DCMA 14-Point vs GAO Schedule Assessment: Key Differences
Introduction
Schedule quality assessments are critical for ensuring project control and credibility. Two prominent frameworks used in the US government contracting space are the DCMA 14-Point Schedule Assessment (Defense Contract Management Agency) and the GAO Schedule Assessment Guide (Government Accountability Office, also known as the “Green Book”). While both aim to evaluate schedule health, they differ in purpose, scope, and rigour. This article compares the two, helping you decide which to apply on your project.
What Each Framework Is For
DCMA 14-Point Assessment
The DCMA 14-Point Assessment is a quantitative, automated check of a Primavera P6 schedule against 14 specific metrics (e.g., missing logic, negative float, high duration, critical path length index). It was developed to provide a quick, repeatable health check for contractor schedules on DoD contracts. The output is a pass/fail per metric with thresholds (e.g., BEI > 0.8). It is widely used because it is fast, objective, and can be run in tools like Project Assure.
GAO Schedule Assessment Guide
The GAO Schedule Assessment Guide (GAO-16-89G) is a comprehensive best-practice framework for developing and maintaining high-quality schedules. It covers 10 best practices (e.g., capturing all activities, sequencing, resource loading, baseline maintenance) and provides detailed criteria for each. The GAO assessment is more qualitative and holistic, focusing on the entire schedule management process, not just the XER file. It is often used for major federal acquisitions and audits.
Where They Overlap
Both frameworks share common goals: ensuring schedules are logically sound, realistic, and useful for management. They both examine logic ties, critical path, float, and duration. For example:
- Logic: DCMA checks for missing predecessors/successors; GAO requires a complete network with a single start and end.
- Critical Path: DCMA checks for negative float and critical path length index; GAO expects a valid critical path and near-critical paths.
- Float: DCMA flags excessive total float; GAO recommends reasonable float values and management of float.
In practice, a schedule that passes DCMA 14-point will likely satisfy many GAO criteria, but the reverse is not always true.
Key Differences in Approach and Rigour
| Aspect | DCMA 14-Point | GAO Schedule Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Quick, automated health check | Comprehensive process audit |
| Scope | 14 quantitative metrics on the schedule file | 10 best practices covering entire schedule lifecycle |
| Method | Automated tool, pass/fail per metric | Manual review, interviews, documentation check |
| Rigour | High for logic and duration, but limited | High for process and traceability |
| Output | Scorecard with 14 metrics | Narrative report with strengths/weaknesses |
| Resource Loading | Not explicitly checked | Required (cost and labour hours) |
| Baseline Maintenance | Not covered | Detailed requirements for baseline and updates |
| Schedule Risk | Not covered | Encourages schedule risk analysis |
The DCMA assessment is more automated and objective, while the GAO assessment is qualitative and process-oriented. For example, DCMA will flag a schedule with BEI < 0.8, but GAO will ask whether the schedule was updated with actual dates and remaining durations correctly. GAO also requires a schedule risk analysis (SRA) for high-risk projects, which DCMA does not.
Which to Apply on Your Project
Choose based on your project’s phase, contract type, and stakeholder requirements:
- Use DCMA 14-Point when you need a quick, repeatable health check—e.g., monthly schedule reviews, internal quality checks, or when the contract mandates it (many DoD contracts do). It is excellent for catching logic errors, missing constraints, and float misuse. Tools like Project Assure let you run these checks free in the browser without uploading your XER.
- Use GAO Schedule Assessment when you need a comprehensive, defensible schedule—e.g., for major federal acquisitions, audits, or when the project is high-risk. It is also ideal for developing a new schedule from scratch or improving your scheduling process.
- Combine both for best results: use DCMA as a daily health check and GAO as a periodic deep-dive. Many organizations start with DCMA and then address GAO gaps.
In summary, DCMA is a tactical tool for schedule quality, while GAO is a strategic framework for schedule management. Understanding their differences ensures you apply the right level of rigour for your project’s needs.
Run these checks free, in your browser
Free, browser-based Primavera P6 XER schedule analyser — DCMA 14-point, GAO & NASA checks, EVM/S-curve, and forensic baseline-vs-update comparison. Nothing is uploaded; your XER is parsed locally in the browser. 3 free analyses, no card required.
Analyse your XER →Frequently asked questions
Can a schedule pass DCMA 14-point but fail GAO assessment?
Yes. DCMA only checks 14 quantitative metrics. GAO assesses broader practices like resource loading, baseline maintenance, and schedule risk analysis. A schedule may have good logic (pass DCMA) but lack proper resource assignments or a traceable baseline, failing GAO.
Is GAO assessment mandatory for all federal projects?
No, but it is strongly recommended for major acquisitions and high-risk projects. The GAO Green Book is a best-practice guide, not a regulation. However, many federal agencies require GAO compliance in contracts.
Which framework is more rigorous?
GAO is more rigorous in scope and process, but DCMA is more rigorous in specific metrics. GAO requires manual review and evidence, while DCMA is automated. For a thorough evaluation, both are needed.
Can I run DCMA 14-point checks without installing software?
Yes. Free browser-based tools like Project Assure parse your Primavera P6 XER file locally and run all 14 DCMA metrics instantly. No upload is required, ensuring data privacy.