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Table
of Contents
In fiscal
year 1996, executive agencies expect to obligate more than
$26 billion for information technology (IT) investments and
operations. This IT spending represents a critical investment
of public tax dollars affecting virtually every government
function. Creating a government that works better and costs
less demands high returns on information technology (IT) investments
and reduced systems development risks.
This guide
sets out an analytical framework for linking IT investment
decisions to strategic objectives and business plans in Federal
organizations; it supplements existing OMB policies and procedures.
OMB's objective is to provide information on 1) what OMB expects
from agencies and 2) how agencies can reduce the risk and
maximize the net benefits from their IT investments. The guide
was written with assistance from GAO and is based on strategic
information management practices in successful organizations.End Note
1, End Note
2
This guide
describes the critical success elements and key phases that
should be a part of a mature IT investment process. The IT
investment process an agency designs should match the culture
and organizational structure of the agency. The overriding
objective is that senior managers be able to systemically
maximize the benefits of IT investments through use of the
IT investment process.
The investment
process, depicted in Figure 1
below, consists of three phases: selection, control and evaluation.
As Figure 1 indicates, the three phases of the investment
process occur in a continuous cycle of selection, control,
and evaluation. Information from each phase flows freely among
all of the other phases with the exception of evaluation.
The evaluation component of the process has a unidirectional
information flow to the selection component. The evaluation
component is used to verify or modify the criteria used during
selection.
Select
-- create
a portfolio of IT project investments that maximizes mission
performance, using a standard set of criteria for consistent
comparison of projects.
Control
-- measure
ongoing IT projects against their projected costs, schedule,
and benefits and take action to continue, modify, or cancel
them.
Evaluate
-- 1)
determine the actual return on investment of an implemented
investment against the agency's mission and 2) adapt the existing
process to reflect "lessons learned".
The control
and evaluation phases are conducted throughout the year and
their results are fed into the selection phase, which in turn
feeds back to the control and evaluation phases.
This guide
begins by identifying three attributes that characterize successful
investment processes in best practice organizations. The guide
then is organized by the phases of the investment process.
Within each phase, the guide will describe: 1) the steps involved
, 2) applicable management techniques and tools, 3) key questions
to ask, and 4) examples from best practice organizations.
While
each phase of the investment process has its own requirements
for successful implementation, there are some overall organizational
attributes that are critical to successful investment evaluation.
These shared, critical attributes are: senior management attention,
overall mission focus, and a comprehensive portfolio approach
to IT investment.
Agency
processes should include the following elements:
• Senior
program managers, with authority to make key business and
funding decisions on IT projects, are continuously involved
in the process.
• A disciplined
and structured management forum is used to make IT investment
decisions, with the authority to approve, cancel, or delay
projects, mitigate risks, and validate expected returns.
• Program,
Information Resource Management (IRM) , and financial managers
with clearly defined roles, responsibilities, and accountability
for the success of IT projects. Mechanisms to achieve this
include establishing service agreements between providers
(IRM/Chief Financial Officer (CFO)) and consumers (line management)
of information technology, incorporating IRM/CFO issues and
requirements into program plans, and routinely involving the
IRM/CFO offices in operational decisions.
Agency
processes should:
• link
strategic planning to the agency's mission goals and customer
needs as required by the Government Performance and Results
Act (GPRA) of 1993 (Public Law 103-62). This includes developing
long-term general goals, setting specific annual performance
targets, and annually evaluating actual performance against
these targets.
• develop
mission-related IT measures that link the IRM strategic plan
with the agency strategic plan.End Note
3 For example, mission goals should be translated into
objective, results-oriented measures of performance, both
quantitative and qualitative, which can form the basis for
measuring the impact of information technology investments.
• determine
whether the function to be supported by the investment should
be performed in the private sector rather than by an agency
of the Federal government.
• determine
whether the agency proposing to perform the function is the
most appropriate agency.
• examine
the work processes involved to ensure they are efficient,
effective, and will take full advantage of the proposed automation.
