After
the Deluge
magazine cover
After
the DelugeDespite a torrent
of interest in ROI, truly workable solutions are just beginning to emerge.Norm Alster, CFO ITOctober 15, 2002One by one, they rose
to make their pitches to the IT steering committee. As the day wore on, recalls
consultant Doug Hubbard, business cases were presented for more than 20 IT
projects. Each was framed in terms of the tremendous savings and benefits
it would provide for the company, a giant midwestern nuclear-power utility.
One skeptical attendee listened closely and entered a series of figures into
a calculator. Toting up the promised benefits of each proposal, he announced,
"If we signed off on all of these, we'd be able to cut staff by 110 percent."Writ large, Hubbard's
tale reflects the past decade's blind faith, massive investment, and sometimes
bitter disappointment in information technology. A recent study by technology
research firm Gartner concluded that 20 percent of the $2.7 trillion spent
worldwide on IT in 2001 was wasted. Others have found little or no correlation
between technology spending and corporate performance. "Let's face it.
There's got to be some increased sobriety about the value that can be created
from technology investments," notes Christopher Dallas-Feeney, vice president,
financial services group, at Booz Allen Hamilton. "It was overblown on
Y2K. The ERP [enterprise resource planning] era was a bit overstated, and
CRM [customer relationship management] is following on its heels."Little wonder, then, that
most corporate buyers are searching for new ways to gauge the payback from
IT investments. Eager to oblige, vendors and consultants have trotted out
a variety of tools that purport to more precisely measure return on investment.
The approaches range from self-service Web sites that cough up an ROI calculation
based on two or three inputs all the way up to new software programs costing
as much as $200,000. Indeed, the mad rush to ROI is beginning to look like
a tour bus unloading blackjack players in Las Vegas: everybody's got a system.The problem with so much
ROI analysis to date is that it's done by the very parties that champion technology
spending, from vendors to consultants to systems integrators and outsourcers.
When ROI is done internally, it's often done by the department that seeks
the funding. "There's a fundamental conflict of interest when the ROI
analysis is conducted by proponents of the project," notes Hubbard.This is not, of course,
news to CFOs, or even CIOs. "We try not to justify things too much on
soft benefits and wishing," says John W. Prosser Jr., senior vice president,
finance and administration, at Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. in Pasadena,
California. Allan Woods, vice chairman and CIO at Mellon Financial Corp. in
Pittsburgh, goes him one better: "We would not calculate productivity
[gains] if there were no headcount reduction." And Ray Seabrook, CFO
at Ball Corp., a Denver-based packaging firm, voices the general discontent
with soft benefits and the companies that champion them when he says, "Five
years from now they're sitting there with all our money in their pockets and
I'm still trying to figure out how to measure something like 'employee empowerment.'"In the face of such attitudes,
vendors and consultants have redoubled their efforts to put hard numbers on
soft benefits. Hubbard, for example, has created Applied Information Economics
(AIE), an ROI methodology he bills as being "truly scientific and theoretically
sound." He offers ROI services through his own firm, Hubbard Decision
Research, and also licenses the AIE methodology to other consultants.Steven Hausheer, chief
operating officer at Investrics in Chicago, which is building the precepts
of AIE into an ROI analysis software program, explains how it works. The basic
concept is that things that don't seem measurable actually are. Consider something
intangible such as "better employee access to information." Based
on input from groups of employees, the Investrics program would try to answer
such questions as: Would better information access result in faster decisions?
Would it produce better decisions on pricing? Would it produce faster decisions
that actually close sales and produce more revenue? Questions can be industry-specific;
for insurers, would getting an answer to a prospect within one hour increase
the chance of a sale, and, if so, by what percentage?Similarly, for an oft-invoked
intangible such as employee empowerment, the software would use input from
employees (gathered by asking questions that have a scaled response, such
as 5 for very likely, 1 for not at all likely, and so on) that zeros in on,
say, the time that managers spend on supervisory tasks. If a project has,
as one benefit, a reduction in such requirements, the process will be able
to assign a hard-dollar value to at least one aspect of employee empowerment.Hubbard says a system
that assigns a probability-weighted range of values acknowledges the inherent
uncertainty of input regarding projected benefits. Rather than yielding a
single projected value, AIE calculations yield a probability-weighted range
of outcomes. This range is reflected in the final ROI assessment, which is
essentially a collection of such outcomes. Hubbard might, for example, conclude
that a client has a 40 percent chance of a 50 percent ROI on a new document-management
system. But recognizing such risks as project cancellation and the possibility
that users might not fully embrace the system, he might conclude that there
is also a 10 percent chance that the project will produce a negative return.
