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Bottom-Up Estimation

Project time estimation technique that breaks projects down into smaller, manageable tasks for detailed estimation, then aggregates them for an overall project timeline. Provides high accuracy through granular analysis and team involvement.

Last updated: 2026-03-12 11:52

Overview

Bottom-up estimation is a detailed project time estimation method that builds the project timeline from the ground up. It involves breaking down the project into its smallest components, estimating each component individually, and then aggregating these estimates to determine the total project duration.

How It Works

  1. Decompose the Project: Break the project down into increasingly smaller tasks using a Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
  2. Identify All Components: List every task, subtask, and activity required
  3. Estimate Each Component: Determine time requirements for each individual task
  4. Involve Team Members: Consult with people who will execute the work
  5. Aggregate Estimates: Sum all individual estimates to get the total project timeline
  6. Add Buffers: Include contingency time for risks and uncertainties

Key Characteristics

Benefits

Implementation Steps

  1. Create comprehensive Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
  2. Identify all tasks at the lowest level of detail
  3. Assign tasks to team members who will execute them
  4. Gather time estimates from assigned team members
  5. Review estimates for consistency and reasonableness
  6. Sum estimates for each work package
  7. Aggregate work package estimates to phase level
  8. Sum phase estimates for total project duration
  9. Add contingency buffers for identified risks
  10. Document assumptions and constraints

Best Practices

When to Use

Challenges and Limitations

Comparison with Top-Down Estimation

Bottom-Up:

Top-Down:

Integration with Other Techniques

Tools and Support

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