TY - JOUR
T1 - The Empirical Reality of IT Project Cost Overrun
T2 - Discovering A Power-Law Distribution
AU - Flyvbjerg, Bent
AU - Budzier, Alexander
AU - Lee, Jong Seok
AU - Keil, Mark
AU - Lunn, Daniel
AU - Bester, Dirk W.
PY - 2022/7/3
Y1 - 2022/7/3
N2 - If managers assume a normal or near-normal distribution of Information Technology (IT) project cost overruns, as is common, and cost overruns can be shown to follow a power-law distribution, managers may be unwittingly exposing their organizations to extreme risk by severely underestimating the probability of large cost overruns. In this research, we collect and analyze a large sample comprised of 5,392 IT projects to empirically examine the probability distribution of IT project cost overruns. Further, we propose and examine a mechanism that can explain such a distribution. Our results reveal that IT projects are far riskier in terms of cost than normally assumed by decision makers and scholars. Specifically, we found that IT project cost overruns follow a power-law distribution in which there are a large number of projects with relatively small overruns and a fat tail that includes a smaller number of projects with extreme overruns. A possible generative mechanism for the identified power-law distribution is found in interdependencies among technological compo- nents in IT systems. We propose and demonstrate, through computer simulation, that a problem in a single technological component can lead to chain reactions in which other interdependent components are affected, causing substantial overruns. What the power law tells us is that extreme IT project cost overruns will occur and that the prevalence of these will be grossly underestimated if managers assume that overruns follow a normal or near-normal distribution. This underscores the impor- tance of realistically assessing and mitigating the cost risk of new IT projects up front.
AB - If managers assume a normal or near-normal distribution of Information Technology (IT) project cost overruns, as is common, and cost overruns can be shown to follow a power-law distribution, managers may be unwittingly exposing their organizations to extreme risk by severely underestimating the probability of large cost overruns. In this research, we collect and analyze a large sample comprised of 5,392 IT projects to empirically examine the probability distribution of IT project cost overruns. Further, we propose and examine a mechanism that can explain such a distribution. Our results reveal that IT projects are far riskier in terms of cost than normally assumed by decision makers and scholars. Specifically, we found that IT project cost overruns follow a power-law distribution in which there are a large number of projects with relatively small overruns and a fat tail that includes a smaller number of projects with extreme overruns. A possible generative mechanism for the identified power-law distribution is found in interdependencies among technological compo- nents in IT systems. We propose and demonstrate, through computer simulation, that a problem in a single technological component can lead to chain reactions in which other interdependent components are affected, causing substantial overruns. What the power law tells us is that extreme IT project cost overruns will occur and that the prevalence of these will be grossly underestimated if managers assume that overruns follow a normal or near-normal distribution. This underscores the impor- tance of realistically assessing and mitigating the cost risk of new IT projects up front.
KW - IT project cost overrun
KW - IT project management
KW - power-law distribution
KW - fat-tails
KW - elf-organized criticality
KW - component interdependence
KW - technological component
KW - IT project cost overrun
KW - IT project management
KW - power-law distribution
KW - fat-tails
KW - elf-organized criticality
KW - component interdependence
KW - technological component
U2 - 10.1080/07421222.2022.2096544
DO - 10.1080/07421222.2022.2096544
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0742-1222
VL - 39
SP - 607
EP - 639
JO - Journal of Management Information Systems
JF - Journal of Management Information Systems
IS - 3
ER -