Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Big Projects, Big Problems
A recent article in CFO
states that schedules on capital budgeting projects are missed by an
average of 55 percent and budgets are missed by 33 percent. One
potential problem for capital budgeting is that most projects are
evaluated by project advocates within the company, who are often biased
in favor of the project. For example, a financial services company found
that the initial cost projections for its projects were off by a factor
of 2.37, meaning that for every dollar originally projected to begin
the project, it actually cost $2.37. A second problem is that small and
large projects are evaluated the same way, especially in regards to
timing. For example, consider you and three friends are going to dinner
together, each from a different starting location. Each of you has a 50
percent probability of arriving on time. What is the probability that
you will all arrive on time for dinner? While you might think that it is
50 percent, it is actually 6.25 percent (.50 × .50 × .50 × .50)!
In a large project, with intermediate tasks that are dependent on
preceding tasks, it is easy to get behind schedule very quickly.