A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results

In modern organizations a large portion of senior management's time is now being spent on finding ways to measure the contribution of their organizations IS/IT investments to business performance. It has been shown that IS/IT investments in many organizations are huge and increasing rapidly eve...

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Main Authors: Lin, C., Pervan, Graham, McDermid, D.
Format: Working Paper
Published: Curtin Business School, Curtin University of Technology 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/39542
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author Lin, C.
Pervan, Graham
McDermid, D.
author_facet Lin, C.
Pervan, Graham
McDermid, D.
author_sort Lin, C.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In modern organizations a large portion of senior management's time is now being spent on finding ways to measure the contribution of their organizations IS/IT investments to business performance. It has been shown that IS/IT investments in many organizations are huge and increasing rapidly every year and yet there is still a lack of understanding of the impact of the proper IS/IT investment evaluation processes and practices in these organizations. At the same time, the issue of expected and actual benefits realized from IS/IT investments has also generated a significant amount of debate in the IS/IT literature amongst researchers and practitioners, though most of the published research comes from the USA and UK. This study has addressed that issue through a survey of the CIOs of Australia's largest 500 organisations. The results indicate that a variety of formal IS/IT investment evaluation processes and techniques are used, costs and budgets are of great concern, there is a strong emphasis on cost reduction and other benefits, and a reasonable level of confidence in the delivery of these benefits. Most organizations used a formal methodology or process for IS/IT investment evaluation, and financially based evaluation techniques such as NPV and ROI which, though not perfect, often do try to incorporate intangible benefits into the process. These and other results are presented in the paper, and suggestions for further work included.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-395422017-01-30T14:34:55Z A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results Lin, C. Pervan, Graham McDermid, D. IT Investment Measurement of IT Effectiveness IT Evaluation IT Benefits Realization In modern organizations a large portion of senior management's time is now being spent on finding ways to measure the contribution of their organizations IS/IT investments to business performance. It has been shown that IS/IT investments in many organizations are huge and increasing rapidly every year and yet there is still a lack of understanding of the impact of the proper IS/IT investment evaluation processes and practices in these organizations. At the same time, the issue of expected and actual benefits realized from IS/IT investments has also generated a significant amount of debate in the IS/IT literature amongst researchers and practitioners, though most of the published research comes from the USA and UK. This study has addressed that issue through a survey of the CIOs of Australia's largest 500 organisations. The results indicate that a variety of formal IS/IT investment evaluation processes and techniques are used, costs and budgets are of great concern, there is a strong emphasis on cost reduction and other benefits, and a reasonable level of confidence in the delivery of these benefits. Most organizations used a formal methodology or process for IS/IT investment evaluation, and financially based evaluation techniques such as NPV and ROI which, though not perfect, often do try to incorporate intangible benefits into the process. These and other results are presented in the paper, and suggestions for further work included. 2000 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/39542 Curtin Business School, Curtin University of Technology fulltext
spellingShingle IT Investment
Measurement of IT Effectiveness
IT Evaluation
IT Benefits Realization
Lin, C.
Pervan, Graham
McDermid, D.
A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results
title A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results
title_full A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results
title_fullStr A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results
title_full_unstemmed A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results
title_short A Survey of IS/IT Investment Evaluation Practices in Australia: Some Preliminary Results
title_sort survey of is/it investment evaluation practices in australia: some preliminary results
topic IT Investment
Measurement of IT Effectiveness
IT Evaluation
IT Benefits Realization
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/39542