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EVM — Three Core Values

PMBOK §7 · Cost
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Planned Value (PV)
BCWS
PV = % planned × BACReference valueAuthorized budget assigned to scheduled work at a point in time. What should be done by now?Use as baseline for SV and SPI calculationsPV at 100% = BAC. PV is always time-phased.
Earned Value (EV)
BCWP
EV = % complete × BACPerformance valueBudget value of work actually accomplished. What IS done, expressed in budget dollars?Calculate this first before CV, SV, CPI, SPIEV uses % COMPLETE (not % spent). Classic trap question!
Actual Cost (AC)
ACWP
AC = Actual $ spentReality checkTotal cost incurred for work performed. How much has actually been spent?Track against EV to identify cost overrunsAC has no upper limit. EV ÷ AC = CPI.
Budget at Completion (BAC)BAC = Sum of all PVFixed baselineTotal approved project budget. PV at project end.Never change without formal Change ControlBAC ≠ EAC. BAC is the plan; EAC is the forecast.
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EVM — Variances

PMBOK §7 · §6
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Cost Variance (CV)CV = EVACCV > 0 = Under budget ✅
CV < 0 = Over budget ❌
Dollar difference between earned value and actual cost. Are you spending more than the work is worth?Negative: identify root cause, implement corrective action, update EACFormula starts with EV. "Earned before Actual." CV can stay negative at project end.
Schedule Variance (SV)SV = EVPVSV > 0 = Ahead ✅
SV < 0 = Behind ❌
Dollar value of schedule performance. How much ahead or behind are you in work accomplished?Negative: crash schedule, fast-track, add resources, re-baseline if neededSV = 0 at project end ALWAYS (EV=PV=BAC). Limitation of SV — doesn't measure time delay directly.
Variance at Completion (VAC)VAC = BACEACVAC > 0 = Under budget ✅
VAC < 0 = Over budget ❌
Expected dollar difference between original budget and forecast final costPresent to sponsor; update funding requests if VAC is significantly negativeIf CPI < 1, EAC > BAC → VAC will be negative. Report this proactively.
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EVM — Performance Indexes

PMBOK §7 · §6
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Cost Performance Index (CPI)CPI = EV ÷ ACCPI > 1.0 = Efficient ✅
CPI < 1.0 = Inefficient ❌
CPI = 1.0 = On target
For every $1 spent, how much value is earned? CPI=0.80 means 80¢ of value per dollar spent.CPI < 1: investigate cost drivers; update EAC; escalate if persistentMost critical EVM index. Used in EAC = BAC/CPI. Research shows CPI rarely improves significantly after 20% complete.
Schedule Performance Index (SPI)SPI = EV ÷ PVSPI > 1.0 = Efficient ✅
SPI < 1.0 = Behind ❌
SPI = 1.0 = On schedule
For every $1 of planned work, how much is actually being accomplished? SPI=0.80 = only 80% of planned work done.SPI < 1: schedule recovery plan, resource reallocation, scope reductionSPI → 1.0 at project end (limitation). Does not directly measure time. Combine with CPM for schedule analysis.
Critical Ratio (CR)CR = CPI × SPICR > 1.0 = Good overall ✅
CR < 1.0 = Problems ❌
Combined measure of cost AND schedule efficiency. Single index showing overall project health.CR < 0.80 is typically a trigger for escalation to managementLess common on exam but tests critical thinking — combines both indexes.
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EVM — Forecasting (EAC, ETC)

PMBOK §7.4
MetricFormulaWhen to UseMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
EAC — CPI Trend
Most Common
EAC = BAC ÷ CPIPast cost performance is expected to CONTINUE through project endIf inefficiency continues, final cost = BAC divided by cost efficiency ratioPresent to sponsor as most likely scenario if no corrective action takenDEFAULT formula unless question specifies otherwise. Exam favorite!
EAC — New EstimateEAC = AC + ETCOriginal estimates are fundamentally flawed; team re-estimated remaining workActual spent + new bottom-up estimate for remaining workConduct bottom-up re-estimate; document assumptions; update scheduleUse when question says "re-estimated," "new estimate," or "original estimate was wrong"
EAC — Remaining at Plan RateEAC = AC + (BACEV)Past variance was ATYPICAL and will NOT recur; remaining work at original rateAssumes future CPI = 1.0. Only past work was over/under.Document rationale for why variance was one-time eventUse when question says "atypical," "one-time," or "won't happen again"
EAC — CPI × SPIEAC = AC + [(BAC−EV) ÷ (CPI×SPI)]Both cost AND schedule efficiency influence remaining work (most pessimistic)Schedule pressure compounds cost inefficiency going forwardMost conservative estimate; use when project is behind AND over budgetUsed when project has BOTH cost and schedule problems. Results in highest EAC.
Estimate to Complete (ETC)ETC = EACACAny time remaining cost is neededHow much MORE money is needed to finish? (not total — just remaining)Use to update cost forecasts and funding requestsETC ≠ EAC. EAC = total. ETC = remaining. ETC = EAC − AC.
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EVM — To-Complete Performance Index (TCPI)

PMBOK §7.4
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
TCPI (based on BAC)TCPI = (BACEV) ÷ (BACAC)TCPI > 1.0 = Challenging ❌
TCPI < 1.0 = Achievable ✅
Required cost efficiency for remaining work to finish within ORIGINAL budget. Can you still make it?Compare to current CPI. If TCPI > CPI, original budget likely unachievable.If TCPI(BAC) significantly > CPI, tell sponsor the original budget is at risk. Classic exam scenario.
TCPI (based on EAC)TCPI = (BACEV) ÷ (EACAC)TCPI > 1.0 = New target also challenging
TCPI < 1.0 = New budget achievable
Required efficiency to finish within REVISED (EAC) budget. Is the new forecast realistic?If TCPI(EAC) also > current CPI, EAC may need further revision upwardBoth TCPI formulas have same numerator (BAC−EV). Denominator changes: BAC−AC vs EAC−AC.
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Schedule Formulas

