You are preparing a Work in Progress (WIP) report for a commercial warehouse wiring project. The total contract amount with your client is $200,000. Your estimated total project costs are $160,000. To date, you have incurred $40,000 in actual job costs. Based on cost progress, match each WIP reporting metric to its correct calculated value for this project.
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Electrician Business Operations
Running an Electrical Contracting Business Course
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On a WIP (Work in Progress) report for an electrical contracting project, how is the percentage complete calculated?
When reviewing a Work in Progress (WIP) report for your electrical contracting business, your earned revenue to date on a project is determined by the total amount of invoices sent and cash collected from the client.
You are preparing a Work in Progress (WIP) report for a commercial warehouse wiring project. The total contract amount with your client is $200,000. Your estimated total project costs are $160,000. To date, you have incurred $40,000 in actual job costs. Based on cost progress, match each WIP reporting metric to its correct calculated value for this project.
You are managing a commercial wiring project with a total contract amount of $200,000 and estimated total project costs of $150,000. Currently, you have sent $100,000 in invoices to the client, collected $75,000 in cash, and incurred $45,000 in actual job costs to date. Based on cost progress, you analyze your WIP report to determine the true value of the work performed, separating it from your billing. Your earned revenue to date is $____.
As an electrical contracting business owner, you are reviewing a project where cash flow seems misaligned with field progress. Arrange the steps in the correct logical order to critically evaluate the true financial standing of the project using percentage complete and earned revenue calculations.