dc.description.abstract |
One of the most profitable areas of investment for any commercial or public sector
organisation ought to be the area of information technology. Unfortunately, this is by no
means always the case.
In practice, there has for some time been a serious concern, and even considerable
anecdotal evidence, that a substantial proportion of IT projects in the UK are poorly-planned
and executed, and that the investment on these projects is therefore wholly or partially
wasted. With little or no significant return, the investments are often profitless and even
disastrous. They are frequently undertaken by ‘organisationally blind’ individuals leading
their business without due regard for IT investment. Typically, even the most senior
managers do not know how and why the organisation in question should invest in IT. In
short, there has been a fear that much IT investment in the UK is, unfortunately, a question
of ‘the blind leading the blind’.
Cranfield School of Management set out to investigate the quality of the IT investment
decision process inside organisations. This report contains the findings of the investigation. |
en_UK |