PMBOK §6 · Schedule Management
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Total Float (TF)
CPM
TF = LSES = LFEFTF = 0 → Critical Path ❌
TF > 0 → Flexibility ✅
TF < 0 → Behind schedule ❌
Amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the project end dateZero float = critical — prioritize resources. Negative float = must crash or fast-track.Critical path = longest path = zero float. All activities on CP have TF=0.
Free Float (FF)FF = ES(successor) − EF(current) − 1FF > 0 = Can delay w/o affecting successorAmount of time an activity can delay without delaying the EARLY START of its successorUse to manage resource leveling without affecting downstream tasksFF ≤ TF always. FF is activity-level; TF is path-level.
Early Start (ES)ES = EF(predecessor) + 1Forward pass calculationEarliest an activity can start based on predecessorsUse forward pass to find all ES and EF values firstForward pass: left to right. Use the LARGEST EF of all predecessors.
Early Finish (EF)EF = ES + Duration − 1Forward pass calculationEarliest an activity can finishTrack against baseline; EF of last activity = Project Early FinishEF of last activity on CP = project duration.
Late Start (LS)LS = LF − Duration + 1Backward pass calculationLatest an activity can start without delaying projectIf ES = LS, the activity is criticalBackward pass: right to left. Use the SMALLEST LS of all successors.
Late Finish (LF)LF = LS(successor) − 1Backward pass calculationLatest an activity can finish without delaying projectCompare LF to EF to find floatLF of last activity = Imposed project deadline (or EF if no constraint).
Project DurationDuration = EF(last activity) − ES(first) + 1Sum of critical pathTotal calendar duration from project start to finishCompare to deadline; identify compression opportunities if exceeds targetAlways calculate via CPM/forward pass, not just adding durations.

Float Relationships & Lead/Lag

PMBOK §6.3
MetricFormula / ConceptCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
LeadNegative lag (−lag)Successor starts BEFORE predecessor finishesAllows overlap between activities to compress scheduleUse carefully — increases risk. Document assumptions.Lead is a schedule compression tool. Lead = negative lag on most software.
LagPositive delay (+lag)Mandatory wait between activitiesRequired delay — e.g., concrete must cure 7 days before loadingFactor into schedule baseline; identify critical lagsLag ADDS time. Lead SAVES time. Don't confuse them.
Project Buffer (CCPM)Buffer = 50% of individual task safety time pooledProtects project end dateCritical Chain PM: aggregated time buffer placed at end of critical chainMonitor buffer consumption rate vs. chain completion rateCCPM reduces Parkinson's Law and student syndrome effects.
Feeding Buffer (CCPM)Buffer between non-critical chain and critical chainProtects critical chain from delays on feeding chainsPrevents non-critical path delays from hitting the critical chainPlace at junction points where non-critical feeds into critical chainFeeding buffer ≠ project buffer. Know the difference for CCPM questions.
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PERT — Three-Point Estimates

PMBOK §6.4
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
PERT Estimate (Beta Distribution)
Most Common
tE = (O + 4M + P) ÷ 6Weighted average favoring Most Likely (4×weight)Best estimate using Optimistic, Most Likely, Pessimistic. Beta weights most likely heavily.Use for cost or duration estimates when uncertainty existsFormula: O + 4M + P divided by 6. The "4" is the key. Beta = PERT = exam default.
Triangular DistributiontE = (O + M + P) ÷ 3Equal weighting of all three estimatesSimple average of three estimates. Less sophisticated than Beta PERT.Use when insufficient data to justify beta weightingTriangular = ÷3. Beta PERT = ÷6 (with 4M). Exam will specify which to use.
PERT Standard Deviation (σ)σ = (PO) ÷ 6Larger σ = more uncertainty/riskMeasure of estimate uncertainty. Large P−O spread = high risk activity.Activities with high σ need risk response plansσ measures spread/uncertainty. Use to identify high-risk activities in schedule.
PERT Variance (σ²)σ² = [(PO) ÷ 6]²Used for path variance calculationSquare of standard deviation. Used to calculate path-level uncertainty.Sum variances along critical path to get path variancePath σ = √(sum of individual σ²). Classic multi-activity PERT question.
Path Standard Deviationσ(path) = √(Σ individual σ²)Larger = more path uncertaintyCombined uncertainty of all activities on a path. Used with normal distribution tables.Use to calculate probability of meeting a deadline68.27% within ±1σ, 95.45% within ±2σ, 99.73% within ±3σ.
Confidence IntervalsRange = tE ± zσ68%=±1σ, 95%=±2σ, 99.73%=±3σProbability that actual duration/cost falls within the rangeUse to set contingency reserves and communicate schedule risk±1σ=68%, ±2σ=95%, ±3σ=99.73% — memorize these for exam!
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Cost Formulas

