1st Edition

Failsafe IS Project Delivery

By Andrew Holmes Copyright 2001
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    This title was first published in 2001. Based on research and practical experience, this text highlights the contributory factors leading to project failure. The buisiness-IT culture gap, information politics, escalating commitment, the problem of high investment and low return, and accountability for failure are all covered.

    List of figures, List of tables, Preface, Acknowledgements, Introduction, Part I: The problem with information systems projects, 1. A fifty-year context, 2. What have we learnt from failure so far?, 3. Introducing the failure model, 4. High investment but low return, 5. Business and IT: they just can’t communicate, 6. Information politics: the new organizational battleground, 7. Over-commitment in information systems projects: when failure is the only option, 8. Where is the accountability when information systems projects fail?, 9. The silver bullet syndrome: expecting the problems with information systems projects to be solved by a single-shot solution, Part II: Breakthrough to project success, 10. Mastering the basics in four, not so easy, steps, 11. Guaranteeing returns from high-investment information systems projects, 12. Eliminating the culture gap: business and IT working together, 13. Short- and medium-term solutions to information politics, 14. Stopping the escalator: ensuring your information systems projects are successful, 15. Rehabilitating accountability, 16. Avoiding the silver bullet syndrome: choosing the right tools and techniques, Part III: Optimizing information systems projects, 17. Optimizing the delivery of information systems projects, 18. Changing attitudes towards IT and information systems projects, 19. The bottom line, Epilogue, Notes, Index

    Biography

    Holmes, Andrew