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Chapter 3

Chapter 3. Software Size and Cost Estimation. PROJECT EVALUATION. Overview. What is it? A systematic and objective assessment of an ongoing or completed project Design Implementation Results Involves gathering, analysing, interpreting and reporting information

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Chapter 3

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  1. Chapter 3 Software Size and Cost Estimation

  2. PROJECT EVALUATION

  3. Overview • What is it? • A systematic and objective assessment of an ongoing or completed project • Design • Implementation • Results • Involves gathering, analysing, interpreting and reporting information • Should be based on credible data

  4. Purpose • Learning and improvement • Accountability • provide useful feed back to stakeholders; • entrepreneurs, • sponsors, • donors, • client-groups, • administrators, • staff, • and other relevant constituencies

  5. Types of Evaluation • There are several types of evaluation. • The classification is based on: • purpose of the evaluation, • methodology, • timing, • who is involved in the evaluation • position of the evaluators. • Based on purpose • formative • summative

  6. Types of Evaluation • Based on Timing • Ex-ante (prediction) evaluation • Ex-Post (Affecting things past) evaluation • Based on position of evaluator • External evaluation • Internal evaluation or self-assessment

  7. Types of Evaluation • Ex–ante evaluation • Conducted before the implementation of a project as part of the planning • Also referred to as appraisal or quality at entry • Ex-post evaluation • Conducted after the project is completed • Used to assess sustainability of project effects, impacts • Identifies factors of success to inform other projects

  8. Types of Evaluation • External evaluation • Initiated and controlled by the donor as part of contractual agreement • Conducted by independent people – who are not involved in implementation • Often guided by project staff

  9. Types of Evaluation • Internal or self assessment • Internally guided reflective processes • Initiated and controlled by the group for its own learning and improvement. • Sometimes done by consultants who are outsiders to the project • Need to clarify ownership of information before the review starts

  10. Types of Evaluation • By methodology employed • Quantitative • Qualitative

  11. Steps in Managing a Project Evaluation • Establishing the need for an evaluation • Initial Planning and Resourcing • Developing Terms of Reference • Engaging the Evaluator or Evaluation Team • Approving the Workplan • Implementing and Monitoring the Evaluation • Assessing the Results of the Evaluation • Developing a Plan for Follow-up

  12. Step 1: Establishing the need for an Evaluation • Project manager(s) need to clarify the purpose of evaluations. E.g. - Donor requirement • Accountability • Innovation • Learning and change • Responding to changed circumstance

  13. Step 2: Initial Planning and Resourcing • Evaluations take up significant time and resources • Need to ensure that the costs are appropriate for the anticipated benefits. • Resourcing the evaluation: Money? Technical expertise? • Defining scope and size • Clarify • if external or internal • Level of effort and resources required / available • Stakeholder groups to be involved and how.

  14. Full stakeholder desirable, but could be limited to the following: • Deciding whether or not to evaluate. • Defining the type of evaluation, its scope, and criteria. • Defining the evaluation questions, what are the key issues to explore in the evaluation? • Defining evaluation workplan. • Evaluation activities must be scheduled and fit into the stakeholders' agendas. • Deciding which recommendations to adopt and which to reject. • Disseminating and gathering feedback on the results.

  15. Providing resources for the Evaluation • Evaluations require substantial investments of financial and human resources. • Funding source would have been indicated in the project document

  16. Developing Terms of Reference (TORs) • TOR are the key guide for an evaluation. • They should • clarify reasons for the evaluation • highlight issues that have become apparent • indicate the general depth and scope required • spell out any imperatives for the evaluators • provide details about methodology, scheduling, cost and the qualifications of the members on the evaluating teams

  17. Developing Terms of Reference (TORs) • The project manager is responsible for ensuring clear and focused TORs • This is as far as the Manager is responsible for development of the TOR

  18. Contents of Terms of Reference • Context for the evaluation • Purpose for the evaluation • Evaluation issues and questions • Evaluation stakeholders • Methodology • Qualifications of evaluators • Schedule • Outputs and Deliverables • Cost • Action Plan • Appendices - Evaluation Matrix, Evaluation Policy, LFA

