The Long and Winding Road of Governance Shortcuts

When I was young, our family vacations always involved long car trips. Whenever my father announced he was taking a shortcut, it took us twice as long to arrive at our destination. Many large organizations are similarly headed for some rough patches of road because they have tried to shortcut their project-planning processes.

By Bart Perkins
Mon, December 21, 2009

Computerworld — When I was young, our family vacations always involved long car trips. Whenever my father announced he was taking a shortcut, it took us twice as long to arrive at our destination. Many large organizations are similarly headed for some rough patches of road because they have tried to shortcut their project-planning processes.

The Top 100 IT Projects of 2009

Governance processes are designed to help companies use limited resources wisely. However, several Fortune 500 CIOs recently told me that business units in their companies have used the recession as an excuse to circumvent virtually all governance. Projects have bypassed the executive steering committee, skipped the priority-setting process, and headed toward implementation with flimsy business cases and incomplete project plans. When IT protests, the business units claim that they needed to fast-track the projects in order to respond to competitive threats. In fact, they have ceded ground to their competitors by avoiding virtually all disciplines necessary for project success.

For the CIOs I talked to, these situations always ended badly. When project delivery schedules slipped, executive management demanded that IT take over the failing project. Each IT organization revised the project plan (amid loud complaints) and eventually implemented the desired system, but with reduced scope and significant cost overruns. And in spite of their valiant rescue efforts, IT lost credibility, and the CIO consumed precious political capital.

Project restarts are never painless. Each company suffered at least one of these additional consequences:

* Delays benefited the competition. Each project wandered for six to nine months before IT took control, and final delivery dates were delayed by an average of six months. Meanwhile, the competition strengthened market position.

* Critical IT resources were redirected. IT staff are usually assigned months (or years) in advance. But rescuing a runaway project requires the most talented people. As a result, other important project schedules are also impacted.

* Fingers were pointed and politics got vicious. Business units felt their autonomy was challenged, and resented IT's involvement. Individuals who initially argued against shortcuts were criticized for not being team players. When project scope was eventually reduced, IT took the heat, and sometimes had difficulty resisting "I told you so" retorts. Unfortunately, being right didn't reduce the negative impact on the corporation's bottom line.

* Missed deadlines and poor quality implementation convinced one organization that the initial project concept was flawed. Rather than restarting the project with a more realistic project plan, this company abandoned a viable (and likely profitable) project, yielding market share to competitors.

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Originally published on www.computerworld.com. Click here to read the original story.
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