Finance

The finance domain covers estimating, budgeting, funding, and controlling project costs so that the project remains financially viable and aligned with organizational constraints.

Why this domain matters

Even well-planned projects fail if they cannot secure and manage money effectively. Finance ensures that cost estimates are realistic, funding is available when needed, and spending stays within approved limits. Strong financial management supports investment decisions, protects profitability, and builds trust with sponsors and governance bodies.

Key concepts

  • Cost estimates: approximations of the monetary resources needed to complete project activities.
  • Cost baseline: the approved, time-phased budget used to measure cost performance.
  • Funding requirements: total and periodic funding needed to execute the project.
  • Reserves: contingency reserves for known-unknowns and management reserves for unknown-unknowns.
  • Cost control and forecasting: monitoring expenditures, calculating variances, and forecasting final costs.

Common pitfalls and exam traps

  • Underestimating costs to gain project approval, leading to later overruns and loss of credibility.
  • Confusing contingency reserves (within the baseline) with management reserves (outside the baseline).
  • Focusing only on actual spend and ignoring trends and forecasts such as estimate at completion (EAC).
  • Not aligning payment terms and cash flow with contract and funding constraints.
  • Exam trap: using management reserve for routine variances instead of requesting appropriate approval.

PMP Example Question

PMP Example Question

During project execution, several identified risks occur and are handled using allocated contingency reserves. Later, an unforeseen regulatory change introduces new work that was not part of any risk response plan. The project manager needs additional funds. What is the best source for this funding?

  1. Reallocate unused contingency reserve from other work packages.
  2. Use management reserve with appropriate approval.
  3. Reduce project scope to free up budget.
  4. Ask the team to work unpaid overtime to avoid extra costs.

Correct Answer: B — Use management reserve with appropriate approval.

Explanation:Management reserve is intended for unforeseen work that is within the scope of the project but outside the original risk responses. It sits outside the cost baseline and requires appropriate authorization to use. Contingency reserve is for identified risks, and reducing scope or relying on unpaid overtime is neither professional nor aligned with proper financial governance.

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