PMBOK §7 · Cost Management
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Analogous EstimatingCost based on similar past projects (expert judgment)Rough estimate: ±25–50% accuracyTop-down, fast, low accuracy. Best used in early project phases.Use when detail data unavailable; document assumptionsCheapest and fastest estimating technique. Least accurate.
Parametric EstimatingCost = Unit cost × QuantityAccuracy depends on quality of historical dataStatistical model using historical unit rates. Example: $150/sq ft × 2,000 sf = $300K.Validate unit rates against current market dataMore accurate than analogous if unit rates are valid. Scale-dependent.
Bottom-Up EstimatingTotal = Σ (all work package estimates)Most accurate: ±10–15%Estimate each work package individually then aggregate. Most time-consuming but most accurate.Use for definitive estimates; requires complete WBSMost accurate, most expensive, most time-consuming. Done after WBS is complete.
Cost BaselineCost Baseline = Σ WBS budgets (time-phased)Includes contingencyAuthorized time-phased budget used to measure and monitor cost performanceMaintain as controlled document; change only via change controlCost Baseline INCLUDES contingency reserves but EXCLUDES management reserves.
Project BudgetBudget = Cost Baseline + Management ReserveMaximum authorized spendTotal funding required = performance baseline + management reserves for unknown unknownsManagement reserve requires sponsor approval to accessCost Baseline + Mgmt Reserve = Project Budget. Know this hierarchy!
Contingency ReserveReserve = Σ(Probability × Impact) for known risksBased on identified risksBudget set aside for known-unknown risks (identified risks that may occur)PM can access without special approval; track against risk registerContingency = known-unknowns. Management Reserve = unknown-unknowns.
Depreciation — Straight LineAnnual Dep = (Asset Cost − Salvage) ÷ Useful LifeEqual annual reductionAsset loses equal value each year of its useful lifeInclude in project financial planning for equipment-heavy projectsStraight line = constant depreciation. Sum of Years Digits and Double Declining = accelerated.
Depreciation — Double Declining BalanceDep = 2/n × Book Value (each year)Accelerated — more in early yearsFront-loads depreciation. Book value never reaches zero (stop at salvage value).Favorable for tax purposes; reduces taxable income in early yearsDDB rate = 2/n where n = useful life years. Book value × rate each year.
Net Present Value (NPV)NPV = Σ [CF_t ÷ (1+r)^t] − Initial InvestmentNPV > 0 = Accept project ✅
NPV < 0 = Reject ❌
Present value of all future cash flows minus investment. Accounts for time value of money.Higher NPV = better investment. Use to compare competing projects.If two projects: choose HIGHER NPV. Opportunity cost = NPV of project NOT chosen.
Present Value (PV)PV(Finance) = FV ÷ (1+r)^nPV always < FV (positive r)Today's worth of a future cash flow. $1 tomorrow is worth less than $1 today.Use to compare cash flows occurring at different timesHigher discount rate r = lower PV. Longer time n = lower PV.
Future Value (FV)FV = PV × (1+r)^nFV always > PVFuture worth of today's money invested at rate r for n periodsUse for financial modeling, lease vs buy analysisFV is opposite of PV formula. Know both directions.
ROI (Return on Investment)ROI = (Net Benefit ÷ Cost) × 100%Higher ROI = better ✅Percentage return relative to investment. Used for project selection.Compare ROI across project alternatives; report to portfolio committeeROI does NOT account for time value of money (unlike NPV/IRR).
Payback PeriodPayback Period = Investment ÷ Annual Cash FlowShorter payback = better (lower risk)Time to recover initial investment. Simple but ignores time value and post-payback cash flows.Use as tie-breaker or risk indicator; prefer shorter payback for uncertain environmentsPayback period ignores time value of money. Simplest project selection method.
Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR)BCR = PV(Benefits) ÷ PV(Costs)BCR > 1.0 = Worth it ✅
BCR < 1.0 = Not worth it ❌
For every $1 invested, how much benefit is generated? BCR=1.5 = $1.50 benefit per $1 cost.Select project with highest BCR when ranking alternativesHigher BCR = better. BCR=2.0 means double your investment in benefits.
IRR (Internal Rate of Return)NPV = 0 when discount rate = IRRIRR > required rate = Accept ✅Discount rate that makes NPV equal zero. The "break-even" rate of return for the investment.Compare to hurdle rate (required rate). If IRR > hurdle rate, project adds value.Higher IRR = better. If IRR > cost of capital, project creates value.
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Reserves & Contingency Hierarchy

PMBOK §7.2
MetricFormula / ConceptWho Controls?For What?Access ProcessExam Tip
Contingency ReserveEMV of known risks + padding for identified risk eventsProject ManagerKnown-unknowns (identified risks in risk register)PM accesses based on risk trigger; no separate approval neededIncluded IN cost baseline. PM controls.
Management Reserve% of total project budget (e.g., 5–10%)Senior Management / SponsorUnknown-unknowns (unidentified, unforeseeable events)Requires change request and management approval to useNOT in cost baseline — added on top. Requires change control.
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Risk Formulas

PMBOK §11 · Risk Management
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Risk Score (Priority)Risk Score = Probability × ImpactHigher score = higher priorityQuantified risk priority for risk register ranking and resource allocationHigh-score risks get active response strategies (avoid, transfer, mitigate, accept)Used in qualitative risk analysis. Creates probability-impact matrix entries.
Risk ExposureRE = Probability × Impact ($)Represents expected monetary impactDollar value of the risk's expected impact weighted by probabilitySum RE across risks for contingency reserve calculationSame concept as EMV. Higher RE = more contingency needed.
Expected Monetary Value (EMV)EMV = Probability × Monetary ValueEMV > 0 = Opportunity ✅
EMV < 0 = Threat ❌
Expected financial impact of a risk or decision. Used in decision tree analysis.Sum EMVs of all paths to find best decision optionThreats = negative EMV. Opportunities = positive EMV. Sum all branches of decision tree.
Decision Tree ValueNode Value = Σ (EMV of each branch)Select path with highest node valueExpected monetary outcome considering all possible outcomes and probabilitiesChoose decision that maximizes expected valueWork right to left. Multiply probability × outcome, then sum. Choose highest at decision node.
Monte Carlo SimulationRuns thousands of scenarios using probability distributionsOutput: probability distribution of outcomesStatistical technique giving range of possible outcomes with probability. Most sophisticated risk tool.Use output to set contingency reserves and schedule buffersMonte Carlo produces S-curve / probability distribution. "What is the probability of finishing by date X?" → Monte Carlo.
Sensitivity AnalysisTornado Diagram: rank variables by impact on outputWider bar = higher sensitivity = more impactIdentifies which variables (risks) have greatest influence on project objectivesFocus risk management efforts on top variables in tornado diagramTornado diagram = sensitivity analysis output. Widest bar = most sensitive variable.
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EMV & Decision Tree Example

