Finance Domain
ECO Domain: Process Domain — Task 6: Plan and manage finance Related principles: Focus on Value, Integrate Sustainability Within All Project Areas
Definition
The Finance performance domain addresses processes and tools related to the use and allocation of monetary resources, both internally and externally. Financial performance relates to costs, funding, and the value proposition of the project. Processes include planning, estimating, budgeting, financing, funding, managing, measuring, and controlling costs to optimize value for the organization.
Financial measurements serve multiple purposes: evaluating performance against plan, tracking resource utilization, demonstrating accountability, providing information to stakeholders, forecasting future trends (cost overruns, resource shortages, savings), evaluating ROI and long-term value, and enhancing risk management.
“The value of financial measurements is not in the collection and dissemination of the data, but rather in the interactions about how to use the data to make value-adding, well-informed decisions.” — PMBOK8 §2.4
Key Concepts
Value definition
Organizations use various strategies to define value — tangible or intangible. Tangible value uses financial metrics: ROI, IRR, payback period, return on assets (ROA), return on average capital employed (ROACE). Intangible value includes compliance with regulations, social impact, customer satisfaction, and innovation. Value may be more than just profit — it can also be value for people (social) or the planet (environmental). Some projects don’t create value by themselves but are components of a program where value is realized in the future.
Value maximization
The Finance domain focuses not only on cost management but on ensuring the project delivers maximum value. This means aligning with strategy, using clear success indicators (ROI, IRR), and considering other dimensions like social impact and customer satisfaction.
Funding
Projects acquire financial resources through multiple means: internal organizational budgets, customer contracts, grants, or customer-driven crowdfunding. Project practitioners are often called upon to lead or support funding activities before or during the project.
Financial constraints
Budget is the primary financial constraint but not the only one. Projects may be restricted to specific types of financial resources:
- CapEx (Capital Expenditures) — funds invested to acquire, upgrade, and maintain physical assets such as property, plants, buildings, technology, or equipment.
- OpEx (Operational Expenditures) — funds for ongoing day-to-day business costs: advertising, administration fees, wages, rent, utility costs.
In some cases, budget is allocated annually and cannot be transferred to the next year. In agile projects, budget can be allocated quarterly and revised quarterly, allowing more flexibility based on work achieved.
Project budget
Project budget buildup depends on organizational process assets (OPAs), policies, governance, portfolio practices, and financial management practices. Two buildup scenarios exist:
- Implicit reserve management: Initial budget = work package cost estimates + contingency reserve + management reserve (all inside the budget figure)
- Explicit reserve management: Initial budget = work package cost estimates only; contingency and management reserves are tracked separately outside
The scenario used varies by organizational preference or external factors. Know both for the exam.
Cost baseline
The cost baseline is the approved version of the time-phased project budget. Two variations:
- Variation A: Cost baseline excludes management reserve only (contingency reserve is inside the baseline)
- Variation B: Cost baseline excludes both contingency reserve AND management reserve
Changes to the cost baseline require formal change control procedures.
Reserves
A reserve is a provision to mitigate cost and/or schedule risk:
- Contingency reserve — allocated for known risks with active response strategies. Usually inside the cost baseline (Variation A). Used for known-unknowns.
- Management reserve — set aside by management in addition to the cost baseline for unforeseen work within scope. Used for unknown-unknowns. Typically released at the discretion of senior leadership — however, in some organizations this may be at the discretion of the project manager or project management team.
Exam trap: Many questions assume management reserve always requires sponsor approval. PMBOK8 explicitly leaves this org-dependent. The right answer acknowledges context.
Cost management
The primary source of project costs is the resources needed to complete project activities. Every project decision may incur further costs related to using, maintaining, and supporting the project’s purpose. Life cycle cost considerations matter: limiting design reviews reduces project cost but may increase the resulting product’s operating costs.
Cost measurement
Different stakeholders measure project costs in different ways and at different times. Cost of an acquired item may be measured when:
- The acquisition decision is made (committed)
- The order is placed
- The item is delivered
- The actual cost is incurred or recorded for project accounting purposes
In many organizations, predicting and analyzing prospective financial performance of the project’s product is performed outside the project. In capital facilities projects, project cost management should include this work.
