
Baseline
A baseline is a fixed point of reference that is used for comparison purposes. The cost baseline is the budget approved for the project, usually broken down in some detail by cost category and cost period of time. If a company opens a new warehouse, for example, and the cost baseline has been set at $100,000 per month every month for 10 months, any monthly cost exceeding $100,000 is a red flag for the budget analyst. For example, a company that wants to measure the success of a product line can use the number of units sold during the first year as a baseline against which subsequent annual sales are measured. In business, the success of a project or product is often measured against a baseline number for costs, sales, or any number of other variables.

What Is a Baseline?
A baseline is a fixed point of reference that is used for comparison purposes. In business, the success of a project or product is often measured against a baseline number for costs, sales, or any number of other variables. A project may exceed a baseline number or fail to meet it.
For example, a company that wants to measure the success of a product line can use the number of units sold during the first year as a baseline against which subsequent annual sales are measured. The baseline serves as the starting point against which all future sales are measured.



Understanding a Baseline
A baseline can be any number that serves as a reasonable and defined starting point for comparison purposes. It may be used to evaluate the effects of a change, track the progress of an improvement project, or measure the difference between two periods of time.
For example, a public company will track the performance of each product line by choosing one year as a baseline and measuring all subsequent years against it.
A baseline is typically used when a financial statement or budget analysis is prepared. The statement or analysis uses existing revenues and spending as a baseline for assessing whether a new project is implemented successfully.
The Baseline in Financial Statement Analysis
A financial statement analysis that uses a baseline is called horizontal analysis. It compares a company's historical financial information over a number of reporting periods that may be monthly, quarterly, or annually.
The first period in a horizontal analysis is denoted as the baseline period. All subsequent periods are then measured as a percentage of the baseline. So a period that has the same revenue as the baseline would have 100% revenue.
In information technology, there are three commonly-used baseline points: cost, scope, and schedule.
This exercise is useful in spotting trends, looking at areas of growth or decline, and assessing financial performance overall. Ratios like profit margin are also compared horizontally against the baseline year to draw conclusions about a company's ongoing performance.
The Baseline in Budgeting
Project budgeting works from what is known as a cost baseline. The cost baseline is the budget approved for the project, usually broken down in some detail by cost category and cost period of time.
If a company opens a new warehouse, for example, and the cost baseline has been set at $100,000 per month every month for 10 months, any monthly cost exceeding $100,000 is a red flag for the budget analyst.
However, project costs inevitably fluctuate from baseline numbers as unknown and unexpected expenses or even, in some cases, savings are realized. The cost baseline can be updated to reflect actual project costs.
The Baseline in Information Technology
In information technology management, a baseline may be set for anticipated or maximal levels of performance. There are three commonly-used baseline points: cost, scope, and schedule.
Software applications used by project management professionals typically are designed to maintain and track these three critical baseline measurements.
Related terms:
Cost Accounting
Cost accounting is a form of managerial accounting that aims to capture a company's total cost of production by assessing its variable and fixed costs. read more
Feasibility Study : How Does It Work?
A feasibility study analyzes all relevant factors of a project to determine the possibility and probability of completing it successfully. read more
Financial Performance
Financial performance measures how well a firm uses assets from operations and generates revenues. Read how to analyze financial performance before investing. read more
Horizontal Analysis
Horizontal analysis is used in financial statement analysis to compare historical data, such as ratios or line items, over a number of accounting periods. read more
Managerial Accounting
Managerial accounting is the practice of analyzing and communicating financial data to managers, who use the information to make business decisions. read more
Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)
Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) refers to the consolidation of companies or assets through various types of financial transactions. read more
Public Company
A public company is a corporation whose ownership is distributed amongst general public shareholders through publicly-traded stock shares. read more
Red Flag
A red flag is a warning or indicator, suggesting that there is a potential problem or threat with a company's stock, financial statements, or news reports. read more
Scope
Scope is a project management term for the objectives necessary to complete a project, allowing managers to estimate costs and time required. read more
Upper Management
Executives and other leaders—collectively known as upper management—hold the primary decision-making power in a company. read more