Title: Maximize Your Software Technology Investment March 24, 2004
1Maximize YourSoftware Technology Investment
March 24, 2004
- Presented by
- Marcia McLean
- CapeCoder, Mashpee, MA
2About CapeCoder
- In business since 1998, incorporated in 2000
- Specialize in web-based, database-driven custom
business applications - Current projects use Microsoft .NET
- Former manager with the MITRE Corporation, the
ASK Group, Freedom Newspapers - Former Board member of the New England Employee
Benefits Council - President of the Cape Cod .NET User Group
- Member of the Cape Cod Internet Council
3A Major Investment
- Total IT costs are around 2.3 of revenue, or
5,000/employee - Software and associated expenses account for
10-40 of total IT costs - Failures in information technology cost the U.S.
economy 100 billion annually, with the price of
software defect repair alone estimated at 59.5
billion - Computerworld 1996
- WorkSoft, automated software testing company
45 Steps to Maximize Your ROI
- Analyze needs, define requirements
- Inventory what you have
- Options available
- Build or buy new software
- Training, testing, maintenance, hiring
- Evaluation
- Case study
5Case Study
- Background
- Motorcycle dealership with four retail stores
- Safe riding school with 500 students
- Requirements
- Enroll students online and from the stores
- Enforce business rules
- Accurate enrollment headcounts
- Change and correct customer (student) info
- Reconcile credit card charges
- Make information available among departments
- Send info to Commonwealth RMV
6Case Study (contd)
- Challenges
- High administrative overhead
- Long time to train new administrator
- Hard to prevent overbooking
- Information collected from various sources
- Could not make changes easily
- Burdensome to create reports to RMV
- Different people needed information
- Competition
- Web hosting company was expensive and unresponsive
7FIRST STEP
8Software Requirements
- Collection, organization, reporting, distribution
of information - Start and end with your business needs
- Examples
- Sales, cash flow and profit
- Scheduling
- Customer contact info
- Inventory
9Questions to Ask
- What information do I need to collect, organize,
report and distribute? - Who provides this information?
- How is the information provided?
- Who collects, maintains and distributes it?
- How is the information stored?
- How is the information used
- How is it reported?
- Who needs this information?
10Case Study what information was needed?
- Inventory class sizes, codes, schedule
- Method and amount of tuition payment
- Customer contact and demographic information
- Attendance and grades
- Credit card payment authorization codes
11Case Study who provided the information and how
was it stored?
- Sales staff -gt school administrator
- Customer call-ins to administrator
- Instructors
- White boards, notebooks
- Legacy dealer management system
12Case Study (contd) who needed the information?
- Customers
- Instructors
- Controller
- Stockroom
- General manager
- RMV
13Points of Failure
- Information was lost
- Hard to retrieve
- Not organized
- Not current
- Hard to make corrections, changes
- Not easily shared
14Define Requirements - Recap
- Determine what information you, your employees,
your customers and your vendors need - Who provides it?
- Who needs to see it?
- Will it need to be changed?
- How and how often does it need to be updated and
reported?
15SECOND STEP
16Types of Business Software
- Basic
- Office Productivity Suites (Word Processing,
Spreadsheet, Email) - Accounting
- Virus Protection, Firewall
- Website
- One Level Up
- Database
- Specialty POS, inventory, HR, medical
- Server-based, multi-user
17Youve Made An Investment
- Software accounts for up to 40 of total IT costs
of 5,000/employee - 8 to 15 of software spending wasted
- Goes to purchasing, renewing, and supporting
contracts for shelf-ware, software which is not
used because - Requirement no longer exists
- Point solution whose functionality has been
replaced by newer applications or suites
18Basic Software
- Business Applications
- Anti-virus
- Spam, Spyware Filters
- Website
- Security
- Firewall
- Encrypted data
- Restrict access to files and network
- Backup
- CDs
- Tape
- External hard drive
- RAID-configured internal hard drive
- Online backup service
19Servers
- 8 reasons your business needs a server
- File-sharing is easier
- Easier back-ups
- Specialized collaboration software
- Mobile work force
- Share high-speed Internet access
- Offload files and tasks to server
- Consolidate email accounts
- Easier to set up new computers and deploy new
applications - http//www.microsoft.com/smallbusiness/reasonsfors
erver.mspx
20Inventory - Recap
- Bundled office productivity applications
- Specialty packages, like accounting
- Custom software purchased with your business
- Legacy database
- Externally hosted web site
- Utilities for network admin, anti-virus,
firewall, spyware detection
21But Does It Work?
