FileMaker Pro 11 has arrived, and we had a chance to try out some of the new features.
Almost 70 percent of respondents said that their managers and their boards continued to provide the financial support for these projects. Common problems cited included overrun on time (62 percent), budget (49 percent) and higher than expected maintenance costs (47 percent). Adding insult to injury, one in four companies said that they found business users reluctant to adopt the new systems once they are implemented.
Some VARs found the statistics out of sync with their own experiences. "I would think with the current generation of CIOs who are more business-minded and now possess tools and an ecosystem that can deliver faster solutions, that the results may be better than a 33 percent success rate," said Lou McElwain, executive vice president of sales at New York solution provider BlueWater.
Still, there are always projects that fail to accomplish their objectives. Following are six tips solution providers suggest to help put your next IT project on the road to success.
#1 -- Plan well
"There are so many technological intangibles in an average IT network, that it is nearly impossible to plan for everything that may arise. Many IT service providers submit low-ball project estimates just to win the work, without considering the business impact of a poorly run project," said Ronnie Parisella, founder of Primary Support, a New York-based solution provider. Building extra time into each phase of large projects is critical to ensure the project stays on track. "Additional time is also built in for executive sign-offs and extensive testing," he added. "Of course there are exceptions to this type of planning, but for the most part, our clients enjoy smooth network infrastructure upgrades and migrations."
#2 -- Implement proper requirement gathering procedures
Projects generally fail due to improper requirements gathering, said Alani Kuye, president, Phantom Data Systems, Norwalk, Conn. Project management and implementation management are two distinct areas often confused, he noted, explaining that while the former involves requirements, milestones, relationship management and service delivery, the latter involves actual implementation deployment and configuration.
"Management may often live with this figure -- one in three IT projects living up to expectations -- if the effect on the bottom line is not too severe," Kuye said. "Usually, when there's a significant cost center attached to the project, then failure is not an option. These sorts of projects tend to involve both internal and external experts. They also tend to be validation driven in an iterative manner."
While there's no single way to solve this problem, proper requirements gathering, continuous testing and validation is the best approach, he said.
#3 -- Forge relationships
One of the reasons for the failure rate would be the disconnect between the needs of the business and the IT goals of the project. Unfortunately, that can occur at any point in the life cycle of a project. "If the CIO or his team do not pre-qualify the technical solution with the end-users and then engage the users at each step of the project's life cycle, it becomes very likely that the end-user expectations will not be met," said BlueWater's McElwain.
While solution providers may not have the political clout or the access to the end users needed for ultimate success, they can often work toward smoothing the passageways among the various players to facilitate successful project implementation, he said.
NEXT: Manage expectations