• use
mission benefit, not project completion on time and within
budget, as an important measure of success for any IT project.
• identify
all major existing or planned information systems and define
their relationship to one another and to the agency's mission.
Agencies
should:
• define
a portfolio that includes IT projects in every phase (initial
concept, new, ongoing, or fully operational) End Note
4 and for every type (mission critical, cross-functional,
infrastructure, administrative, and R&D) End Note
5 of IT system.
• develop
levels of review, documentation requirements, and selection
criteria appropriate to the phase and type of IT system.
• define
dollar thresholds that can be used to channel projects to
the appropriate agency decision levels to best accommodate
organization wide versus unit specific impact. Mostimportant
is the use of a consistent set of investment decision practices
throughout the agency. Some best practice organizations submit
projects to thorough investment reviews when costs exceed
between 0.5 and 2 percent of the organization's IT budget.
• develop
criteria for identifying projects of a critical nature that
fall below the dollar threshold but should be included in
the investment review process.
Each attribute
contributes to properly implementing the three phases of the
investment process. Senior managers and those helping to install
the investment process in each agency should keep these elements
in mind during review of the details of the selection, control,
and evaluation phases.
The selection
phase creates a portfolio of IT project investments designed
to improve overall organizational performance. This phase
combines rigorous technical evaluations of project proposals
with executive management business knowledge, direction, and
priorities. Key to this phase is the use of uniform, consistent
decision criteria that will allow agency executives to make
comparisons of costs, benefits, risks, and returns across
project proposals. The four step selection process is:
Step 1
-- screen IT project proposals;
Step 2
-- analyze risks, benefits, and costs;
Step 3
-- prioritize projects based on risk and return; and
Step 4
-- determine the right mix of projects and make the final
cut.
• Executive
management team that makes funding decisions based upon comparisons
and tradeoffs among competing project proposals, especially
for those projects expected to have organization-wide impact.
• Documented
and defined decision criteria that examine expected return
on investment (ROI), technical risks, improvement to program
effectiveness, customer impact, project size and scope.
• Pre-defined
thresholds and authority levels that recognize the need to
channel project evaluations and decisions to appropriate management
levels to accommodate unit-specific versus agency level needs.
• Minimal
acceptable ROI hurdle rates for project approvals -- applicable
to all organizational levels -- to minimize risks and increase
returns.
• Risk
assessments that expose potential technical and managerial
weaknesses that could impair project success.
IT
proposals should be screened for the level of review as well
as relevance and feasibility.
A mature
investment screening process should prescribe the amount of
documentation and level of analytical rigor depending on the
project's type (i.e., mission critical, infrastructure, etc.)
and phase (i.e., initial concept, new, ongoing and operational).
For instance, when senior managers analyze initial concept
proposals the questions and documentation would be different
from that required for a project that is ready to be awarded
and implemented.
Example:
One best practice company required more documentation and
greater analytical rigor if a proposal would replace or change
an operational system vital to keeping the company running
or if the concept matched a company-wide strategic goal. Lower-impact
proposals that would only affect an office or had a non-strategic
objective were not scrutinized in as much detail.
If a project
proposal does not meet all the essential requirements necessary
for its type and phase, it should be returned to the originating
business unit sponsor indicating problems, issues, or documentation
that needs further work or clarification.
Following
are some of the questions that can be used to screen projects
for relevancy to the agency's mission and for technical and
organizational feasibility. If the answer to any of these
questions is no, a project should not receive consideration
and should be returned to the originating unit. Projects that
meet these criteria should continue to Step 2 where more rigorous
analysis is performed.
-
Is
the project clearly relevant to mission priorities outlined
in the agency's strategic or business plan?
-
Is
the project feasible to design and execute given the agency's
demonstrated capability to deliver?
-
Are
there commercial off the shelf systems available to achieve
the majority of the project's goals?
-
Has
another agency done this type of a project before? If
so, have lessons learned been incorporated into the project
plan, and consideration given to using their system for
the project's requirements?