  19. Engaging the Evaluator or Evaluation Team • Evaluators can be selected by you, imposed by donors or jointly agreed to. • Which ever it is some guide is useful here: • The appropriate level of technical expertise or evaluation expertise • The previous experience or profile of the evaluator • Suggested profile of a good evaluation team • Using peers as evaluators • Roles and responsibilities

  20. Reviewing and Approving theWorkplan • The evaluation work plan is developed by the evaluator and the evaluation team • It should: • provide roadmap for conducting the evaluation • include proposed methodology and means of analysis • A poor work plan leads to poor evaluation • Important that the leadership of the project review and approve the evaluation work plan

  21. Reviewing and Approving theWorkplan • Suggested outline of a Workplan • Introduction - purpose and stakeholders • Evaluation Questions (framework) • Methodology (sources, methods) • Schedule (Gantt chart) • Resource Allocation and Budget • Evaluation Team • Outline of Evaluation Report

  22. Implementing and Monitoring theEvaluation Work • Managers required to facilitate evaluators work by: • Supporting field data collection • Making documents available • Responding to regular evaluation reports and feedback • Distributing draft reports for comments to appropriate partners • Participating in donor and evaluator meetings when requested • Reviewing drafts of findings and reports and providing feedback

  23. Different Audiences may haveDifferent Needs • Internal staff might need a verbal report and a memo with key points • Donors and external stakeholders might need a full report • Ministries might need an abstract • Public at large might need an abstract of findings only • Know your audience and match your reporting approach

  24. Effective Communication ofEvaluation Results • Captures the data in its conclusions • Speaks in language of users • Detached, non-possessive stance • Objective - “truth” to power, but • Is pragmatic - goes only as far as the key stakeholders will accept

  25. Assessing the quality of an evaluationreport and process • Meeting needs – commissioning managers, stakeholders • Relevant scope • Suitable methods • Reliable data • Sound analysis • Credible findings • Impartial conclusions • Clear reporting

  26. What to Evaluate • Outcomes • Processes

  27. Steps In Evaluation • Planning • Selecting object (setting objectives) • Methodology • Deciding on standards • Choice of measures • Data collection • Data analysis • Implementing evaluation • Reporting

  28. Project Estimation

  29. Estimation • “The single most important task of a project: setting realistic expectations. • Unrealistic expectations based on inaccurate estimates are the single largest cause of software failure.”

  30. The Problems • Predicting software cost • Predicting software schedule • Controlling software risk • Managing/tracking project as it progresses

  31. Fundamental estimation questions • How much effort is required to complete an activity? • How much calendar time is needed to complete an activity? • What is the total cost of an activity? • Project estimation and scheduling are interleaved management activities.

  32. Software cost components • Hardware and software costs. • Travel and training costs. • Effort costs (the dominant factor in most projects) • The salaries of engineers involved in the project; • Social and insurance costs. • Effort costs must take overheads into account • Costs of building, heating, lighting. • Costs of networking and communications. • Costs of shared facilities (e.g library, staff restaurant, etc.).

  33. Nature of Estimates • Man Months (or Person Months), defined as 152 man-hours of direct-charged labor • Schedule in months (requirements complete to acceptance) • Well-managed program

  34. Common Estimation models • Expert Judgment • Analogy • Top Down • Bottom up • Price to win • Parametric or Algorithmic Method • Using formulas and equations

  35. Criteria for a Good Model • Defined—clear what is estimated • Accurate • Objective—avoids subjective factors • Results understandable • Detailed • Stable—second order relationships • Right Scope • Easy to Use • Causal—future data not required • Parsimonious—everything present is important

  36. Expert judgment • One or more experts in both software development and the application domain use their experience to predict software costs. Process iterates until some consensus is reached. • Advantages: Relatively cheap estimation method. Can be accurate if experts have direct experience of similar systems • Disadvantages: Very inaccurate if there are no experts!

