Title: Hubbard
1Quantitative Methods Make A Difference
2Overview
- Quantitative methods (probabilistic analysis,
operations research, etc.) are widely used in
other industries, but mostly lacking in IT
investment analysis - Over the past 7 years, we have been focusing
specifically on the application of more advanced
quantitative methods to IT - This presentation will review the key findings
from the application of quantitative methods to
over 30 projects
3Quantitative Methods Include
- Computing uncertainties and risks
- Computing the economic value of information
- Measurement methods for many items usually
considered intangible - Optimizing solutions when there are huge
combinations of options for - Roll-out priorities of systems
- Selection of a portfolio of functions
- Any other problem where different alternatives
about different aspects of the investment
generate lots of possibilities
4Method AIE
Applied Information Economics is the practical
application of scientific and mathematical
methods to quantify the value of IT-enabled
business investments
Economics
Applied Information Economics
Modern Portfolio Theory
5Some HDR Clients
- Booz-Allen Hamilton
- Accenture w/ the State of North Carolina
- Giga Information Group
- American Express
- The Discovery Channel
- U.S. Federal Government
- Department of Treasury
- Bureau of The Census
- Department of Veterans Affairs
- General Services Administration
- Housing and Urban Development
- The Axa Group 6 major companies
- The Banking Industry Technology Secretariat
- Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois
6What Do the Critics Say?
- Quantifying the risk and comparing its
risk/return with other investments sets AIE apart
from other methodologies. It can substantially
assist in financially justifying a project --
especially projects that promise significant
intangible benefits. The Gartner Group - AIE represents a rigorous, quantitative approach
to improving IT investment decision making..this
investment will return multiples by enabling much
better decision making. Giga recommends that IT
executives learn more about AIE and begin to
adopt its tools and methodologies, especially for
large IT projects. Giga Information Group - AIE-like methods must become the standard way to
make (IT) investment decisions. Forrester
Research, Inc.
7Five Key Revelations
- Quantifying risk radically changes IT investment
priorities - Current measurement priorities are upside-down
when compared to priorities based on economic
value of information - Technology regret is a significant and
overlooked factor in the the value of IT
investments - The true cost of scope creep is much higher
than most would think - The value of quantitative analysis would make it
the best investment in most IT portfolios
8Finding 1 Risk Analysis
- When IT computes risk in the same way that an
actuary would, many IT investments will look
completely different - We define risk a The probability of a quantified
loss - Risk analysis of IT investments involves a
probabilistic analysis of all uncertain variables
9Real-world Measurements vs. Ideal Values
Ideal Values Point
Real-world Meas.
Normal Distribution
Uniform Distribution
Lognormal Distribution
Hybrid
15
85
Threshold confidence
10Calibrated Estimates
- Measuring your own uncertainty about a quantity
is a general skill that can be taught with a
measurable improvement - Studies show that most managers are statistically
overconfident when assessing their own
uncertainty - Training can calibrate people so that when they
provide a 90 confidence interval, it still has a
90 chance of being right (even though it is
subjective)
When asked to provide a subjective 90
confidence interval, most managers provide a
range that only has about a 40-50 chance of
being right
Perceived 90 Confidence Interval
Actual 90 Confidence Interval
11Distribution-based ROI
12Analyzing the Distribution
ROI 0
Expected ROI
Risk of Negative ROI
Probability of Positive ROI
The cancellation hump
25
50
75
100
125
-25
0
Return on Investment (ROI)
13Plotting the Risk and Return
Risk
40
A proposed IT investment with a 15 risk and 54
return
30
Probability of less than a risk-free return
20
X
10
Return
10
20
30
40
50
60
14Example of Risk Effects
- These are real IT investments of 2M-3M
plotted against a clients investment boundary - The 27 ROI investment is actually preferred to
the 83 ROI investment
50
Region of Unacceptable Investments
40
30
Chance of a negative IRR
20
Region of Acceptable Investments
10
0
0
50
100
150
200
Expected IRR over 5 years
15Risk Increases Required ROIs
- Adjusting for risk causes some previously-acceptab
le projects to be rejected - Also, some low return but low risk projects would
now be acceptable - More projects with intangible benefits are now
economically justified - The net result A completely reshuffled deck of
IT project approvals
16Using Risk Analysis to Improve Decisions
- If the Risk is significant (it usually is),
consider doing the following - Reduce the size and functionality of the proposed
system - focus on fewer high-return features - Wait until specific uncertainties in the
environment subside - e.g. major mergers,
reengineering, etc. - Wait to tackle big projects until proper skills
are developed and methods are in place - Consider purchased packages that arent a perfect
fit but close enough - they may look more
attractive now - Invest more on a proper economic analysis of the
largest IT investments - this should reduce
uncertainty about critical quantities - Include deferred benefits in any estimate of
scope creep costs
17Finding 2 Measurements
- Information has a value that can be calculated
with a formula known for 50 years - Computing the value of additional information on
uncertain variables causes some surprising
changes in what gets measures
18The Economic Value of Information
The Decision Theory Formula
- What it means
- Information reduces uncertainty
- Reduced uncertainty improves decisions
- Improved decisions satisfy business objectives
(by definition)
19The IT Measurement Inversion
Least Relevant to Approval Decisions
Receives Most Attention
- Costs
- Initial Development Costs
- Ongoing Maintenance/Training Costs
- Benefits
- A specific benefit (productivity, sales, etc.)
