/30 May 01, Schedule Risk was a major topic • Action Item: • Investigate Schedule Risk • Content variation • Cost risk* • PERT • Time and budget constraints * The subject of this paper This work was conducted for and funded by the IC CAIG and MDA

  4. The Hypothesis • Many people believe1 a graph of cost growth vs. schedule growth as illustrated below: Cost Growth Factor 1.0 Schedule Growth Factor 1.0 1 E. g., Cost Risk Schedule – CEAC, Dr. M. Anvari, First BMDO Cost Symposium, 4 October 2001

  5. The Data • We analyzed data from the RAND Cost Growth Database with both thefollowing characteristics: • Programs with E&MD only • Because growth is different for those with and without PDRR • Programs with schedule data in the requisite fields • There were 59 points. The analysis follows.

  6. Descriptive Statistics for Schedule Growth • We will look at these descriptive statistics in the following slides • Distribution shape • Scatter plots • Dollar weighting

  7. Schedule Growth Distribution PDF for Schedule Growth The distribution is highly skewed CDF for Schedule Growth Note this region These two graphs look much like CGF graphs, but the PDF is tighter here, and the CDF is steeper.

  8. Basic Statistics of Schedule ChangeAnalyzed data only Observations • Mean 1.29 • Standard Deviation 0.54 • CV 42% • 75th %-ile 1.46 • 61st %-ile 1.29 • 50th %-ile 1.11 • 25th %-ile 1.00 • Shrinkers 9/59 15.3% • Steady 12/59 20.3% • Stretchers 38/59 64.4% There is some dispersion and tendency to extremes The distribution is highly skewed, as was seen in the histogram But, many programs have little-to-no growth

  9. Basic Scatterplots – SGF & Sked vs. Dollar Size • We see the usual size effect, analogous to that in CGF graphs • Bigger programs have less schedule growth

  10. The “1/x Pattern” The 1/x pattern is virtually universal.

  11. CGF and SGF vs. Cost Size • The pattern is similar, but CGF is generally more extreme: • Higher highs • Lower lows* • * See later plot

  12. Basic Scatterplots – Dollar Size vs. Length At Phase 2 start, there is a vague connection between length and size At end, there is no connection We would not say that longer programs are costlier

  13. Basic Scatterplots – Length vs. $ Size At Phase 2 start, there is a vague connection between size and length At end, there is no connection We would not say that costlier programs are longer

  14. Basic Scatterplots – Cost Growth There is no obvious connection between CGF and SGF

  15. Basic Scatterplots - Length There is a slight tendency for longer programs to grow less

  16. Weighting by Length- and Dollar-Size Dollar Weighting shows a more severe effect Schedule growth is less than cost growth Weighting by Length- and Dollar-Size both reinforce size effects

  17. Sorted Graphs This graph is a zoom-in SortedCGF shows more growth than SortedSGF (To the left and right of the x-intercept, Pink y-values are more extreme)

  18. Correlation and Other Joint Effects

  19. CGF SGF Correlation and Other Joint Effects Between Schedule Growth and Cost Growth • We will look for correlation • Parametric • Non-parametric • Trends in sorted data • We will investigate the hypothesis for schedule growth vs. cost growth • We will normalize by dollar size to eliminate any inadvertent distortion

  20. Correlation - Parametric There is no linear parametric correlation

  21. Correlation – Non-Parametric • Test • Cox Stewart Test for Trend test statistic of 18 is within the critical values of 8.41 and 18.59 • The non-parametric test cannot reject no correlation • Used CGF Sort because CGF had less ties, thus less ambiguity • Previous parametric test cannot reject no correlation • Moving averages of CGF do not show a rise • Conclusion: Cannot reject “no correlation” • Visual presentations follow

  22. Patterns in SGF and CGF The gentle rise here conforms with the near-critical test statistic There is no strong rising pattern in either CGF or SGF after sorting on the other

  23. Investigating the Hypothesis CGF SGF

  24. CGF by Regime Larger CGFs, but Some small n’s Largest CGF Smallest CGF Programs divided into SGF Regimes show a marked pattern, like the hypothesis suggested

  25. CGF by Regime Programs divided into SGF regimes look somewhat like the hypothesis suggested they would

  26. There is a PatternbutIs There a Curve? CGF SGF

  27. Is there a curve? CGF • There is no pattern on either side of the data SGF

  28. Is there a Curve? CGF SGF There is no reasonable grouping of the stretchers that will produce a curve. Any grouping of points has the same average.