- Does my software collect ALL the information I
need? - Does it provide helpful built-in or ad hoc
reporting tools? - How easily is the information shared?
- Can multiple people use it at the same time?
- How easy is it to learn and to use?
- How expensive is it to maintain and upgrade?
- Are my existing systems well integrated?
22No?
- Consider upgrades
- Consider new software purchase
- Consider consulting assistance to integrate,
enhance - Consider consulting assistance to develop custom
solution
23Case Study what was their investment?
- Legacy accounting and POS
- Bundled office productivity suite
- Servers, hardware, network
- Integration was minimal
- School information was kept on white boards and
in notebooks
24THIRD STEP
25Buy
- Shrink Wrap
- Advantages
- Tested by vendor, support available and often
part of purchase price - Forums, user groups and other resources readily
available - Maintenance, upgrades, patches readily available
- Fixed price, no surprises
- Disadvantages
- You get it as is, no customization
- Vendors tech support may be inadequate
- You cant legally copy it or redistribute it.
26Buy (contd)
- Checklist before buying software
- Pricing, bundled (Office)
- Single or multi-user
- Shop around for best price and special programs
- Release date of at least 12 months ago
- Establish procedures for installation, updates
and patches - Test and run parallel, especially mission
critical app and/or on production servers
27Licensing
- Grants you the right to use the software
developers intellectual property
28Volume Licensing Discounts
- Transactional of purchases (new, renewed,
maintenance) - Forecast spreads orders and costs over fixed
period, e.g., 2 years - Site multi-user limited or unlimited
- First order price of future licenses receive
same discount as your first order - Points - value of purchases
29Freeware, Shareware
- Freeware
- http//www.tucows.com
- http//www.download.com/
- http//www.macoszone.com/
- Shareware try before you buy
- Demo versions of commercial software
- Beware of spyware, adware
30Build
- Customize
- Advantages
- You have a resource your competition doesnt
- Meets your businesss unique needs
- You and your vendor have complete control if you
want changes, enhancements - You can negotiate licensing and ownership
(buyers market) - Disadvantages
- It always takes longer than expected to build
- It is often more expensive that expected this
is controllable through contract negotiations and
managing scope creep - It really is Beta are you set up to deal with
unexpected bugs? - Do you have time to work with the vendor on
testing? - Do you understand your business processes well
enough to help your vendor write a reasonably
good statement of work?
31Build
- Checklist before building software
- Shop Around
- In 2000, there were 127 technology consulting
firms in Barnstable, Plymouth and Bristol
counties providing custom software development
services - There should be a contract and it should include
- Statement of work
- Budget (fixed price, hourly)
- Payment schedule (typically 1/31/31/3)
- Schedule
- Protection of privacy, ownership of code
- Warranty
- Expectations need to be clear up front
- Work out communications (regular meetings,
emails, phone calls) - If you are putting the job out to bid, tell your
vendor
32Build AND Buy
- Combination Build Buy
- Advantages
- Can be best of both worlds tested software that
can be modified to your specific needs - Tech support MAY be available user groups and
other resources may be available as well. - Disadvantages
- Comes with a price more expensive. Companies
need to recoup their development costs, and this
kind of software is harder to write. - You HAVE to find a vendor who has deep knowledge
of the software and that may be hard to do. - Your vendor needs to provide excellent
documentation and training one more thing to
worry about! - A good vendor is expensive customization is a
higher skill set. - Vendor is probably a VAR, which means they may
try to upsell you.