-
Does
the project conform to the agency's technology and information
architecture?
-
Will
the project be executed in well-defined stages, including
decision points for continuing, modifying, or canceling
the project?
At
this point, the proposals should be reduced to those with
the highest potential to support the agency's critical mission
and/or operations.
A detailed
evaluation of each proposal's supporting analyses should be
conducted and summarized so that senior management can begin
examining tradeoffs among competing proposals that are to
occur in the next step. At this stage, a technical review
team should evaluate the soundness of the project's benefit-cost
and risk analyses. In particular, the review team should examine
how theproject is expected to improve program or operational
performance and the performance measures that will be used
to monitor expected versus actual results.
Example:
One best practices organization required the project team
to present not only the estimated return on investment (ROI),
but also the specific assumptions underlying their analysis,
why such assumptions are appropriate under these circumstances,
and any differences from assumptions used to calculate ROI
for comparable projects in the past.
Example:
In another best practices organization, qualified staff
reviewed and scored all projects using risk criteria before
the projects were reviewed for approval by top managers. The
top managers considered these risk scores in their decision
making process. Risk elements were reported in five categories:
security, user and customer impact, system (project) impact,
dollar impact, and complexity. Within each category, applicable
elements were given a numeric score from 1 (lowest risk) to
5 (highest risk). Under security, for example, elements included
the classification levels of information to be processed,
how programs and files were protected by security software,
and what access controls were to be in place. Total scores
from the individual elements in each category were weighted,
based upon an agreed upon formula, to reflect the organization's
priorities. Weighted scores were included in the top managers'
review packages.
-
Has
the relevant agency group successfully managed previous
IT investments of similar risk and complexity?
-
Has
the project team assessed project risk (e.g., unusual
technical requirements or system complexity) using a comprehensive,
well understood and documented process?
-
Has
a sensitivity analysis been performed for key variables?
-
For
higher risk projects, does the proposal explain how specific
risk factors will be continuously monitored to minimize
exposure?
-
What
are the risks to program operations and customer service
if this project does not proceed?
-
Have
the benefit estimates been validated or approved by users?
-
Has
the project team prepared a benefit-cost analysis for
the investment that:
-
1)
relies on systematic measures of mission performance,
-
2)
is consistent with OMB Circular A-94 "Guidelines and
Discount Rates for Benefit-Cost Analysis of Federal
Programs," and
-
3)
is at a level of detail appropriate to its size?
-
What
are the constraints and assumptions that may affect the
costs and benefits of alternative solutions?
-
Does
the justification for the investment proposal depend on
projected benefits that occur more than 5 years in the
future? If so, what is the level of confidence in those
benefits estimates? End Note
6
-
Is
an IT investment considered an infrastructure project
that makes future projects possible? If so, how does the
benefit-cost analysis account for expected payoffs from
future investments?
-
Do
the assumptions supporting the analysis accurately reflect
market conditions where commercially available software
and hardware costs are declining each year? Are agency
cost assumptions based on today's prices or prices expected
at the time of budget execution?
-
Are
quantitative and qualitative benefits clearly expressed
in mission or program improvement terms (e.g., changes
in quality, cost, speed, accuracy, or productivity)?
-
Is
it possible to share the costs of the project across different
organizational units with similar needs?
During
this phase, IT projects are rigorously compared against one
another to create a prioritized list of all investments under
consideration.
After
completing analysis, the agency should develop a ranked listing
of information technology projects. This listing should use
expected risks and benefits to identify candidate projects
with the greatest chances of effectively and efficiently supporting
key mission objectives within given budget constraints. End Note
7
One approach
to devising a ranked listing of projects is to use a scoring
mechanism that provides a range of values associated with
project strengths and weaknesses for risk and return issues.
