Implementing large-scale information and communication technology (IT)
projects carries large risks and easily might disrupt operations, waste
taxpayers' money, and create negative publicity. Because of the high risks it
is important that government leaders manage the attendant risks. We analysed a
sample of 1,355 public sector IT projects. The sample included large-scale
projects, on average the actual expenditure was $130 million and the average
duration was 35 months. Our findings showed that the typical project had no
cost overruns and took on average 24% longer than initially expected. However,
comparing the risk distribution with the normative model of a thin-tailed
distribution, projects' actual costs should fall within -30% and +25% of the
budget in nearly 99 out of 100 projects. The data showed, however, that a
staggering 18% of all projects are outliers with cost overruns >25%. Tests
showed that the risk of outliers is even higher for standard software (24%) as
well as in certain project types, e.g., data management (41%), office
management (23%), eGovernment (21%) and management information systems (20%).
Analysis showed also that projects duration adds risk: every additional year of
project duration increases the average cost risk by 4.2 percentage points.
Lastly, we suggest four solutions that public sector organization can take: (1)
benchmark your organization to know where you are, (2) de-bias your IT project
decision-making, (3) reduce the complexities of your IT projects, and (4)
develop Masterbuilders to learn from the best in the field.Comment: Published in Commonwealth Secretariat (Eds.): Commonwealth Governance
Handbook 2012/13: Democracy, development and public administration, London:
Commonwealth Secretariat, December 2012. ISBN 978-1-908609-04-