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In spite of the fact that the significance and the requirement for advancement and conveyance through data innovation have developed as of late, some of the IT delivery requests do not yield the outcomes and the advantages expected by the clients in question. It is crucial to understand why.

Four Shortfalls of IT Delivery
Four Shortfalls of IT Delivery


During 2017 we conducted surveys to get feedback from business units on their assessment of the quality of the IT delivery during the year. 

The results of the surveys were balanced in relation to the effectiveness of IT delivery, but a few common themes were consistently highlighted which need to be addressed as critical areas of weakness and which will be discussed in this article.

We mainly identified the top four shortfalls of IT delivery:

I) Lack of a clear "agreement" between the IT team and the business units:

Often business units will go directly into finding the solution to an issue without thoroughly understanding the problem that is being addressed or the benefits of the solution. In order for an IT delivery to be successful an "Agreement document" needs to be prepared and accepted by the business unit with a clear description of the problem and a clear business case that includes a clear definition of the success factors for the project implementation.

An agreement document does not have to be a long drawn document, as the project document would include the details, but it is required to ensure that the final output of the IT delivery will meet the business unit's request and ensure that both sides have a common understanding of the problem and of the relative solution. 

The document should include at least the following items:

Executive Summary.
Deliverables (outputs).
Schedule/Plan.

Milestones: 

The milestones can be of type Customer Acceptance, Progress Measures, External Dependency, and Benefits Realization. Milestones can occur beyond the end date of the initiative, especially for Benefits Realization. 

There should be at least 3 customer satisfaction milestones, at the start, middle, and end.

Budget and estimated costs.
Prerequisites/Dependencies.
Risks.
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Quality assurance: 

In addition to the standard quality assurance criteria, this section should include measurable success factors and define if an IT delivery is considered successful or not. If a project cannot identify the success factors needed for successful implementation, the scope of the project could easily change during the implementation and the quality of the final phase of the project could easily be argued as there are no established measures of success. 

It is essential to have a measurable definition of the scope and what constitutes a successful implementation of IT delivery.

Without a documented agreement from the business units, IT delivery could easily become less effective or even a failure due to delayed implementation, changes in scope, or disagreements on what is expected from the required delivery.

II) Weak Project Management

In general project managers need to be able to manage and coordinate all of the project logistics. Many of the project managers in IT usually focus on the delivery of the technological solution and do not address many other factors that are essential for successful IT delivery such as:

Planning (activities and resources)
Defining Scope
Time Estimating
Cost Estimating
Developing a Budget
Documentation
Managing Risks and Issues
Monitoring and Reporting Progress
Controlling Quality
Benefits Realization

While the above list seems to be obvious and is documented in every project management methodology, numerous IT deliveries fail as the project manager focuses on a subset of the above and is not able to balance all of the above responsibilities. The project manager should focus on enabling the business unit's expectations, and delivery dates and should be able to differentiate between scope creep and valid user concerns if he/she wants to improve efficacy and reduce the number of project failures.

III) Lack of adequate Planning:

In general, the performance of successful delivery is directly related to the effectiveness of the planning phase. Unfortunately, many IT teams are not patient and do not take adequate time to have a thorough plan to achieve the requested goals. The lack of planning usually results in an untimely delivery of the solution, improper scope or objective delivered, and overspending the agreed cost/budget.

Most plans of successful projects had realistic milestones with an unrealistic timeline, or they'll use an outdated planning model that has nothing to do with today's business environment. IT delivery plans need to match the current business unit's trends, organizational objectives, as well as end-user needs. If they don't, the project will quickly be doomed to fail.

IV) Lack of Clear Communication

Communication is key to the success of any IT delivery. Many IT teams engage with the business units during the pre-implementation phase while gathering requirements and designing the solution and then would disappear for a period of time during the implementation phase... Regular dialogue among executive management, project managers, and end-users have always contributed to success in IT delivery. 

Many business units have mentioned a lack of communication as a major factor for the shortfall of IT delivery, they felt left in isolation on numerous occasions and then presented with a problem or solution that contributed to the failure of the whole objective. For success in any IT delivery, communication flow should be constant between the IT delivery project manager and business units.

In conclusion, for IT delivery to improve you have to carefully address all the four elements listed above. Considering that IT teams focus on technological solutions and sometimes become complacent about executing the agreed deliverables, a tangible agreement document assists in managing the expected deliverables in an effective manner. 

This saves the two parties significant time and effort in clarifying the expectations and in determining the success of the IT delivery.

abouelmagd
abouelmagd
Ahmed Abu Al-Majd is an Egyptian blogger. I work on the blog "abouelmagd tech - احمد ابو المجد 2" which whose most important priority is to provide a group of exclusive explanations related to computers, technology, and information. This includes detailed explanations of each domain and also includes creating and explaining topics in the Windows and Android domains. The blog was created in late 2019 and its purpose is to provide everything new in the field of computers, technology, and information. facebook ــــ twitter ــــ instagram ــــ linkedin ــــ visit site abouelmagd tech - احمد ابو المجد 2
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