Table
1, below, shows an example of how individual risk and
return factors might be scored. This example is a hybrid table
drawn from multiple best practices organizations. Higher scores
are given to projects that meet or exceed positive aspects
of the decision criteria. Additionally, in this example, weights
have been attached to criteria to reflect their relative importance
in the decision process. In order to ensure consistency, each
of the decision criteria should have operational definitions
based on quantitative or qualitative measures.
|
IT
Project (1 thru n) |
Weight
|
| DECISION
CRITERIA |
SCORING
|
PERCENT
|
|
Overall
Risk Factors
|
|
Weights
for Risks
SUM=100%
|
Investment
Size - How large is the proposed technology investment,
especially in comparison to the overall IT budget?
|
1__________5__________10
Large Small
|
40
|
Project
Longevity - Do projects adopt a modular approach
that combines controlled systems development with rapid
prototyping techniques? Are projects as narrow in scope
and brief in duration as possible to reduce risk by
identifying problems early and focusing on projected
versus realized results.
|
1__________5__________10
Non-modular Modular
|
30
|
Technical
Risk - How will proposed technology be integrated
into existing systems? Will proposed investment take
advantage of Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) software
and systems? How will the complexity of the systems
architecture and software design affect the development
of the project?
|
1__________5__________10
Experimental Established
Custom Industry
Standard
|
30
|
|
Overall
Return Factors
|
|
Weights
for Returns
SUM=100% |
Business
Impact or Mission Effectiveness - How will the technology
investment contribute toward improvement in organizational
performance in specific outcome-oriented terms?
|
1__________5__________10
Low High
|
25
|
Customer
Needs - How well does the technology investment
address identified internal and/or external customer
needs and demands for increased service quality and
timeliness or reductions in costs?
|
1__________5__________10
Low High
|
15
|
Return
on Investment - Are the return on investment figures
using benefit-cost analysis thresholds reliable and
technically sound?
|
1__________5__________10
Risky Known
estimates benefit
|
20
|
Organizational
Impact - How broadly will the technology investment
affect the organization (i.e., the number of offices,
users, work processes, and other systems)?
|
1__________5__________10
Low High
|
25
|
Expected
Improvement - Is the proposed investment being used
to support, maintain, or enhance existing operational
systems and processes (tactical) or designed to improve
future capability (strategic)? Are any projects required
by law, court ruling, Presidential directive, etc.?
Is the project required to maintain critical operations--payroll,
beneficiary checks, human safety, etc.--at a minimal
operating level? What is the expected magnitude of the
performance improvement expected from the technology
investment?
|
1__________5__________10
Tactical: Strategic:
Improves Provides
existing new
process capability
|
15
|
Total
Risk Adjusted Score = Weighted Sum of Overall Risk
Factors +
Weighted Sum of Overall Return Factors |
|
|
A scoring
and ranking process such as the one depicted in Table 1 may
be used more than once and in more than just this step to
"winnow" the number of projects that will be considered by
an executive decision-making body down to the best possible
choice.
An outcome
of such a ranking process might produce three groups of projects:
-
Likely
winners -- One group, typically small, is a set
of projects with high returns and low risk that are
likely "winners."
-
Likely
drop-outs -- At the opposite end of the spectrum,
a group of high risk, low return projects usually develops
that would have little chance of making the final cut.
-
Projects
that warrant a closer look -- In the middle is usually
the largest group. These projects have either a high
return/high risk or a low return/low risk profile. Analytical
and decision-making energy should be focused on prioritizing
these projects in the middle group, where decisions
will be more difficult to make.
At the
end of this step, senior managers should have a prioritized
list of IT projects and proposals with supporting documentation
and analysis.
During
this phase, an executive level decision making body determines
which projects will be funded based on the analyses completed
in the previous steps.
Determining
the right mix of projects to fund is ultimately a management
decision that considers the technical soundness of projects,
their contribution to mission needs, performance improvement
priorities, and overall funding levels that will be allocated
to information technology.
Senior
management should consider the following balancing factors
when arriving at a final resource allocation and project mix.
