Cost-to-complete and final-cost forecasts that move with the schedule and the field — not with optimism.
A forecast made from optimism is a surprise waiting to happen. ErectOS computes cost-at-completion and the finish date from real production, committed cost, and approved changes — so the number you carry is the number the job is actually heading toward.
Estimate-at-completion is built from committed cost and field production — not a percentage someone typed.
Cost forecast and schedule forecast share the same data, so a slip shows up in both at once.
Pulse surfaces the trend lines bending the wrong way while there is still room to react.
Pull committed cost, actuals, and field production into a cost-to-complete that updates itself — and an estimate-at-completion you can defend to the owner.
1.0 Project
EAC is trending $182k over the budget.
The schedule forecast moves with daily-log progress, so the completion date reflects the pace on site — not the date on the contract.
2.0 Finish
Pulse forecasts completion on Oct 14 — 9 days late.
Driven by MEP production and CO-014 impact.
Forecasting reads from and writes to every module it touches — your data is entered once and trusted everywhere.
Committed and actual cost feed the estimate-at-completion live.
Real progress drives the forecast finish date.
Approved changes adjust both cost and schedule forecasts.
The cost and date forecast reshape the cash curve.
The finish date is computed, not negotiated.
Schedules → ForecastingThe overrun is a forecast, not a year-end surprise.
Budget → ForecastingDollars and days move together, off the same data.
Field → Forecasting