PMBOK §11.4
ConceptFormula / CalculationResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Decision Tree NodeValue = Σ(Pi × Outcome_i) − Cost of decisionSelect highest value nodeExpected value of each decision path considering all outcomes and their probabilitiesAdd cost of each decision option before comparingSubtract the cost of the decision FROM the EMV. Exam commonly omits this step as a trap.
Risk-Adjusted NPVR-NPV = NPV × (1 − risk probability) + Risk-adjusted payoffMore realistic project valueAdjusts NPV for risk. Lower than base NPV for projects with significant downside risks.Use for portfolio decisions with uncertain cash flowsLess common but tests understanding of combining NPV with probability concepts.

Quality Formulas

PMBOK §8 · Quality Management
MetricFormula / ConceptCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Cost of Quality (COQ)COQ = Cost of Conformance + Cost of Non-ConformanceLower COQ = more efficient quality systemTotal cost to achieve quality standards including prevention, appraisal, and failure costsInvest in prevention to reduce failure costs. Prevention > Appraisal > Internal Failure > External Failure.COQ has 4 components. Prevention is cheapest long-term. External failure is most expensive.
Cost of Conformance= Prevention Costs + Appraisal CostsPlanned quality investmentCosts to do things right: training, inspections, testing, documentationIncrease conformance costs to decrease non-conformance costsPrevention = training, process improvement. Appraisal = testing, inspections.
Cost of Non-Conformance= Internal Failure + External Failure CostsHigher = poorer quality systemCosts from NOT meeting quality standards: rework, scrap, warranty, liabilities, lost reputationTrack non-conformance costs to justify quality investmentInternal failure = found before delivery. External failure = found by customer. External costs more!
Control Chart — UCL/LCLUCL = Mean + 3σ
LCL = Mean − 3σ
Points within = in control. Points outside = out of control.Statistical limits for process variation. ±3σ contains 99.73% of normal variation.Investigate and correct any point outside control limits or 7 consecutive points on one side±3σ = control limits. Rule of 7: 7 consecutive points same side = out of control (even if within limits).
Rule of Seven (7)7 consecutive data points on same side of meanProcess is OUT of control (assignable cause)Even without exceeding control limits, a run of 7 indicates a non-random patternInvestigate for assignable (special) cause variation7 consecutive = out of control. Exam will ask: "7 points in a row below mean — what do you do?" → Investigate!
Process Sigma LevelSigma = (USL − Mean) ÷ σHigher sigma = better qualityMeasure of process capability. 6-sigma = 3.4 defects per million opportunities.Define target sigma level in quality management plan6-sigma = near perfection. 3-sigma = 99.73% = 2,700 defects per million. Know the difference.
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Quality — Defect & Sampling Metrics

PMBOK §8.3
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Defects Per Million Opportunities (DPMO)DPMO = (Defects ÷ Opportunities) × 1,000,000Lower DPMO = better qualityStandardized measure of defect rate allowing comparison across different processesTrack DPMO trends; set reduction targets6-sigma target = 3.4 DPMO. Exam may give DPMO and ask what sigma level it represents.
YieldYield = (Good Units ÷ Total Units) × 100%Higher yield = better qualityPercentage of output meeting quality standards without reworkTrack first-pass yield; low yield = process problemFirst Time Yield (FTY) = units passing inspection on first attempt / total units.
Pareto Principle80% of problems caused by 20% of causesFocus on top 20% of causes80/20 rule: most defects come from a few root causes. Prioritize top causes for maximum improvement.Use Pareto chart to identify and attack the vital few causes firstPareto chart = bar chart ordered by frequency. Tallest bars = highest priority. Classic exam tool.
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Communications Formulas

PMBOK §10 · Communications Management
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Communication Channels
Most Tested
Channels = n(n−1) ÷ 2Grows exponentially with team sizeTotal number of potential communication paths between n stakeholders. Adding one person adds n-1 new channels.Manage communications carefully as team grows. Large teams need formal comms plan.n=10: 10×9÷2=45. n=11: 11×10÷2=55. Adding 1 person adds 10 channels. VERY common exam question!
New Channels AddedΔChannels = (nₙₑw × (nₙₑw−1) ÷ 2) − (nₒₗd × (nₒₗd−1) ÷ 2)Always positive when adding peopleHow many new communication paths are created when adding team membersUpdate Communications Management Plan when team size changes significantlyFormula: compute both before and after, then subtract. Simpler: new channels = n_old channels added for each new person.
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Procurement Contract Types