  29. Normalizing for Dollar SizeTo Remove Inadvertent Dollar Size Distortion

  30. Size Normalization • We know there is a size effect in CGF • We think there is a size effect in SGF • We must investigate schedule effects free from size effects • First we will look at a scatter plot • Then we will normalize1 all programs for dollar size, and compare to actuals • If there is a pattern in any regime, we will worry • If there is no regime pattern, we can conclude there is no dollar size distortion • We chose to correct out dollar-size because it is stronger, and because we were worried about a length and SGF correlation causing mischief if we tried to correct it out 1 See backup for norming algorithm

  31. Is there a Dollar-Size Bias? “Steady” programs are probably attenuated vertically (growth bias) “Shrink” programs maybe attenuatedhorizontally (size bias) “Growth” programs span the full range horizontally and vertically Programs in the 3 regimes show no clear size bias, but a clear growth bias

  32. Normed vs Actual CGFs by Regime Averages for size-normed programs show the same patterns, so there is no size distortion Note: Corrected 20 Apr 02. Minor differences

  33. Normed vs Actual CGFs by Regime Both sets of bars look like the hypothesis suggested they would

  34. Hypothesis – The Answer • The Hypothesis was about right • The below is all we can say for sure • Some liberties have been taken with the graph CGF SGF Cost Growth Factor NB 1: Nominal has growth 1.43 1.24 1.12 1.0 NB 2: Thecurveis not validated, just the 3 regimes Schedule Growth Factor 1.0

  35. Correction Factors and Their Use

  36. Correction Factors and Their Use • We must correct for schedule growth, if we can predict it. The form of the correction is unclear: We might use these factors to correct a risk model’s nominal growth factors These factors describe what happens if schedules change. We might use these factors to adjust an EAC if a schedule changed.

  37. Conclusions • Schedule growth is less extreme than cost growth • But patterns are the same • There is a cost-size and length effect, just as for cost growth • Dollar-larger programs lengthen less • Longer programs lengthen less • Neither cost nor length predict the other • There is a difference in cost growth by schedule-growth regime Relative to Relative to RegimeCGFNo ChangeAverage • Programs that shorten 1.42 1.25 1.14 • Programs that stay the same 1.13 1.00 0.91 • Programs that lengthen 1.24 1.09 1.00 • We now have tools to correct EACs and risk analyses The hypothesis was essentially true But there is no curve in evidence

  38. Modeling Schedule Duration of Networks

  39. Schedule Growth Distributions • For schedule network models, a distribution is useful to model durations • We will provide a distribution for program-level network schedule growth • Useable for confidence intervals and predictions for single programs • Useable for systems of systems, to simulate component systems as single entities • This section will provide a detailed analysis for fitting the schedule growth data to a distribution • Lognormal and Extreme Value distributions show the most promise • Extreme Value is the most theoretically compelling • Extreme value distributions are used to model the largest of a set of random variables, and networks complete when the last event is finished

  40. Best Fits vs. Empirical Data Note disproportionate amount of 1.0’s Note disproportionate number of 1.0’s • Extreme Value Distribution is what we expect theoretically • Extreme Value more peaked, appears to represent data better than Lognormal • But we will see the number of 1.0’s in the data base (schedules finishing “on time”) creates problems in the fit statistics