- Utilization (when usage starts and how quickly
usage grows) - Chance of Cancellation
Economic Relevance
Typical Attention
Receives Least Attention
Most Relevant to Approval Decisions
See my article The IT Measurement Inversion in
CIO Magazine (its also on my website at
www.hubbardresearch.com under the articles link)
20Finding 3 Technology Regret
- Most business cases treat IT investments
implicitly as a now or never choice - Technology regret is an economic quantity
associated with committing to a technology after
which, for whatever reason, becomes regrettable - The equivalent of buyers remorse
- Technology regret becomes and important
consideration in any environment where changing
technology is a constant - The issue becomes balancing technology regret
(which tends to defer IT investments) vs. the
opportunity loss of deferring the benefits of
making the investment now
21Changing Technology
32 Annual Growth Rate
350
- Some Areas of Growth
- Processors Memory
- (Moores Law)
- Storage
- Communications (Paynes Law)
- Internet Users
- Sensory devices
300
250
200
Relative Computing Power Per (19801)
150
100
50
0
1995
1980
1985
2000
1990
Year
Competition makes capitalizing on new technology
more critical to survival
22Changing With Technology
How often should you change with technology?
Avoiding technology regret is often a major
driver in IT decisions.
Upgrade 2
A Critical Technology Measure
Upgrade 1
Time
23Real Option Theory
- The option value tells us when an investment,
even if it looks positive now, should be deferred
until the opportunity is better - In the case of IT, waiting for the possibility of
better technology around the corner should be
considered
Invest this cycle, low priority, may be deferred
if resources are strained
Single Period Option Value (Value of Waiting one
period)
Invest in this cycle, high priority
0
Net Value of the Investment
24The Effects of Tech Regret
- Very long duration IT projects that commit to a
proprietary solution tend to look much less
favorable - Short turnaround projects based on
non-proprietary standards tend to look better - Large scale commitments to the fastest improving
technologies (like data storage, bandwidth) tend
not to be favorable
25Finding 4 Scope Creep
- The cost of adding one additional function to an
software development project is rarely addressed
properly - If anything, the only cost of new features
considered is development cost - Long term maintenance, increased risk of
cancellation plus deferred benefits is much more
significant
26True Scope Creep Costs
- 24 Initial development costs
- 24 Future maintenance costs (computed over 5
years) - 1 Incremental contribution to probability of
total project cancellation - 51 Deferred benefits of the other functions
delayed by the proposed new function
24
51
24
1
27Finding 5 Value of Quant.
- Organizations have successfully adopted more
advanced quantitative methods for evaluating IT
investments - The cost of analysis routinely comes in below 1
and has always been under 2 of the investment
size - including initial training - This is still less than non-IT investments of
similar size and risk - It is also sometimes less time-consuming than the
previous non-quantitative analysis techniques
used by the firm (One of the reasons this
analysis is efficient is we conduct a Value of
Information Analysis - we only measure what is
economically justified) - Using the standard VIA calculation for the value
of AIE analysis, AIE itself was the best
investment of all the IT investments we analyzed
- very conservative measures of payoffs put 20
to every 1 spent on AIE
28Overview of RRA Analysis
Classification
Value of Info.
Intangibles Customer Satisfaction Strategic
Alignment Technology Risk Information
Quality etc.
Measurables Errors in Decision X Change to
Strategic Measure M Productivity in Activity
Y Chance of cancellation, etc.
Risk
Organization's investment limit
Acceptable region of investment
Return
29In Conclusion
- Quantitative methods like AIE cause major IT
decisions to be very different and better - Advanced methods can and have been learned and
adopted by IT organizations - More quantitative analysis can be the highest
return investment in your IT portfolio