PMBOK §12 · Procurement
Contract TypeFormula / StructureRisk: Buyer vs SellerMeaningWhen to UseExam Tip
Firm Fixed Price (FFP)
Lowest buyer risk
Price = Fixed amount regardless of costSeller bears ALL cost riskSeller agrees to deliver scope for a set price. Overruns are seller's problem.When scope is well-defined and stableFFP = buyer's favorite. Seller must manage costs carefully or absorb losses.
Fixed Price Incentive Fee (FPIF)Final Price = Actual Cost + Fee, capped at Ceiling Price
Seller's share = sharing ratio
Shared risk with incentive for efficiencyFixed price with incentive for seller to reduce costs. Savings split per sharing ratio.When cost control by seller is desired with some flexibilityKnow the sharing ratio concept and ceiling price. Costs above ceiling = all seller's risk.
Fixed Price with Economic Price Adjustment (FP-EPA)Price adjusted per pre-agreed index (CPI, labor rates)Buyer absorbs inflation risk partiallyProtects seller from inflation/market changes on multi-year contractsLong-duration contracts where prices may shiftFP-EPA is used for long contracts. The index is pre-agreed (e.g., Bureau of Labor Statistics).
Cost Plus Fixed Fee (CPFF)Payment = Actual Cost + Fixed FeeBuyer bears ALL cost riskSeller reimbursed for all costs plus a fixed fee regardless of performanceR&D or unknown scope projects where cost cannot be estimatedCPFF = highest buyer risk. Fixed fee = constant regardless of cost. No incentive for seller efficiency.
Cost Plus Incentive Fee (CPIF)Fee = Target Fee ± (Target Cost − Actual Cost) × Sharing RatioBuyer bears most risk; seller has incentiveReimbursed costs plus fee that grows if costs are below targetWhen cost reduction incentive desired on cost-reimbursable contractsSharing ratio splits savings/overruns. e.g., 80/20 means buyer takes 80% of variance, seller 20%.
Cost Plus Award Fee (CPAF)Fee = Cost + subjective award fee based on performanceBuyer bears cost risk; seller motivated by awardAward fee based on buyer's subjective assessment of performance. Not disputable.When performance criteria are hard to define objectivelyAward fee is subjective and cannot be litigated. CPIF fee is objective and can be disputed.
Time and Materials (T&M)Payment = Hourly Rate × Hours + Materials CostBuyer bears cost and schedule riskHybrid contract. Not fixed (like CR) but bounded by rates (like FP). Risk grows with duration.Staff augmentation, short-duration, undefined scopeT&M has elements of both FP (fixed rates) and CR (no cap on hours). Use NTE clause to limit exposure.
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Point of Total Assumption (PTA)

PMBOK §12 · FPIF Contracts
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Point of Total Assumption (PTA)
FPIF Only
PTA = [(Ceiling PriceTarget Price) ÷ Buyer's Share Ratio] + Target CostActual Cost > PTA → Seller absorbs ALL additional costCost threshold above which seller assumes ALL additional risk on FPIF contract. Above PTA, seller "owns" overruns.Monitor contractor costs against PTA; if trending above, renegotiate or invoke contract clausesPTA only applies to FPIF contracts. Extremely common exam question. Know the formula cold!
🎯 PTA Example: Target Cost=$100K, Target Price=$110K, Ceiling Price=$125K, Sharing Ratio=80/20 (buyer/seller)
PTA = [(125K−110K) ÷ 0.80] + 100K = [15K ÷ 0.80] + 100K = 18,750 + 100,000 = $118,750
If actual costs exceed $118,750, seller absorbs 100% of all additional costs.
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Resource / HR Formulas

PMBOK §9 · Resource Management
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Resource LoadingLoading = Σ(hours assigned per resource per period)Over-allocated = > availabilityTotal work assigned to each resource in each time periodLevel resources to eliminate over-allocation; may extend scheduleResource leveling can extend schedule. Resource smoothing does not extend schedule but may not resolve all conflicts.
Team Size ComplexityInterfaces = n(n−1) ÷ 2 (same as communication channels)Larger team = exponential complexityNumber of interpersonal interfaces in a team. Same formula as comms channels.Keep teams small (Scrum: 3–9) to reduce coordination overheadSame formula as communication channels — tests if you recognize the connection.
Training CostTraining ROI = (Productivity Gain − Training Cost) ÷ Training Cost × 100%Positive = justified investmentReturn on training investment in terms of improved productivityInclude training costs in project budget; track productivity improvementLess commonly tested — but training is always considered an investment, not just a cost.
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Scope Formulas & Concepts

PMBOK §5 · Scope Management
MetricFormula / ConceptCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
WBS DecompositionWork Package = Lowest level WBS element with cost + scheduleTypically 8–80 hours of effortDeliverable-oriented hierarchy. 100% rule: WBS must capture 100% of project work — no more, no less.Validate 100% rule; each parent = sum of children100% Rule is the most important WBS concept. Anything NOT in WBS = outside project scope.
Scope BaselineScope Baseline = Project Scope Statement + WBS + WBS DictionaryThree components togetherApproved version of scope — what IS and IS NOT included in the projectMeasure scope performance against; change only via change controlScope Baseline = 3 documents. Missing any one = incomplete baseline.
Scope CreepUncontrolled scope additions without change controlAlways harmful — avoid ❌Growth of project scope without corresponding changes to cost, schedule, or resourcesEnforce change control process; document all scope changes formallyScope creep = unauthorized additions. Gold plating = PM adds unrequested features. Both are bad!
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Agile Velocity, Burndown & Burnup