-
Strategic
improvements vs. maintenance of current operations
Efforts
to modernize programs and improve their mission performance
may require significant investments in new information
systems. Agencies also have operational systems on which
the agencies depend to operate their programs as currently
structured. These older systems may need to be maintained.
A balance should be struck between continuing to invest
in older systems and modernizing or replacing them.
It may be helpful to track over time the percentage
of funding spent on strategic/development vs. maintenance/operations
projects.
-
New
projects vs. ongoing projects
The
senior managers who choose the final mix of projects
to be funded must periodically re-examine projects that
have already been approved to ensure that they should
still be supported. There may be concerns about a project's
implementation, such as greater-than-expected delays,
cost overruns, or failures to provide promised benefits.
If new projects are more consistent with an agency's
strategic initiatives, offer greater benefits for equivalent
cost, or present fewer risks, the old projects may need
to be canceled.
-
High
vs. low risk
If
a portfolio is managed only to minimize risk, senior
management may unnecessarily constrain an agency's ability
to achieve results. High risk, high return projects
can significantly enhance the value to the public of
an agency's IT spending, provided the agency has the
capability and carefully manages the risks. Most organizations,
however, can only handle a limited number of such projects.
As a result, senior management must consciously help
balance the amount of risk in the portfolio against
the agency's capabilities and ability to manage risk.
-
Impact
of one project on another
Now
that federal agencies are trying to integrate their
systems, every new project proposal is likely to affect,
or be affected by, other project proposals, ongoing
projects, or current systems. Senior management must
recognize the context in which the new project will
be placed and make decisions accordingly. For example,
one best practice company has established as a risk
the number of dependencies between a new project and
other projects/systems.
-
Other
complicating factors
Other
complicating factors can heavily influence how senior
management makes a final cut for approved IT projects.
-
Opportunity
costs
Consider
the impact on long range investment opportunities if
all of the current projects are funded. Will large current
costs preclude or delay better future opportunities?
Will large current capital expenditures create even
larger maintenance costs in the future?
-
External
funding
IT
projects sometimes rely on funding and resources from
outside agencies or private organizations. If any project
under consideration requires critical components from
outside the agency, then the value of the agency's investment
may be lost if the commitment by the outside party later
shifts.
-
Budget
constraints
How
much does the agency have available for IT investments
for this budget year and for the next several years?
Besides budget year spending levels and out-year estimates
for the agency, the analysis should examine if there
are other sources of funding for the projects. The agency
should identify these other sources in its investment
proposals.
What
projects will fit under the spending levels this budget
year and in out-years? Senior management can take the
final list of projects with their associated costs and
determine which projects fit within the spending parameters
this budget year and/or in out-years. A project may
have a relatively high priority, but resource constraints
may preclude funding it this budget year. Senior management
can then decide that the project be approved, but that
its start date be delayed until funds are available,
assuming it still matches the agency priority needs
in the coming years.
After
consideration of all of the factors mentioned above, senior
management should have enough information to make knowledgeable
investment decisions. Senior management should also designate
how many times a project is to be reviewed based on the level
of risk and any steps that the project team must take to mitigate
that risk. For example, one best practices organization requires
that senior management only approve projects after a review
schedule has been established, (e.g., reviewed once a month
for high risk, or once a quarter for lower risk), and specific
requirements have been given to the project team to ensure
that they mitigate risks, (e.g., develop a risk management
plan).
Project
review schedules, risk mitigation plans and the cost-benefit
plans from prior steps all feed directly into the next section
of the investment process -- control.
While
agencies select proposals once a year, the control phase is
an ongoing activity to review new and ongoing projects, as
well as operational systems. During the control phase, senior
management regularly monitors the progress of ongoing IT projects
against projected cost, schedule, performance and delivered
benefits. The frequency of the reviews may vary, but should
not wait until the annual budget preparation and deliberation
process. How often and to what extent individual projects
should be reviewed should have been established as the last
step in the Selection phase. Rather than avoiding problems
and concerns emerging from unexpected risks, this phase accentuates
the need for management accountability by creating pre-arranged
checkpoints for projects and forcing corrective action when
necessary. If a project is late, over cost, or not being developed
according to expectations, then senior management must decide
whether to continue, modify, or cancel it. The steps in this
phase are to:
Step 1
--monitor projects/systems against projected costs, schedule,
and performance; and
Step 2
-- take action to correct any deficiencies.