33Business Software Recap
- Upgrades may be available
- Buying new
- Integration
- Hidden costs of installation, running parallel,
training, purchasing more licenses - Building
- Requires good communication with vendor, in-depth
knowledge of your requirements
34Case Study BUILD
- Maximize current IT investment
- Unique business rules
- Wanted exclusive ownership of the software
- Enroll students at four stores and at trade shows
- New central database independent of legacy system
- Customer self-service component
- Ability to administer servers and access data
independent of their outside hosting service - Competitive advantage
35FOURTH STEP
- TRAINING, MAINTENANCE HIRING
36Training Resources for Commercial Software
- Colleges, training centers , trade schools,
community adult education - Vendor resources
- Online forums
- User groups
- On-site training by a specialist
37Maintenance Hidden Cost
- Install upgrades and patches
- Integrate with other systems
- Administer permissions and privileges
- Protect from viruses and other attacks
- Testing and deployment
- Server tuning
- Hosted software model is an alternative
38Hiring Employees
- Degree/equivalent and 3-5 years
- Network administrator 44-60
- Sr. network admin 60-65
- Tech support 34-44
-
- 2003 Cape Cod Compensation Benefits Survey
- Cape Cod Human Resources Association
- Conducted by The HR Consulting Group
39Hiring a Vendor
- Good Signs
- This is a full-time business for them
- Have been in business FT for 2 or more years
- Have clients who have been with them for 2 yrs
- Have experience with similar projects
- Have at least 3 credible business/technical
references - Website is current (no dead links) and easy to
use - Keeps skills current by participation in
continuing education - Courses, user groups, publications
40Hiring a Vendor (contd)
- Warning Signs
- Moonlighters, limited professional experience or
just out of school - VAR for a specific software package (okay if you
already own it) - Wont sign or dont have a written agreement
which includes a statement of work, fees and
payment schedule and confidentiality agreement - Not forthright about their strengths and
weaknesses NO ONE knows everything!
41Case Study
- Had a full-time IT manager
- Ability and desire to perform back-end system
administration (web and database servers) - Hardware and network was in place
- School administrator (high turnover)
42FIFTH STEP
43A Major Investment
- Total IT costs are around 2.3 of revenue, or
5,000/employee - Software and associated expenses account for
10-40 of total IT costs - Failures in information technology cost the U.S.
economy 100 billion annually, with the price of
software defect repair alone estimated at 59.5
billion - Computerworld 1996
- WorkSoft, automated software testing company
44But Is It Working For You?
- Mercer Human Resources Consulting Study
- 50 of respondents indicated their organization
was either ineffective or very ineffective when
it came to capturing ROI from technology
investments - Only 16 of respondents indicated they were
effective in capturing ROI of their technology
investments
45Uncovering YOUR ROI
- Evaluation Checklist
- Have you been better able to deal with unexpected
trends in the marketplace (e.g., an increase in
demand for your services?) - Are you/your staff better able to make changes
and corrections? - Are you able to respond to internal and external
customer needs more quickly and/or more
thoroughly? - Have you replaced overhead with a profit center?
- Are you seeing other areas where technology could
make your business more profitable?
46Primary Reasons for Failure
- Failure to Clearly Define Requirements
- Before leasing, purchasing or designing any
software, organizations need to have a clear
understanding of what it is they need the
software to do. Define objective and goals - Failure to Consider All Costs
- Annual maintenance fees and upgrades, the
internal resource costs for implementation and
the costs for training and change management are
typical cost categories most overlooked in
cost/benefit analysis
47Primary Reasons for Failure
- Failure to Understand the Challenges of
Integrating with Other Systems - Integration is the hottest topic in IT today.
It ranks as one of the chief concerns due to the
proliferation of applications within an
organization - Failure to Train
- Introducing new technology does not automatically
result in cost savings. - By-in and acceptance by users
- Failure to Procure Adequate IT Staff for
Implementation and Maintenance - Pay 5,000 in the beginning to get it done right
vs. 50,000 over the course of the technologys
lifespan to undo the wrong and get it working
efficiently.
48Case Study (conclusion)
- The system paid for itself in the first year
- The system is in its fourth year
- Training costs reduced
- Overhead costs reduced 1 FTE -gt ½ FTE
- Able to respond to unexpected changes in the
marketplace enrollments tripled over time - Errors reduced or eliminated
- Can make changes easily
- Can share information easily
- Success-gt more successes
49Moving Forward
- Software is an ASSET
- Analyze your business needs
- Seek information and professional resources
- Select from variety of options what is best for
business - Evaluate it
- Train staff to use it
50Online Resources
- http//www.cnet.com
- http//www.zdnet.com
- http//www.tucows.com
- http//www.capeinternet.org
- http//www.ccdevgroup.net
- http//www.techsoup.com
- Search engines
51Questions? Comments?
- Marcia McLean
- CapeCoder
- http//www.capecoder.com
- mmclean_at_capecoder.com
- (508)477-6141