PMI-ACP · Agile Practice Guide
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
VelocityVelocity = Story Points completed per sprintHigher velocity = more productive teamMeasure of team's delivery capacity per sprint. Used for release planning.Average 3+ sprints for reliable velocity estimate; don't pressure team to inflateVelocity is team-specific — cannot compare across teams. Don't use to measure performance.
Release PlanningSprints Needed = Total Story Points ÷ VelocityMore stories = more sprintsEstimate of how many sprints needed to deliver all backlog itemsUse to set release dates and expectations with stakeholdersIf velocity = 20 SP/sprint and backlog = 200 SP → 10 sprints needed.
Burndown ChartRemaining Work = Total Backlog − Completed WorkTrending to zero = on track ✅
Flat/rising = behind ❌
Shows remaining work over time. Ideal line goes from total to zero by sprint/release end.Monitor daily; investigate when actual deviates significantly from ideal lineBurndown = remaining work. Goes DOWN to zero. Burnup = completed work. Goes UP to total.
Burnup ChartCompleted Work over Time (separate line for total scope)Gap between lines = remaining workShows completed work AND total scope. Scope changes are visible as shifts in the total line.Use burnup to show scope changes; preferred over burndown for scope creep visibilityBurnup shows scope changes explicitly. Burndown hides them. Burnup = better transparency.
Sprint CapacityCapacity = Available Hours × Focus FactorRealistic capacity < total hoursActual usable hours for a sprint accounting for meetings, interruptions, vacationsUse focus factor (typically 60–80%) for realistic sprint planningDon't plan at 100% capacity. Sustainable pace = key agile principle.
Team Happiness / NPSTeam Health = % Promoters − % Detractors (NPS concept)Higher = healthier teamMeasure of team morale and engagement. Correlates with productivity and retention.Conduct regular retrospectives; address team health issues promptlyPMP exam now includes significant agile content. Team health metrics are increasingly tested.
Cumulative Flow Diagram (CFD)Bands showing WIP in each state over timeParallel bands = smooth flow. Widening band = bottleneck.Visual tool showing workflow through Kanban states. Thick bands = work piling up = problem.Identify and resolve bottlenecks shown by widening bandsCFD = Kanban metric. Widening band = WIP building up = process constraint.
Cycle TimeCycle Time = Work Finish Date − Work Start DateShorter = more responsive ✅Time from when work starts to when it's done. Measure of process speed.Track cycle time trends; use Little's Law to relate WIP, throughput, cycle timeLittle's Law: WIP = Throughput × Cycle Time. Common in advanced agile metrics questions.
Lead TimeLead Time = Work Finish Date − Request DateShorter = better customer experience ✅Time from customer request to delivery. Includes wait time before work starts.Reduce lead time by reducing queue sizes and WIP limitsLead Time > Cycle Time always (Lead includes waiting). Reduce WIP to reduce Lead Time.
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Stakeholder Engagement Metrics

PMBOK §13 · Stakeholder Management
MetricFormula / ConceptCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Stakeholder Engagement Assessment MatrixGap = Desired Engagement − Current EngagementGap > 0 = Need to increase engagementCompares current vs. desired engagement level for each stakeholder (Unaware→Resistant→Neutral→Supportive→Leading)Develop targeted engagement strategies to close gaps5 levels: Unaware, Resistant, Neutral, Supportive, Leading. C=Current, D=Desired. Goal: C=D.
Power/Interest GridCategorize: Power (H/L) × Interest (H/L)4 quadrants define strategyStakeholder classification tool: High Power+High Interest=Manage Closely; High Power+Low Interest=Keep SatisfiedTailor engagement approach based on quadrant placement4 strategies: Manage Closely (HH), Keep Satisfied (HL), Keep Informed (LH), Monitor (LL).
⚙️

General PM Formulas & Concepts

All Knowledge Areas
MetricFormulaCondition / ResultMeaningPM ActionExam Tip
Expected Activity DurationD = Effort ÷ ResourcesMore resources = shorter duration (to a point)Time required = total work divided by number of people doing it. Linear relationship with caveats.Apply resource leveling constraints; Brooks's Law applies (adding late resources slows project)Adding people doesn't always reduce duration (Brooks's Law: "adding manpower to a late software project makes it later")
Heuristic 80/20 for WBSWork package = 8–80 hours of effortBelow 8h = too granular; above 80h = too largeRule of thumb for WBS decomposition granularityStop decomposing when you can realistically assign, track, and control the work package8-80 rule = heuristic, not a hard rule. Context matters. Very common exam concept.
Project Selection — Constrained OptimizationLinear programming, integer programming, goal programming modelsUse for complex multi-project portfoliosMathematical models to select optimal portfolio given constraints (budget, resources, time)Use constrained optimization models for large portfolio decisionsKnow the name and concept. Contrasted with "benefit measurement methods" (NPV, BCR, payback).
Rough Order of Magnitude (ROM)ROM accuracy = −50% to +100%Used in pre-project / initiation phaseVery rough estimate used before full project scope is defined. Wide range reflects high uncertainty.Communicate ROM range explicitly; upgrade to definitive estimate when scope is definedROM = −50% to +100%. Budget estimate = −10% to +25%. Definitive = −5% to +10%.
Budget EstimateAccuracy = −10% to +25%Used in planning phaseModerate accuracy estimate used for budgeting and resource allocationUse budget estimates for portfolio-level planningKnow estimate accuracy ranges: ROM, Budget, Definitive. Common exam knowledge area.
Definitive EstimateAccuracy = −5% to +10%Used in execution phase (detailed design complete)Most accurate estimate based on detailed scope, design, and historical dataUse for contract pricing and procurementDefinitive = most accurate. Requires complete WBS and detailed design.
Procurement Cost Models
Target Cost, Target Fee
Target Price = Target Cost + Target FeeStarting point for CPIF/FPIF contractsBaseline for incentive contract — defines expected cost and fee at planned performanceNegotiate realistic target cost; unrealistic targets create adversarial relationshipsTarget Price ≠ Ceiling Price. Ceiling Price > Target Price. Know all contract price components.
Earned Schedule (ES)ES = Time when PV should equal current EVES < AT = Behind scheduleAdvanced EVM: translates EV-based SV into time units. Overcomes SV=0 at project end limitation.Use ES-based metrics for more accurate schedule forecasting in later project phasesEarned Schedule converts dollar-based schedule metrics into time. SPI(t) = ES ÷ AT. More accurate late in project.
📋

