APMP Cost Task Force Industry / Government Questions & Responses

December 20, 2011 · Filed Under APMP · Comment 

Here is the summary of the questions and responses from 2010 that were obtained regarding the APMP task force charter to make government and industry work better together in cost analysis.  This is posted in advance of the task force telephone conversation on December 21, 2011.

If you would like an invite to that call or would like to join the task force please email Dan Galorath.

Probe further into causes for differences between Industry proposed costs and Government evaluated most probable costs

Understand differences in the approaches behind developing Industry cost proposals and performing Government cost evaluations

Identify contradictory assumptions

Industry

How do you determine the price you will propose?

What type of estimate do you prepare?

How far down in the WBS do you prepare it?

Government

 

When preparing your internal estimate, what is your technical baseline?

How detailed are your estimates, e.g., level of WBS? What are your estimating methodologies? What is your historical data?

Would you consider providing this information to industry as part of the solicitation request, especially if there is an incumbent?

Why discrepancies might exist

What might industry do to provide a realistic cost proposal?

What might government do to receive a realistic cost proposal

Industry

 

What types of assumptions do you make to support your estimate?

Do you clearly define these as assumptions?

Do you desire more information from the Government?

How much detail do you provide to substantiate your price? Do you prepare detailed justifications?

Government

 

How much detail is needed to substantiate bidders’ cost?

Is there a format that you might like to see this information in so that you can compare apples-to-apples?

Cost Proposal Substantiation

What might industry do to provide more consistent substantiation?

What might the Government ask for to ensure that it gets the level of detail it is seeking?

Thank you for reading “Dan on Estimating”, if you would like more information about Galorath’s estimation models, please visit our contact page, call us at +1 310 414-3222 or click a button below to ask sales questions, sign up for our free library or schedule a demo.




APMP Cost Taskforce November 2011: Helping Calm the Storm of Budget Cuts Via Cost Analysis

December 3, 2011 · Filed Under APMP · Comment 

During the November 2011 meeting the APMP cost task force regrouped with Dan Galorath as the Chair.  The cost task force’s mission is to help resolve the differences between government and contractor positions in cost.  The PowerPoint including the history and new goals is here. Quintin Redmond also offered his systems engineering paper Why Affordability Is A Systems Engineering Metric to the group.

We determined to resurrect the earlier document covering government and contractor positions and complete it as a report.

The original statement of the issue follows:

  • DIFFERENCES IN ESTIMATES: There are often large differences between an offeror’s proposed cost and the Government’s realistic or Most Probable Cost.
  • GOVERNMENT & INDUSTRY: This task force will involve Government and Industry Cost experts to discuss/brainstorm possible reasons. (It may require discussing or mapping each others processes to determine where these disconnects may be.)
  • IDENTIFY DISCONNECTS: Identify disconnects between offerors’ approaches in developing cost proposals and the Government’s approach to evaluating cost proposals (including performing realism analysis and developing Most Probable Cost)
  • HELP RESOLVE DIFFERENCES DUE TO ANALYSIS DIFFERENCES: Minimize differences between the proposed cost and the Government’s Most Probable Cost that is due analysis approach differences (e.g., Government point estimate or a 50% probability approach vs. an offeror’s 10% best case approach.)

Thank you for reading “Dan on Estimating”, if you would like more information about Galorath’s estimation models, please visit our contact page, call us at +1 310 414-3222 or click a button below to ask sales questions, sign up for our free library or schedule a demo.