Governments have never been more keen to leverage information technology for public projects, but their track record isn’t particularly good. In Victoria, myki has been branded a “disaster from touch on to touch off”, and HealthSMART has been ditched. In NSW, the first transport card scheme, T-Card, became a legal saga before being canned.
Picture: Richard Jones
Now David Glance says the federal government’s Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record project is unfixable.
Problems with public IT projects often start with the engagement process. Clients don’t understand the complexity of the technology required, and the providers often don’t understand the complexity of the business process they are working on.
The rush to sign
IT service providers spend a relatively short period of time understanding the broader business drivers and focus on existing processes to support the sales pitch. The client in turn spends little time understanding the complexities of the technology.
Often the technology and the provider are selected for their appeal and the glamour surrounding the sales process. Both parties are to blame for the project being more complex than expected, the contract not being fit for purpose and cost increases.
NSW was an early adopter of the smart card, of which the first troubled incarnation was the T-Card. The project should have been identified by NSW as high-risk due to the required level of innovation and because ERG Ltd, the technology company tasked to develop it, had not deployed such a project previously. ERG probably understood much of the complexities of the technology but — as seems apparent from press releases — not the broader requirements of data management and integration.
ERG delivered a largely functional application at the point of use, but there was a major question mark over its ability to deliver the necessary infrastructure. One of the biggest problems was that ERG signed contracts with clients around the world to work on similar initiatives at the same time. Rather than trying to develop a specific system to take to market globally, ERG endeavoured to supply different systems to different customers.
Why did this happen? Probably because ERG wouldn’t get paid until each system was operational, which put tremendous strain on its financial and technical resources. The NSW government abandoned the T-Card in 2008. Legal action around the project was settled out of court in 2012.
Misaligned expectations
And then there is the disconnect between the original expectations of the client and that of the provider. The understanding of the complexity of this early stage of a project is the responsibility of both parties.
Even after so many failed IT projects, it is notable that public servants commissioning this kind of work don’t spend more time aligning their expectations and the engineering activities in a way found in other complex innovation projects.
Evidence indicates that clients, in this case the government, identify a provider they can work with and a product that appears fit for the purpose. But providers often drive the implementation, without the inclusion of senior IT staff from the government, which results in cost overruns and a lack of benefits being delivered.
One solution would be for contracts to be signed on the basis of business process improvement. This would mean that engineering requirements become the specific responsibility of the provider and ensure that the provider diligently understood the requirements pre-contract.
Information systems projects are generally sanctioned either by capital expenditure requests, in the public sectors this a budgetary approval process, or by strategic initiatives.
Measuring benefits
The ones that support strategic initiatives are usually deemed more successful than the capital expenditure projects engaged for their return on investment. This is because the expectation is set against business improvement rather than tangible project by project benefit analysis.
The major issue with a tangible benefit analysis is that organisations underestimate cost and overestimate return. To some extent this is a human failing. When this happens a system is doomed to fail to meet expectations.
Information systems of today have such longevity that identifying returns over time is all but impossible. A reduction in cost five years after a system is implemented is difficult to relate to the IT initiative, particularly as other projects will be competing for recognition of that improvement.
A broader recognition of the enduring value of IT would change the emphasis from short term project goals to that of a long term business enabler. This in turn would reduce the short term focus on success or failure to the broader implications of innovative technology adoption.
An information system provider often sees project success as the implementation of IT on time and on budget. The client sees the project as a matter of business or process improvement. And almost all contracts relate to IT specifics rather than business specifics.
IT contracts often obscure objectives through technological jargon, man hours and deadlines. If business objectives and outcomes were better stated in contracts there would be clear and obvious accountability. When there is a common understanding of success the more likely are successful outcomes.
Richard Fulford is a Senior Lecturer at Edith Cowan University. He does not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has no relevant affiliations.
This article was originally published at The Conversation. Read the original article.
Comments
12 responses to “How Bad Contracts Ruin IT Projects”
oh god… i’ll sheepishly chime in and *cough* mention *cough* the NBN…
*cough* QLD Health Payroll *cough*
I have a bad feeling this article is the carrier of the next swine flu. *cough* too many projects to mention between *cough*
Hang on. This would be the same ERG that deployed a working smartcard transit system in Singapore in the early 2000’s? And Hong Kong and San Francisco? I think the phrase “because ERG Ltd, the technology company tasked to develop it, had not deployed such a project previously” does not mean what you think it means.
And if NSW government hadn’t tried to force a fare-system orders of magnitude more complicated than any other city, then ERG may have had a chance. Instead of creating a transport fare system that served citizenry and attracted people to public transport, the state transport stakeholders wanted to bake their old-fashioned, highly fractured fare system into the new system.
A multinational IT sales executive once told me “never confuse a sale with an implementation”. There’s the problem…
It would be nice if even government websites worked after their regular departmental renaming.
Even the most basic links end up failing because they’re pointed at an old domain name. It seems that no concept of link integrity or checking has penetrated the minds of government IT workers.
Government websites are the worst thing to navigate, it’s like they completely take logic out of the whole equation
Biggest issue I see with Government projects is that they like to keep changing the deliverables. Doing so of course causes delays and at times can miss the original goal of the project!
Amen!
One of the (many, many) problems with the contracts in government IT projects is that the provider writes the contract. Government contracts are generally unpalatable to the providers, are overly complex, and aren’t easily varied. Add to that the mindset that ripping off the government is a victimless crime, and it’s the government’s fault for allowing it to happen.
That, and that government departments usually aren’t allowed to admit a project failed – it can be blindingly obvious, everyone can know it, everyone else can say it and point it out, but if a public servant were to admit failure, they’d prove they were wasting public money. I remember a technology conference I was at a few years ago where the idea of a “Project Failure Conference” for government was suggested. Pretty much every bureaucrat in the conversation said it would greatly help with project success rates, and they’d be encouraged to attend, but no one would be allowed to talk about their projects.
My experience with public & private sector contracts is when it comes to accountability.
In private sector people are tasked and held accountable for deliverable, but in public sector, sign-off is the biggest problem with too many stake holders and red tape and no-one prepare to put pen to paper out of fear of repercussion.
Implementing the same process in both, private sector looks at efficiency & cost savings, working smarter. Public sector want controls, controls and then some. Which leads to the previous poster’s comment about ripping off government. If only the public knew how much money is wasted, everyone will stop paying taxes out of protest.