MASTER CHEAT SHEET — All Formulas at a Glance

Quick Reference
Formula NameFormulaPositive = Good?Knowledge Area
PV (Planned Value)% planned × BACCost / EVM
EV (Earned Value)% complete × BACCost / EVM
AC (Actual Cost)Actual $ spentLower = betterCost / EVM
BACTotal authorized budgetCost
CV (Cost Variance)EVAC✅ YesCost
SV (Schedule Variance)EVPV✅ YesSchedule
CPIEV ÷ AC✅ > 1.0Cost
SPIEV ÷ PV✅ > 1.0Schedule
EAC (CPI trend)BAC ÷ CPILower betterCost
EAC (new estimate)AC + ETCLower betterCost
EAC (atypical past)AC + BAC − EVLower betterCost
EAC (CPI×SPI)AC + (BAC−EV)÷(CPI×SPI)Lower betterCost
ETCEACACLower betterCost
VACBACEAC✅ YesCost
TCPI (BAC)(BACEV)÷(BACAC)✅ ≤ 1.0Cost
TCPI (EAC)(BACEV)÷(EACAC)✅ ≤ 1.0Cost
Critical RatioCPI × SPI✅ > 1.0Cost/Sched
Total FloatLSES or LFEF✅ > 0Schedule
Free FloatES(succ)−EF(curr)−1✅ > 0Schedule
PERT (Beta)(O+4M+P)÷6Schedule
PERT (Triangular)(O+M+P)÷3Schedule
PERT Std Dev(P−O)÷6Lower betterSchedule/Risk
PERT Variance[(P−O)÷6]²Lower betterRisk
EMVProbability × Impact ($)✅ PositiveRisk
Communication Channelsn(n−1)÷2Lower = simplerComms
PTA[(Ceiling−Target Price)÷Buyer Share]+Target CostProcurement
NPVPV(benefits)−Initial Investment✅ > 0Cost/Finance
PV (Finance)FV÷(1+r)^nFinance
FVPV×(1+r)^nFinance
BCRPV(Benefits)÷PV(Costs)✅ > 1.0Finance
ROI(Benefit−Cost)÷Cost×100%✅ HigherFinance
Payback PeriodInvestment÷Annual CF✅ ShorterFinance
COQConformance+Non-ConformanceLower betterQuality
Control Chart UCL/LCLMean ± 3σWithin = goodQuality
DPMO(Defects÷Opportunities)×1M✅ LowerQuality
Velocity (Agile)SP completed per sprint✅ Stable/higherAgile
Release Sprints (Agile)Total SP÷VelocityAgile
Straight-Line Depreciation(Cost−Salvage)÷LifeFinance
Double Declining Balance2/n × Book ValueFinance

🧮 PMP Formula Calculator

Pre-filled examples · Enter your own values · Instant results with full interpretation and step-by-step solution

Planned Value (PV)

PV = % Planned × BACEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

A $500,000 highway project, 6 months long. At month 3, plan calls for 50% completion. What is PV?

Enter 50 for 50%
Total project budget
📖 How to Solve
Step 1: Identify % of work planned to be done by this date (from schedule baseline).
Step 2: PV = (% Planned ÷ 100) × BAC
Key rule: PV = what SHOULD be done in dollar terms. It is always time-phased from the schedule baseline.

Earned Value (EV)

EV = % Complete × BACEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

BAC=$500K, at month 3 only 40% of work is done. EV=?

Physical work done
📖 How to Solve
EV = (% Complete ÷ 100) × BAC
⚠️ Common trap: Use % of WORK done, NOT % of budget spent. If 60% of budget is spent but 40% of work is done → use 40%.

Cost Variance (CV)

CV = EVACEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

Road project: EV=$400K (50% done on $800K BAC), AC=$480K spent. CV=?

📖 How to Solve
CV = EV − AC. Positive = under budget ✅ Negative = over budget ❌
Memory: "Earned before Actual" — EV always first. PM Action for negative CV: find root cause, update EAC, notify sponsor.

Schedule Variance (SV)

SV = EVPVEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

Software project week 8: PV=$250K (planned), EV=$200K (accomplished). SV=?

📖 How to Solve
SV = EV − PV. Positive = ahead ✅ Negative = behind ❌
Limitation: SV always = $0 at project end (EV=PV=BAC). Cannot detect lateness at completion. Use CPM alongside SV.

Cost Performance Index (CPI)

CPI = EV ÷ ACEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

Bridge project: EV=$600K, AC=$750K. CPI=?

📖 How to Solve
CPI = EV ÷ AC. CPI >1 = under budget ✅ | <1 = over budget ❌
CPI=0.80 means for every $1 spent only $0.80 of value is earned. Used to calculate EAC = BAC ÷ CPI.

Schedule Performance Index (SPI)

SPI = EV ÷ PVEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

Office fit-out: EV=$180K, PV=$240K. SPI=?

📖 How to Solve
SPI = EV ÷ PV. SPI >1 = ahead ✅ | <1 = behind ❌
SPI=0.75 = only 75% of planned work accomplished. SPI approaches 1.0 at project end — supplement with CPM.

Estimate at Completion (EAC) — All 4 Methods

EAC = BAC÷CPI | AC+ETC | AC+(BAC−EV) | AC+(BAC−EV)÷(CPI×SPI)EVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

Water plant: BAC=$2M, EV=$800K, AC=$1M, PV=$1M. All 4 EAC methods?

New estimate for remaining
📖 Which EAC Formula to Use
Method 1 (BAC÷CPI): Past inefficiency CONTINUES — most common on exam.
Method 2 (AC+ETC): Original estimate FLAWED — team re-estimated remaining work.
Method 3 (AC+BAC−EV): Past variance was ATYPICAL — remaining work at original rate.
Method 4 (CPI×SPI): BOTH cost & schedule problems — most pessimistic EAC.

ETC & VAC

ETC = EAC−AC | VAC = BAC−EACEVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

BAC=$1.2M, EAC=$1.5M, AC=$600K. Find ETC and VAC.

