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According to reports, 25 percent of technology projects fail outright; 20 to 25 percent don’t show any return on investment; and as much as 50 percent need massive reworking by the time they’re finished.
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Poorly defined (or no defined) outcome.
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Lack of leadership
Too often, technology projects are deemed “IT” projects and relegated to the IT department, regardless of what the project actually is.
Without leadership it is difficult to get employees on board and who to look to for guidance.
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Lack of accountability
When projects are dubbed “IT projects” and left to the IT department, there’s also a lack of accountability that can develop.
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Insufficient communication
It’s important for someone on the team to communicate clearly and regularly what’s happening with the project to others.
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No plan or timeline
A clear plan and someone to keep track of it is vital for keeping projects moving forward.
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Lack of user testing, or failure to address feedback
Technology projects are made for people, not machines. A lack of real-world user testing before launching is a common problem.
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Sometimes Projects are Solving the wrong problem.
Before embarking on any IT project determine the answer these five essential questions:
- What business problem that needs to be solved?
- What data or tools will be needed to solve the problem?
- How will success be measured?
- How will the insights and knowledge learned be presented?
- How to test and implement the solution?
- What business problem is being solved?
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A company will say they want to improve customer service, for example — but no one ever bothers to say what that looks like. Shorter call times? Fewer calls? Higher customer satisfaction? How will you know when you’ve succeeded? Without a goal a project is doomed.