Based on input from managers, Hubbard calculates the level of risk that a
client will tolerate for a given projected return. If, in this case, managers
have indicated they would tolerate as much as a 15 percent risk of negative
return in exchange for a 50 percent ROI, the project would get a green light.
If management will tolerate only a 5 percent negative return risk, that project
would be rejected.It is in the assessment
of overall project risk that Hubbard and those who have drawn on his methodology
distance themselves from vendors and some consultants who, to borrow from
Will Rogers, have never met a tech project they didn't like. Hubbard says
that his analysis results in a red light about 20 percent of the time; of
the remaining projects, about 60 percent require modifications before getting
a green light.CFOs would do well to
ask those peddling various ROI methodologies how often their analysis puts
the kibosh on projects. With customers increasingly alert to the risks in
new IT projects, some ROI consultants claim they have become tougher graders.
"If two or three years ago 1 in every 2 or 1 in every 3 were green lights,
now it's 1 in every 5 or 1 in every 10. The eye of the needle is getting narrower,"
notes Booz Allen Hamilton's Dallas-Feeney. Then again, perhaps the
devil is not so much in the details as in the share price. A company called
iValue urges an approach to IT portfolio management that focuses on shareholder
value. Co-founders Ray Trotta and Christopher Gardner argue that large IT
projects should be assessed in the same way that Wall Street assesses companies,
with the emphasis on how shareholder value will grow over time. Too often,
they say, companies concoct some sort of ROI methodology up front in order
to green-light a project with some degree of confidence, then let that project
proceed as projects always have — with precious little focus on financial
discipline.They urge companies to
develop simulations as a way to assess how and to what degree a project will
yield a return over time. Pilot projects provide one form of input, as do
market research, conjoint testing (in which customers or users of a system
are interviewed about the trade-offs they're willing to make between cost
and functionality), and other forms of analytics."ROI is just the
latest management fire drill," says Gardner, whose book The Valuation
of Information Technology (John Wiley & Sons, 2000) lays out much
of the thinking behind iValue's methodology. "Companies need to change
their entire approach to how they make decisions." It's ironic, he says,
that Wall Street has imported computer science experts to bring technological
sophistication to the value of companies, but IT departments have not tapped
financial experts to help assess the true value of IT projects.The sorts of changes that
are needed don't come easily, and Trotta admits that one impediment to the
adoption of iValue's approach is that "it takes work, and you have to
follow through. Two complex disciplines, IT and finance, have to work together
continuously." When they do, he says, the focus on ROI will give way
to a more-continuous assessment of value creation.Clearly what seemed at
first blush like a panacea for the costs and complexities of IT projects —
conduct an ROI analysis — is rapidly morphing into perhaps the central question
for executives involved in IT strategy: how to create a solid framework in
which IT spending can be analyzed and capital best deployed. There is certainly
no shortage of firms willing to help you take some new swipe at these perpetually
vexing questions. That means companies are in the unenviable position of having
to analyze how they approach analysis. Yet those that meet this challenge
successfully will be well positioned to stem the tide of millions of wasted
dollars and untold hours of wasted effort. You may be tired of hearing about
"ROI," but the real discussions are just beginning.Norm Alster has worked
for Forbes and Business Week and is currently a contributor
to The New York Times.Time Is Not Always
MoneyImproved productivity
is one eternal promise of technology. But does the ability to produce more
goods and services at the same cost actually translate into bottom-line gains?
Often not, say many CFOs, who are wary of productivity gains that don't result
in more goods produced or fewer people on the payroll.Productivity gains don't
necessarily boost revenue or cut cost, because people don't necessarily apply
freed-up time to work — particularly in the executive suite. Ian Campbell,
vice president of research at Nucleus Research Inc., says that, generally
speaking, lower-level employees are more likely to turn extra time into more
work. "It's the VP who says, 'I can close my door and practice putting,'"
says Campbell. "If you're a line worker, there's no chance to goof off."This reality, Campbell
says, needs to be factored into ROI equations. Here are his rule-of-thumb
calculations on the percent of freed-up time various workers convert into
increased output:- Assembly-line
workers: 95-100%
- Call-center
support: 90-95%
- Administrative
and support help: 70-80%
- Engineering
(technical): 75%
- Engineering
(nontech): 65-75%
- General
staff within a group (marketing, PR, accounting): 60%
- Companywide
general staff: 50%
- Middle
management (large corporations): 40-55%