📖 How to Solve
ETC = EACAC → How much MORE money needed to finish (remaining only)
VAC = BACEAC → Expected over/under budget at completion. Positive = savings; Negative = overrun.
Exam trap: EAC = total forecast. ETC = remaining only. Don't confuse them!

To-Complete Performance Index (TCPI)

TCPI = (BAC−EV)÷(BAC−AC) or (EAC−AC)EVM
📋 Pre-filled Example

BAC=$1M, EV=$400K, AC=$500K, EAC=$1.25M. Current CPI=0.80. Is budget achievable?

📖 How to Solve
TCPI(BAC) = (BAC−EV) ÷ (BAC−AC) — efficiency needed for original budget
TCPI(EAC) = (BAC−EV) ÷ (EAC−AC) — efficiency needed for revised budget
Compare to current CPI: If TCPI(BAC) > current CPI → original budget NOT achievable. Tell sponsor!
TCPI < 1.0 = you can be less efficient than current rate and still meet the target.

PERT Three-Point Estimate

tE=(O+4M+P)÷6 | σ=(P−O)÷6Schedule/PERT
📋 Pre-filled Example

Concrete pour: Optimistic=3 days, Most Likely=5 days, Pessimistic=13 days.

📖 How to Solve
Beta PERT: (O + 4M + P) ÷ 6 → weights Most Likely 4× more
Triangular: (O + M + P) ÷ 3 → equal weights
σ = (P−O) ÷ 6 → uncertainty/spread
Confidence: ±1σ=68.27% | ±2σ=95.45% | ±3σ=99.73%

Total Float & Free Float

TF=LS−ES | FF=ES(succ)−EF−1Schedule/CPM
📋 Pre-filled Example

Activity D: ES=5, EF=9, LS=8, LF=12. Successor starts day 15. TF and FF=?

📖 How to Solve
TF = LS − ES (or LF − EF) → max delay without delaying project
FF = ES(successor) − EF − 1 → max delay without delaying successor
TF=0 = Critical Path | TF<0 = Behind schedule | FF ≤ TF always

Net Present Value (NPV)

NPV = Σ[CF÷(1+r)^n] − InvestmentCost/Finance
📋 Pre-filled Example

Project costs $500K. Returns $200K/year for 3 years. Discount rate=10%. Worth it?

📖 How to Solve
Step 1: PV each cash flow = CF ÷ (1+r)^n
Step 2: NPV = Sum of all PVs − Initial Investment
NPV > 0 = Accept ✅ | NPV < 0 = Reject ❌
Comparing projects → choose HIGHER NPV. Opportunity cost = NPV of rejected project.

BCR · ROI · Payback Period

BCR=B÷C | ROI=(B−C)÷C | Payback=Invest÷CFCost/Finance
📋 Pre-filled Example

Project costs $400K, delivers $700K benefits, annual cash flow=$140K. BCR, ROI, Payback=?

📖 How to Solve
BCR = Benefits ÷ Costs: >1.0 = worth doing. BCR=1.75 means $1.75 benefit per $1 spent.
ROI = (Benefit−Cost)÷Cost×100%: Does NOT account for time value of money.
Payback = Investment ÷ Annual CF: Shorter = lower risk. Ignores time value and post-payback flows.

Expected Monetary Value (EMV)

EMV = Probability × ImpactRisk
📋 Pre-filled Example

Risk A: 30% chance of −$50K. Risk B: 20% chance of +$30K. Total EMV?

Negative=threat
📖 How to Solve
EMV = (Probability ÷ 100) × Impact
Threats = negative impact | Opportunities = positive impact
Contingency Reserve = Sum of all negative EMVs
Decision trees: sum EMVs at each chance node, subtract decision costs, choose highest node value.

Cost of Quality (COQ)

COQ = Conformance + Non-ConformanceQuality
📋 Pre-filled Example

Training=$20K, Inspections=$30K, Rework=$80K, Warranty=$40K. COQ breakdown?

Training, process design
Testing, inspections
Rework, scrap
Warranty, claims
📖 How to Solve
Conformance = Prevention + Appraisal (doing things right)
Non-Conformance = Internal + External Failure (cost of defects)
Invest in prevention: $1 in prevention saves $5-$10 in failure costs. External failure is the most expensive.

Communication Channels

Channels = n(n−1) ÷ 2Communications
📋 Pre-filled Example

Team of 12. Adding 3 more people (total=15). Channels before, after, and new ones added?

📖 How to Solve
Formula: n × (n−1) ÷ 2
n=10→45 channels | n=20→190 channels — growth is exponential!
Adding 1 person to an n-person team creates n new channels. Each new person = exponentially more complexity.

Point of Total Assumption (PTA)

PTA = [(Ceiling−Target Price)÷Buyer Share]+Target CostProcurement
📋 Pre-filled Example

FPIF: Target Cost=$200K, Target Fee=$30K, Ceiling=$280K, Share=70/30. PTA=?

Enter 70 for 70/30
📖 How to Solve
Target Price = Target Cost + Target Fee
PTA = [(Ceiling − Target Price) ÷ Buyer Share Ratio] + Target Cost
Above PTA → seller absorbs 100% of all additional costs. FPIF only. Exam favorite!

Agile Velocity & Release Planning

Velocity=SP/Sprint | Sprints=Backlog÷VelocityAgile
📋 Pre-filled Example

Team completed 22, 18, 25, 20 SP over 4 sprints. Backlog=340 SP remaining. Sprints to complete?

📖 How to Solve
Average Velocity = Total SP ÷ Number of Sprints
Sprints to finish = Remaining Backlog ÷ Avg Velocity
Use 3+ sprints for reliable average. Never compare velocity across teams — scale is team-specific.