-
Establish
processes to involve senior management in ongoing reviews
and force decisive action steps to solve problems early
in the project.
-
Define
explicit measures and data used to monitor expected versus
actual project outcomes on cost, schedule, and performance
which are consistently maintained throughout the organization
and readily accessible via automated management information
systems.
-
Create
positive incentives for raising real and potential project
problems for management attention and action.
Before
an organization can fully implement the control steps, uniform
mechanisms for collecting, automating, and processing data
on expected versus actual costs, schedules, and returns should
be in place for all projects. End Note
8
Example:
One best practice company has developed a database which
stores risk-based assessment data about ongoing IT projects.
The company uses RED, YELLOW, and GREEN symbols to evaluate
each project on several dimensions; including quality of
deliverables, conformance with company project development
processes, and technical feasibility. For example, a project
that has a YELLOW symbol on the deliverables dimension would
mean that the company is concerned the expected deliverable
will not meet needs, and that minor improvement is required.
An overall assessment symbol is applied to projects as well.
Projects with a RED symbol mean that there is a least one
RED symbol, or 3 YELLOW symbols, attached to it. The database
provides executive management with an easily accessible
tool for identifying risks by type or severity.
Senior
managers need to compare the preliminary results being achieved
by a project against its projected costs, benefits and risks,
and to identify actual or potential managerial, organizational,
or technical problems.
Senior
management should be able to judge whether a project is on
track to achieve its projected mission benefits. The key is
to use a set of performance measures consistently so that
senior program managers are provided early warning of potential
or actual problems. It is essential torefresh these measures
as costs, benefits, and risks become better known to ensure
the continued viability of an information system prior to
and during implementation.
Examples
of problems that could affect a project or system include
1) lack of input by program management into the requirements
phase of a project, 2) a project that was intended to be cross-functional
becomes stove-piped because other offices in the agency do
not support it, 3) new requirements have been added, and 4)
it is more difficult to use the technology than was anticipated.
Senior
program managers in federal agencies often pay most of their
attention to new projects and carry ongoing projects as necessary
budget items. In best practice organizations, however, ongoing
projects are reviewed continually along with new projects
and go/no-go decisions are made. No project should be allowed
to continue indefinitely through failure. Project continuance
should be periodically challenged.
Based
on a schedule developed during the selection phase, each project/system
should be reviewed with at least the following considerations
in mind:
-
How
do current costs compare against projected costs?
-
How
does the current schedule compare against the projected
schedule?
-
How
does the current performance of the deliverables compare
against projected measures?
-
If
we were starting over, would we fund this proposal today?
-
Have
new requirements "crept" into the project?
-
Have
business conditions changed significantly since the project
was approved?
-
Is
the project still technically feasible?
-
Is
the project dependent on other projects? Are they late?
-
Does
the project still support the architecture?
-
Is
the project necessary for the successful completion of
other projects?
Senior
program management should be able to develop a well-informed
picture of current and potential problems for each ongoing
IT project.
The
action should result in the deliberate continuation, modification,
or cancellation of each project.
The prior
step, pertaining to monitoring of projects, should pinpoint
projects that senior management need to make decisions on.
What action to take is a management decision.
Senior
management should ensure that:
-
The
solution to problems should not be the sole province of
the IRM organization. Even when senior management
is aware of problems with projects or systems, the solution
to the problem is too often left with the information
systems organization. Senior managers should ensure that
program officials are involved in the solution, since
in many instances it may be the business side of the organization
which provides a solution.
