Projection types
A projection in AMT represents the life cycle costing for an asset, which can be broken down to the component level. An asset can have a number of projections, including current budget and estimate-draft. Projections house the strategy tasks that are used to forecast costs and drive the planning process.
For an asset owned by the business there are a number of different types of projections depending on the asset type. While the structure of each projection is the same, each type of projection behaves slightly differently.
Centreline asset projections
- Centreline projection.
- Centreline.
- Always assumed to be current.
- Cannot have a start date in the past - AMT updates the start date at the start of each month, so scheduled tasks can never become overdue.
- Strategy tasks can be linked to standard jobs.
Modelling asset projections
- Estimate-Current projection.
- Modelling assets can only have one Estimate-Current projection.
- Represents the latest assumptions.
- Can link to standard jobs but pricing is not automatically updated if the standard job is changed (so that history is always maintained).
- Enter the expected asset start dates (future or historical) and terms.
- There is an option to escalate costs to today's values or show at original values.
- Estimate-Draft projection.
- Modelling assets can have many Estimate-Draft projections.
- Provides full version control.
- Behaves the same way as Estimate-Current.
Real asset projections
- Current projection.
- The live assumptions for an asset.
- Drives the planning and execution of work.
- Real-time updating for actual maintenance activities (work orders).
- Reflects the real-time life cycle costing for an asset.
- Leaves the link to standard jobs.
- All strategy task costs are escalated to today's values.
- Alternate projection.
- Used for what-if analyses.
- You can use a copy of the current projection in a test environment.
- Behaves like a current projection.
- Archive projection.
- Save a copy of a projection.
- Contains all the details of a projection, but does not change for anything in the future.
- Used to provide an audit trail or reference point.
- Budget projection.
- For maintenance contracts, the budget projection usually reflects the commercial assumptions made to determine contractual billing rates.
- Represents original assumptions or company benchmark performance.
- Can link to standard jobs, but pricing is not automatically updated if a standard job is changed (so that history is always maintained).
- Will schedule historical tasks to when they were expected to occur (so they do not become overdue). Therefore, the projection flexes with utilisation (it is not a data-based accounting budget).
- Will escalate historical costs to the date they were expected to occur - called escalating costs over time.
- Not impacted by actual occurrences, only utilisation.