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Seven fundamentals of IT project success

By Michael Krigsman, ZDNet
Wednesday, October 14, 2009 11:43 AM
These points cover areas such as conflicting agendas, multiple perspectives as well as a range of business-oriented conditions.

Many folks think large projects usually fail for technical reasons--software that doesn't work as advertised, bugs, and so on. In reality, that's not the case.

In my experience, the most serious project issues come down to misplaced expectations among participants. Fundamentally, problems in human communication lie at the root of most failures.

These expectation and communication mismatches are difficult to detect systematically, because they aren't quantitative or technical in nature. Failures persist despite fancy project management methodologies, precisely because traditional approaches do not isolate and address hidden problems.

These seven points of project success touch on conflicting agendas, multiple perspectives, and a broad range of business-oriented conditions that drive projects to succeed or fail:

  1. Business case
  2. Stakeholder and user engagement
  3. Executive sponsorship
  4. Third-party relationships
  5. Project management
  6. Change management
  7. Resource availability

The Project Failures analysis
It's tempting to dismiss these points as obvious or to believe your projects have few problems in these areas. However, successful project managers dig deeper than that. For example, how do you really know that sufficient executive sponsorship is present? If you only asked one or two stakeholders, then your opinion may well be incorrect.

To gauge sponsorship accurately, you must gather perceptions across the project. After all, someone reporting directly to the CIO may have quite a different view than one working 1000 miles away who has never even met the sponsor.

Please do not ignore these seven fundamentals, thinking they are too "simple"; or do not apply to your work. They really are that important.

Michael Krigsman is CEO of Asuret, a software and consulting company dedicated to reducing software implementation failures. He also serves as CEO of Cambridge Publications, which specializes in developing tools and processes for software implementations and related business practice automation projects. Michael contributes to the IT Project Failures blog at ZDNet Asia's sister site, ZDNet.



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Seven fundamentals of IT project success
In my opinion, the success or failure of a IT project lies the creep(s) of the project scopes as well as the stakeholder's commitment and management supports.
Posted by anonymous on Wednesday, October 14 2009 05:28 PM

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