-
All
management decisions are documented along with data supporting
the required changes. Common problems and their solutions,
which are applicable to one IT project, should be evaluated
as to how they apply to other IT projects under management's
purview. To avoid replication of effort for analysis,
documentation of management decisions is critical. Federal
agencies often treat each budget year as isolated and
provide funding for whatever can be supported each year
rather than evaluating the IT projects with a historical
perspective. By contrast, leading organizations revise
their selection processes and IT funding decisions based
upon the outcomes produced from the previous year.
To use
an example, many federal agencies are prototyping IT projects
before moving into the implementation stage. Monitoring the
mission results gained by the prototype allows senior program
management to make informed decisions about whether to stop
or modify a project at this stage, rather than letting the
project continue on into implementation automatically.
Proper
control of IT investments enables senior management to mitigate
risk of schedule, cost overruns, and development of a product
that does not meet the goals originally intended. This process
is highly dependent on facts provided through continual measurement
of new and ongoing projects. The data fed from the Selection
process to the Control process supports this requirement,
as do the measurements taken throughout the life of a project.
Evaluation
is conducted after a system has been implemented, and
is an assessment of the project's success or failure. Using
post implementation reviews, data is collected, recorded,
and analyzed to compare expected results against actual benefits
and returns. Figure 1,
shown previously, depicts the evaluation phase in relation
to the other two phases. Evaluation is used to 1) decide whether
future changes are necessary which can help address serious
performance gaps, and 2) make decisions about modifications
to the organization's existing evaluation process and selection
criteria. This phase is comprised of three steps:
Step 1
-- Conduct Post Implementation Reviews
Step 2
-- Decide on Adjustments
Step 3
-- Lessons Learned
-
Post
implementation reviews to determine actual project cost,
benefits, risks, and returns.
-
Maintaining
accountability for project performance and success based
on quantifiable measures to create incentives for strong
project management and senior management ownership.
-
Modification
of selection decision criteria and investment control
processes as needed to ensure continual improvement based
on lessons learned.
Conduct
and review the results of post implementation reviews, focusing
on anticipated versus actual results in terms of cost, schedule,
performance, and mission improvement outcomes. Determine the
causes of major differences between plans and end results.
Most federal
agencies accept that recently implemented systems are a fait
accompli and move on from there. This point of view is contrary
to the investment management philosophy of managing the entire
IT portfolio. The primary tool to assess a project in best
practice organizations is the post-implementation review.
Questions to ask include:
-
How
effective was the project in meeting the original objectives?
-
How
well did the project meet the planned implementation dates?
-
What
mission benefits has the project achieved, and do they
match the benefits projected? If not, why not?
-
Were
the original business assumptions that justified the system
valid?
-
What
lessons did the team learn from this project?
The post-implementation
review should inform senior management's decision whether
to continue, modify, or cancel operational systems.
Using
the results of the post implementation review as a baseline,
decide whether to continue without adjustment, to modify the
system to improve performance or, if necessary, to consider
alternatives to the implemented system.
Even with
the best system development process, it is quite possible
that a new system will have problems or even major flaws that
must be taken care of in order for the agency to get the full
benefit of its investment. The post implementation review
should provide executive management withuseful information
on how best to modify a system, or to work around the flaws
in a system, in order to improve performance and to bring
the system further in alignment with the needs of its customers.
Using
the collective results of post implementation reviews across
completed systems, modify the organization's existing investment
selection and control processes based on lessons learned.
The information
from post implementation reviews helps senior management develop
better decision criteria during the Selection process and
improve the evaluation of ongoing projects during the Control
process.
Example:
After several post implementation reviews of several
completed projects, one best practice organization found
that it was only realizing a 9 percent return on the projected
benefits of its information systems investments. This focused
senior management attention on more rigorous and realistic
assessments of benefits projections presented during the
selection cycle of their investment decision making process.
Cost and benefit estimation techniques were improved, based
upon quantitative data associated with past systems development
efforts. Low value and high risk projects became more readily
identifiable in the investment selection and control processes.
