Wellington: 31 st October 2016 Presented by: Stephen Jenner The - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

wellington 31 st october 2016 presented by stephen jenner
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Wellington: 31 st October 2016 Presented by: Stephen Jenner The - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Realising Benefits from Projects & Programs The Case for Disciplined Investment Management (& 8 things you can do about it) Wellington: 31 st October 2016 Presented by: Stephen Jenner The Problem: the track record in deIivering RoI


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Realising Benefits from Projects & Programs The Case for Disciplined Investment Management (& 8 things you can do about it)

Wellington: 31st October 2016 Presented by: Stephen Jenner

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The Problem: the track record in deIivering RoI isn’t good

“Up to 70% of change initiatives fail to deliver on the benefits that they set out to achieve.”

John Kotter

“Most large capital investments come in late and over budget, never living up to

  • expectations. More than 70% of new manufacturing plants in North America, for example,

close within their first decade of operation. Approximately three-quarters of mergers and acquisitions never pay-off … And efforts to enter new markets fare no better; the vast majority end up being abandoned within a few years.” Lovallo & Kahneman “the evidence shows that two thirds of public sector projects are completed late, over budget

  • r do not deliver the outcomes expected” and “The track record of project delivery in the

private sector is equally mixed.” NAO “At the same time as many more and much larger infrastructure projects are being proposed and built around the world, it is becoming clear that many such projects have strikingly poor performance records” Flyvbjerg et al

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Causes (1) – Cognitive biases

“we overemphasise projects’ potential benefits and underestimate likely costs, spinning success scenarios while ignoring the possibility of mistakes.”

Daniel Kahneman The Planning Fallacy

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Causes (2) there is another explanation…

“it is found with overwhelming statistical significance that the cost estimates used to decide whether such projects should be built are highly and systematically misleading” and demand forecasts are, “significantly misleading (inflated). The result is large benefit shortfalls”. Bent Flyvbjerg

“Strategic Misrepresentation”

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Activity rather than results-led change The ‘Build it & They Will Come’ fallacy The ‘Knowing-Doing gap’ ‘Box ticking’ & the Status Quo bias…

Causes continued…

“A good deal of corporate planning … is like a ritual rain dance. It has no effect on the weather that follows, but those who engage in it think it does. … Moreover, much of the advice related to corporate planning is directed at improving the dancing, not the weather.” Brian Quinn

“Most corporate change programs mistake means for ends, process for outcome.”

Schaffer & Thomson

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Source: Spetzler, Strategic Decisions Group

Solutions – Disciplined Investment Management

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Increased Revenue Reduced Costs Strategic Contribution Mandatory Requirement

  • 1. Segment the portfolio

And tailor the investment criteria accordingly

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  • 2. A portfolio view on the benefits to be realized

Source: ONS

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  • 3. Start with the End in Mind

BENEFITS PROBLEM SOLUTION

Southbank Arts Precinct Redevelopment (Fictional) Department of Premier and Cabinet

Investment Logic Map

Generate vision for use of arts precinct

  • ver 20 years

Existing facilities will not support Victoria’s continued leadership position in the arts (60%) Create a precinct which functions as a distinctive attraction (40%) Arts precinct is dislocated and is no longer aligned with the way the city is developing (40%) Improve the connection of the arts precinct with Melbourne and its local community (20%) Renew and upgrade existing facilities so they can meet current and future needs (40%)

DRIVER Enabling Assets OBJECTIVE CHANGES BENEFITS

Strengthen enterprise and precinct marketing Redeveloped Arts Centre New Sturt Street Ramp Develop integrated ticketing, security and precinct management systems Establish a precinct governance and management model Make physical changes to arts precinct New CRM - ticketing platform and services Strengthen the Victorian community (40%) Improve Victoria’s industry (20%) Enhance Victoria’s arts profile and reputation (40%)

Source: The Victorian Investment Management Standard

i.e. Benefits-led vs Activity-centered programs

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“We were survivors, dwellers forever in the cracks of the vast organisational

  • chart. Disperse us, downsize us, squash us, transfer us, and we will

reassemble someday, somewhere, to once again build new layers of redundancy, waste, and glaring irrelevance.” Lerner

  • 4. Being clear about the benefits you are buying
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  • 5. With more reliable forecasting…

Answering the ‘how much?’ question

  • Range forecasting
  • Wisdom of Crowds
  • Delphi technique
  • Optimism bias adjustments
  • Reference class forecasting
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Sufi parable: “Trust in God, but tether your camel.”

Contract sign-off

Project Executive sign-off: Date: Benefit Owner sign-off: Date: Business Partner sign-off: Date: Business Change Manager sign-off: Date:

Source: Bristol City Council

  • 6. Integrate benefits with the performance management

regime – ‘booking’ the benefits

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  • 7. Challenge – “Adversarial collaboration”

As Shakespeare said - are you “wise enough to play the fool”? “humans not only are prone to make biased predictions, we’re also damnably overconfident about our predictions and slow to change them in the face of new evidence. In fact, these problems of bias and overconfidence become more severe the more complicated the prediction.” Ayres

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G a t e k e e p e r

  • GATE

Prescribed requirements Decision criteria Decision – Go, Kill, Hold Including:

  • Funding

to next gate

  • Resources

release

  • Deliverables

due by next gate & key milestones

  • Any

interim condi ons

  • n

funding Including:

  • Performance

to date

  • Measurable

strategic contribu on

  • Acceptable

risk profile

  • Cost

to complete Including:

  • Updated

Business Case

  • Progress

since last gate

  • Updated

3 A’s assessment

PgM M PgM B PgM L PgM K PgM J PgM H PgM G PgM F Pg M E Pg M D PgM C

Pj M 9 Pj M 6 Pj M 5 Pj M 7 Pj M 3 Pj M 2 Pj M 1 Pj M 4 Pj M 8

PgM N PgM Q PgM P PgM R

With Staged Release of Funding & ‘Gates with Teeth’

Regular review - including a rigorous Start Gate

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  • Summative – real evidence on whether the performance matched

the promise

  • Formative – what did we learn in relation to:
  • Future forecasting (reference class data)?
  • Our project & program management processes?
  • Validating the business model and the

assumptions underpinning strategic

  • bjectives?
  • 8. Learning from experience Rigorous post-implementation

review

and why wait: consider ‘pre-mortems’

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Thank you

Email me at stephen.jenner@qut.edu.au or stephen.jenner5@btinternet.com Free materials at www.stephenjenner.com