Processes
Plan Financial Management
Define how project revenues and expenses will be estimated, budgeted, managed, monitored, and controlled. Performed once or at predefined points.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Key inputs | Project charter, project management plan (schedule mgmt plan, risk mgmt plan), project documents, EEFs, OPAs |
| Key tools | Expert judgment, data analysis (alternative analysis), meetings |
| Key outputs | Financial management plan, funding strategy |
Estimate Costs
Develop an approximation of the cost of resources needed to complete project work. Performed periodically throughout the project.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Key inputs | Scope baseline, project schedule, resource requirements, Risk Register, lessons learned register, make-or-buy decisions |
| Key tools | Analogous estimating, parametric estimating, bottom-up estimating, multipoint estimating, reserve analysis, cost of quality |
| Key outputs | Cost estimates, basis of estimates, updates to assumption log and risk register |
Develop Budget
Aggregate estimated costs of individual activities or work packages to establish an authorized cost baseline. Performed once or at predefined points.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Key inputs | Cost estimates, project schedule, Risk Register, Business Case, Benefits Management Plan, agreements |
| Key tools | Cost aggregation, reserve analysis, historical information review, funding limit reconciliation |
| Key outputs | Cost baseline, project funding requirements |
Monitor and Control Finances
Systematically oversee and manage the project’s financial health by tracking expenditures, updating financial records, adjusting cost baseline and revenue forecasts, and implementing corrective actions. Performed continuously throughout the project.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Key inputs | Financial management plan, cost baseline, performance measurement baseline (Integrated Baseline), work performance data |
| Key tools | Earned Value Management (EVM) (EV analysis), trend analysis, reserve analysis, TCPI (To-Complete Performance Index) |
| Key outputs | Work performance information, revenue and cost forecasts, change requests, funding proposals, updates to cost baseline and PMB |
Tailoring Considerations
- Product/industry — Heavily regulated industries (e.g., Sarbanes-Oxley/SOX, GDPR) require more formal financial controls and may impact how finances are planned and tracked across phases.
- Development approach — Iterative approaches flatten the spend curve throughout the project. Time-phased budgeting and continuous funding assessment are employed; budget is not front-loaded.
- Procurement strategy — Contract type selection (fixed-price vs. T&M vs. cost-plus) is directly connected to financial risk distribution. Tailoring must align financial processes with procurement strategy to minimize cost overrun risk.
- Value definition — The definition of value varies by performing organization; financial success criteria must be tailored accordingly.
- Resource availability — Constraints in human, physical, or virtual resources may increase costs due to higher wages, training costs, expedited shipping, rental surcharges, or late-delivery penalties.
Worked examples from PMBOK8:
Example 1 — Adaptive life cycle: Contracts should be structured to reflect iterative budget expenditures aligned to sprint/iteration cadence; budget allocation is revised quarterly, not annually.
Example 2 — Small project: Limited financial flexibility means a conservative approach to budgeting with contingency and management reserves is crucial to project stability.
Example 3 — Government sector: Higher demand for fiscal accountability and risk aversion (public accountability, regulatory requirements) means reserves should carry a higher buffer to handle unforeseen challenges without compromising objectives.
Domain Interactions
Finance is one of the key pillars of project success — it provides access to the resources necessary for execution. Financial constraints have direct impact on adjacent domains, and decisions in those domains affect Finance in return:
| Direction | Domain | Nature of interaction |
|---|---|---|
| Finance → | Governance Domain | Budget decisions require governance approval; cost baseline changes need CCB |
| Finance → | Scope Domain | Financial constraints determine what scope is feasible |
| Finance → | Schedule Domain | Budget limits resource availability and schedule compression options |
| Finance ← | Stakeholders Domain | Stakeholder expectations and contractual obligations shape financial targets |
| Finance ← | Risk Domain | Risk reserves (contingency, management) are financial provisions; risk responses have cost implications |
Broader: maximizing value delivery should be the primary goal, connecting Finance results to the performing organization’s strategy.
Check Outcomes
Table 2-8 from PMBOK8 §2.4.5:
| Outcome | How to check |
|---|---|
| Project contributes to business objectives and advancement of strategy (value maximization) | Check ROI, NPV, IRR, cost-benefit analysis, KPIs, OKRs, CapEx, and OpEx parameters |
| Project completeness is within or below budget | Check variance analysis: CV and CPI; confirm financial targets with vendors per signed contract |
| Project deliverables are validated according to plan | Apply Earned Value Management (EVM); check other metrics as defined by the organization |
| Value is created as an investment or a different kind of value (financial perspective) | Use success criteria metrics defined for the project (e.g., investment value, future value) |
| Financial visibility is achieved | Use trend analysis, graphical analysis, and forecasting tools |
Exam angle
- Reserve authority trap: Contingency reserve = PM can use (known risks); management reserve = typically senior leadership, but PMBOK8 says some organizations allow PM discretion — right answer acknowledges the org context, not a blanket rule
- Two cost baseline variations: Exam scenarios may describe a baseline that includes or excludes contingency reserve — both are valid per PMBOK8; identify which scenario is described before calculating
- CapEx vs. OpEx: CapEx = physical assets (capitalize and depreciate); OpEx = ongoing operations (expense immediately) — wrong answers confuse the two when a scenario involves buying equipment vs. hiring contractors
- Agile budgeting: Quarterly allocation replaces annual baselines; contracts must reflect iterative cadence — wrong answers apply predictive cost baseline logic to adaptive projects
- Monitor and Control Finances outputs: Change requests and funding proposals are outputs — budget problems trigger change control, not unilateral PM adjustment
- Life cycle cost: Reducing project cost (fewer design reviews) may increase product operating cost — total cost of ownership thinking is the right frame, not just project budget