Change Order Settings

Project administrators can control several Cost Management settings within the Cost settings tab:

  1. Click the Module Selector .

  2. Select the Services tab.

  3. Select Cost Management in the left panel.

    Note: If you enter Project Admin directly from Cost Management, you start in this position.
  4. The General secondary tab is selected by default. Switch to the Change Order tab.

Number Format

Change the number format that is generated as you create change orders and cost items.

  1. Expand the Number Format section.
  2. Select the More menu for the number format that you would like to define.

You can define:

Financial Markup Formulas

Financial markups can be added to change orders. An example of a financial markup is an add-on such as a bond, contingency, or fee. These financial markups can be added to the change order for submission to the owner. See the Potential Change Order article to see an example of how to apply a financial markup.

Before you can apply a financial markup, a project administrator must create the financial markup formula in the Change Order settings tab.

Create a Financial Markup for a Change Order

As a project administrator, you need to create a financial markup formula:

  1. Navigate to the Financial Markups Formulas drop-down list.
  2. Click Add.
  3. Click Markup from the left panel to add it to the formula.
  4. In the editor on the right, enter the name of the new markup.
  5. Select the markup type and amount. Available options include:
    • Percentage: Calculates the markup as a percentage of the cost basis.
    • Flat: A fixed amount applied as a total for the markup at the PCO level.
  6. Select the cost basis for the markup. Only available on percentage-based markups.
    • Current Cost Basis: Multiplies the percentage and the cost.
    • Net Total: Multiplies the net total amount.
    • Revised Cost Basis: Multiplies the following subtotal and percentage.
    • Preceding Markup Subtotal: Equals the total of all preceding markup above the selected markup, excluding the net total.
    • Grand Total: Multiplies the calculated grand total and the percentage.
    • Preceding Total: Calculated on the total of net total and all preceding markups.
  7. Toggle whether the variable can be edited when the formula is applied.
  8. Provide an optional description of the markup.
  9. By default, markups are calculated on all budget items. Click the Map Markup to Budget Code drop-down list to make a markup only apply to a specific budget code.
  10. Click Calculate on normal Cost Item where to select a column, operator, and value combination to apply the markup to. By default, markups are calculated on all budget items.

To add a subtotal to your financial markup formula:

  1. Click Subtotal from the left panel.
  2. Select the appropriate cost basis revision. Available options include Revise Cost Basis or Info Only:
    • Revise Cost Basis creates a subtotal and recalculates the sample cost basis for subsequent markups.
    • Info Only creates a subtotal for informational purposes but does not recalculate the cost basis for subsequent markups.

You can add more markups or subtotals as required. After everything is ready, click Save.

Note: Calculation rules may force markups to only calculate on cost items with specific budget codes. Therefore, sample cost basis data may not reflect the actual results of the calculation and is only shown for the purposes of checking the formula.

After you created financial markup formula, you can decide where to use it in Cost Management. Choose between two options:

Caution: Keep only one contract per PCO. More contracts in PCO will generate an error.

Delete or Deactivate a Financial Markup Formula

To delete or deactivate a financial markup formula:

  1. Switch to the Change Order tab in Services.
  2. Click Deactivate or Delete in the Financial Markups Formulas section.

By clicking Deactivate, you can temporarily switch it off not to be used in change orders from now on. By clicking Delete, you'll permanently remove created financial markup formula.

Required Fields for Change Orders

Project administrators can define a batch of fields as required. This setting may be helpful when working with change order workflow to prevent the missing of important information. To do so:

  1. Open Services, and then Cost Management from the left navigation.
  2. Switch to the Change Order tab.
  3. Scroll down to Required Fields.
  4. Select the drop-down list next to the change order.
  5. Choose the required fields for change orders. Custom attributes are also shown on the list.

Required fields apply to all existing instances and instances to be created in the future.

After setting it up, when changing the status of a change order, those fields are marked as obligatory and must be filled up to proceed with the change order workflow. By clicking View, you'll be redirected to the missing data.

Members with collaborative access also see the required fields when submitting an RFQ (Request for Quotation). See the Collaborative Potential Change Order Workflow article to learn how to collaborate with suppliers in Cost Management.

Change Order Types

Change order types can be used to filter your budget and contract tables and be part of your change order codes. You can deactivate the default types or add your own.

To add change order types:

  1. Select the Change Order tab in Services.

  2. Expand the Change Order Types section.

  3. Click Add.

  4. Enter the type name.

  5. Enter a description.

  6. Choose which change order module a type applies to. When you open the change order's flyout panel, you'll see this information displayed in the Type field as an option to choose for a particular change order.

  7. Select whether a specific change order type should be set as the default option for a given change order. If a type is designated as the default for a change order, it cannot be deselected in the Applicable to section.

Select the More menu to deactivate undesired default types.

Change Order Pay Before Approval

Administrators can select any OCO/SCO change order types to be manually added to Budget and Cost Payment Applications before these orders are approved. This allows the value of the change order to be edited between payment applications.

To add change order types that can be included in payment applications when they have at least Open status, before final approval:

  1. Select the Change Order tab from the Settings tool.

  2. Expand the Change Order Types section.

  3. Go to Pay before approval.

  4. Select the desired OCO and SCO types from drop-down menu.

Tip: Learn how to add change orders in Budget Payment Application or Cost Payment Application.

PCO Scope

Customize the name of the change order scope so that it can suit your company's needs.

To change the name:

  1. Select the Change Order tab in Services.
  2. Expand the PCO Scope section.
  3. You can either add a customized name for the original scope's name or change it's description.
Note: Description can't be left empty. If cleared, will revert to default.

In the example, Contingency is changed to Transfer:

PCO Source Types

PCO (Potential Change Order) source types can be used to filter your budget and contract tables and be part of your PCO codes. You can deactivate the default types or add your own.

To add PCO types:

  1. Select the Change Order tab in Services.
  2. Expand the PCO Source Types section.
  3. Click Add.
  4. Enter the type name.
  5. Enter the type description.

Select the More menu to deactivate undesired default types.

OCO Approval Workflows

Automate the workflows that an OCO (Owner Change Order) goes through before being submitted to the owner. You can create multiple workflows to make sure that the right people see an OCO before the owner is involved in the process. For example, if the value of an OCO is above a certain threshold, it may require a manager's approval. Learn more about approval workflows.

SCO Approval Workflows

Automate the workflows that an SCO (Supplier Change Order) goes through before being submitted to the supplier. You can create multiple workflows to make sure that the right people see an SCO before the supplier is involved in the process. For example, if the value of an SCO is above a certain threshold, it may require a manager's approval. Learn more about approval workflows.

Document Templates

Create the templates that generate documents for your various change orders. Learn about setting up document templates. Learn about variables that can be used in document templates.

Dates for RFQ, COR, OCO, SCO

You can define a default value for dates and choose to have them displayed on the home page. This will help you manage the schedule in Cost Management. To do so, open the More menu and click Edit.

Note: Items without the More menu can't be displayed on the home page and can't be edited.

If applicable, you can choose the default value for the date. Use the relative date option for cases where an activity is relative to the date of another activity (for example, creating a procurement schedule). The relative date option is only available for editable system-generated dates and custom dates. For example, here you can select the number of days that a response is required for an RFQ (Request For Quotation).

Tip: You can create relative dates for custom attributes and custom columns.

Available document variable examples are shown by clicking Show More. You can use those to prepare document templates.

Custom Attributes

Add custom attributes to the different change order types. Learn about creating custom attributes.

Default Email Message

Write default email templates for the different change order communications.