  41. Why are Values of 1 more Common?And who cares? • There is intense pressure to complete on time, and late finishes are easily discerned • The consequence of an early finish is to “ship” a flawed system • Flaws can be fixed after testing • There is a temptation to drag out work if you are done early • Perhaps the implication is that the customer should put less emphasis on finish time and more on test results? • In any event, it is altogether likely that there would be cosmetic 1.0 SGFs, and the data would seem to reflect that • We will find a way to deal with this in the analysis, and recommend a modeling approach

  42. Extreme Value Distribution Fit • The CDF of the data is oddly shaped due to a large number of 1.0’s and fails a Kolmogorov-Smirnov test for the Extreme Value Distribution • We believe the disproportionate amount of 1.0’s is politically motivated and not a natural occurrence • This causes a “gap” between the empirical and fitted distributions • We will next examine a hypothetical distribution with the 1.0’s redistributed along the “gap” area (using the Ext Val fit) Note “gap” caused by 1.0’s Empirical Schedule Growth CDF vs Fitted Extreme Value K-S stat = 0.161 95% Critical Value (n=59) = 0.1131 “gap” 1. Lilliefors methodology applied to Extreme Value distribution to generate critical value with Monte Carlo simulation

  43. The Hypothetical “Natural” CDF 1.0’s redistributed along the “gap” area (in red) better represents what we believe to be the “natural” distribution 12 points at 1.0 Revised Empirical and Extreme Value Fit Extreme Value: m = 1.12 b = 0.28 12 points respread K-S stat = 0.093 95% Critical Value (n=59) = 0.113 The revised empirical produces an Extreme Value fit with K-S stat below the critical value. This suggests Extreme Value is a good representation of the natural SGF distribution

  44. What the test showsAnd what it doesn’t show • The redistributed data pass a K-S test • But, the test cannot take the redistribution of data into account • This is analogous to loss of degrees of freedom, but the literature provides no remedy • We fully realize that this is not a “valid statistical test” • But it strongly suggests that the underlying distribution is the Extreme Value distribution

  45. Hybrid Distribution Alternative • The hypothetical natural (re-distributed) distribution is reasonable for use • But, if you wish to capture the effects of too many programs appearing to finish “on schedule” then a hybrid distribution should be examined • To do this we must consider the probability of 1.0 vs. the rest of the outcomes as discrete cases • P(1.0) = 12/59 = 20.3% • P(Extreme Value) = 79.7% • The Extreme Value parameters would then be estimated from the data with the 1.0’s removed 20.3% (i.e. 12/59) probability of 1.0 Hybrid Schedule Growth PDF with Histogram (original SGF data) 79.7% probability of Extreme Value Distribution (fitted w/o 1.0’s)

  46. Hybrid Distribution Alternative Extreme Value fit to data without 1.0s: K-S stat is less than the critical value. The Extreme Value is a good representation of this data. Extreme Value: m = 1.16 b = 0.32 K-S stat = 0.087 95% Critical Value (n=47) = 0.1261 Results of simulation combining this distribution with a discrete 20.3% probability of a 1.0 1. Lilliefors methodology applied to Extreme Value distribution to generate critical value with Monte Carlo simulation

  47. Distribution Conclusions • We have shown that the Extreme Value distribution is well supported as the natural distribution • We have shown that the pieces of the hybrid distribution fit the data • And, the hybrid reproduces the actuals well • We recommend using the hybrid • But if “political” or “cosmetic” effects are absent, we recommend using the hypothetical natural distribution

  48. How Networks OperateSome “Toy Problems”

  49. Independent Tasks • Tasks 1 and 2 begin at the same time and are independent • Both tasks must be complete before the system is ready • Duration is modeled as a uniform distribution ranging from Estimated ± 20% • Note that it is symmetric! • What is the Expected Duration? Task 1 Duration 9 Start End Task 2 Duration 10

  50. Independent Tasks Task 1 Duration 9 Start End Task 2 Duration 10 Each task is uniformly distributed from –20% to +20% of the expected duration The “shorter” Task 1 is the critical path 20% of the time! The average system duration is 10.91 months … longer than the estimated duration of either component task

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