  37. Estimation by analogy • The cost of a project is computed by comparing the project to a similar project in the same application domain • Advantages: May be accurate if project data available and people/tools the same • Disadvantages: Impossible if no comparable project has been tackled. Needs systematically maintained cost database

  38. Cost Pricing to win • The project costs whatever the customer has to spend on it • Advantages: You get the contract • Disadvantages: The probability that the customer gets the system he or she wants is small. Costs do not accurately reflect the work required. • How do you know what customer has? • Only a good strategy if you are willing to take a serious loss to get a first customer, or if Delivery of a radically reduced product is a real option.

  39. Top-down and bottom-up estimation • Any of these approaches may be used top-down or bottom-up. • Top-down • Start at the system level and assess the overall system functionality and how this is delivered through sub-systems. • Bottom-up • Start at the component level and estimate the effort required for each component. Add these efforts to reach a final estimate.

  40. Top-down estimation • Usable without knowledge of the system architecture and the components that might be part of the system. • Takes into account costs such as integration, configuration management and documentation. • Can underestimate the cost of solving difficult low-level technical problems. • Advantages • Easy to calculate • Effective early on (like initial cost estimates) • Disadvantages • Some models are questionable or may not fit • Less accurate because it doesn’t look at details

  41. Bottom-up estimation • Usable when the architecture of the system is known and components identified. • This can be an accurate method if the system has been designed in detail. • It may underestimate the costs of system level activities such as integration and documentation. • Advantages • Works well if activities well understood • Disadvantages • Specific activities not always known • More time consuming

  42. Estimation methods • Each method has strengths and weaknesses. • Estimation should be based on several methods. • If these do not return approximately the same result, then you have insufficient information available to make an estimate. • Some action should be taken to find out more in order to make more accurate estimates. • Pricing to win is sometimes the only applicable method.

  43. Pricing to win • This approach may seem unethical and un-businesslike. • However, when detailed information is lacking it may be the only appropriate strategy. • The project cost is agreed on the basis of an outline proposal and the development is constrained by that cost. • A detailed specification may be negotiated or an evolutionary approach used for system development.

  44. Algorithmic Measures • Lines of Code (LOC) • Function points • Feature points or object points • Other possible • Number of bubbles on a DFD • Number of of ERD entities • Number of processes on a structure chart • LOC and function points most common • (of the algorithmic approaches) • Majority of projects use none of the above

  45. Lines of code • What's a line of code? • The measure was first proposed when programs were typed on cards with one line per card; • How does this correspond to statements as in Java which can span several lines or where there can be several statements on one line. • What programs should be counted as part of the system? • This model assumes that there is a linear relationship between system size and volume of documentation. • A key thing to understand about early estimates is that the uncertainty is more important than the initial line – don’t see one estimate, seek justifiable bounds.

  46. Code-based Estimates • LOC Advantages • Commonly understood metric • Permits specific comparison • Actuals easily measured • LOC Disadvantages • Difficult to estimate early in cycle • Counts vary by language • Many costs not considered (ex: requirements) • Programmers may be rewarded based on this • Can use: # defects/# LOC • Code generators produce excess code

  47. LOC Estimate Issues • How do you know how many in advance? • What about different languages? • What about programmer style? • Stat: avg. programmer productivity: 3,000 LOC/yr • Most algorithmic approaches are more effective after requirements (or have to be after)

  48. Function Points • Software size s/b measured by number & complexity of functions it performs • More methodical than LOC counts • House analogy • House’s Square Feet ~= Software LOC • # Bedrooms & Baths ~= Function points • Former is size only, latter is size & function • Six basic steps

  49. Function Point Process • 1. Count # of biz functions per category • Categories: outputs, inputs, db inquiries, files or data structures, and interfaces • 2. Establish Complexity Factor for each and apply • Simple, Average, Complex • Set a weighting multiplier for each (0->15) • This results in the “unadjusted function-point total” • 3. Compute an “influence multiplier” and apply • It ranges from 0.65 to 1.35; is based on 14 factors • 4. Results in “function point total” • This can be used in comparative estimates

  50. Parametric Method Issues • Remember: most projects you’ll run into don’t use these • Which is ‘normal’, so don’t be surprised • Or come-in to new job and say “Hey, let’s use COCOMO” • These are more effective on large projects • Where a past historical base exists • Primary issue for most projects are • Lack of similar projects • Thus lack of comparable data

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