Within two years, this company saw IT benefits exceed initial
projections by some 33 percent.
A mature
investment process will help ensure that taxpayer dollars
spent on information technology will be used to effectively
support the agency's mission objectives. Dwindling resources
and higher public demand for service means that a project
must be worth doing from a mission perspective,
it must be possible to accomplish it at reasonable
time and cost, and it must support the strategic
direction of the agency.
A mature
investment process requires discipline, executive management
involvement, accountability, and focus on risks and returns
using quantifiable measures. Senior program managers,
those with the programmatic responsibility in key business
areas, should be involved directly in prioritizing and selecting
the IT projects their organization will pursue. Their decisions
should be well-informed, based on analytical rigor and robust
measures. Furthermore, a mature investment process is a year-round
activity, not just a process to be done near budget time.
Senior program managers should be involved in devising and
enforcing solutions to the problems that inevitably arise.
Finally, the mature investment process is a learning process.
The real-world results of IT projects and mission programs
should be continuously fed back to senior managers as they
make decisions on new projects and operational systems.
End Notes
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The
foundation for the IT investment process and most of the
examples cited in this guide are based upon case study
research of leading private and public sector organizations
conducted by the United States General Accounting Office
(GAO) and summarized in its report entitled, Executive
Guide: Improving Mission Performance through Strategic
Information Management and Technology (GAO/AIMD-94-115,
May 1994).
-
For
more information on IT investment call at GAO, David McClure
or Alicia Wright (202-512-6406), at OMB, Jasmeet Seehra
(202-395-3785).
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OMB
Circular No. A-11, Transmittal Memorandum No. 66, Supplement
No. 1 (September 14, 1995), "Preparation and Submission
of Strategic Plans," provides detailed guidance on the
preparation of agency strategic plans. In particular,
Section 200.10, "Description of how the general goals
and objectives will be achieved," calls for a description
of how the agency will use "technolog[y]...information,
and other resources" to support the agency's mission goals
and objectives, thus establishing the basis for a linkage
between the IT investment process and the agency's strategic
plan.
-
Initial
concepts - A project idea that has a sponsor and mission
relevance but has not had formal cost/benefit, alternative,
or requirements analyses; New - A project that
has had formal cost/benefit, alternative, or requirements
analysis completed, but has not been awarded; Ongoing
- A project that has been awarded but has not been completely
implemented (this also includes pilots and prototypes);
and Operational - Systems that are completely implemented
(this includes legacy systems).
-
Mission
critical - Systems essential to the completion of
an agency's mission (sometimes known as program specific);
Cross-functional - Systems that cut across more
than one program or mission in an agency; Infrastructure
- Enabling technologies that are essential to run
other types of systems (may include networks, telecommunications,
etc.); Administrative - Systems that are operational
in nature, but not mission specific (such as accounting
and financial systems); R&D - Projects or systems
that are "state of the art" either in concept or technology
that could reinvent the agencies processes or mission.
Embedded systems are not included because they
are considered to be parts of larger systems, such as
an aircraft or rapid transit system.
-
Expected
benefits accruing from multi-year information technology
investments are difficult to precisely quantify and are
often subject to change; the reference to the five year
time frame is offered as a guide.
-
Mission
and management objectives may be prioritized in an agency
strategic plan. Information Systems Plans (ISPs) may also
be in place that are clearly linked to the agency's strategic
plan and have taken into consideration that portion of
the budget available for IT spending. In such cases, some
level of IT prioritization may already be completed. However,
this step should still be used to confirm these linkages
and evaluate risks and returns across projects throughout
the entire organization.
-
The
Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-355),
Subtitle B, Title V, requires agencies to establish and
track major acquisitions against cost, schedule, and performance
goals. OMB Bulletin No. 95-03, "Planning and Budgeting
for the Acquisition of Fixed Assets" (June 27, 1995),
prescribes reporting requirements consistent with that
Act. These measures can be designed for use in the Selection
and Control phases of the investment management process.
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