2. Feasibility study

During this stage, the company has to decide firstly whether there is a need for the system and secondly, if there is a need, can the cost of the system be justified against the benefits that it will bring.

Consider three imaginary (very brief!) alternatives that a company could choose from:

a) Company does not change anything

Benefit: No disruption to the business. Least cost.

Performance: No change, system remains outdated.  Process becomes increasingly less efficient.

b) Company makes alterations to half the system

Benefit: Best parts of the system are kept, whilst the least efficient parts are redesigned to improve performance.

Cost: Moderate, training moderate.

Performance improvement: 30%

c) Complete overhaul

Benefit: Reduces running costs for the company (more profitable).

Cost: High, given that new equipment / software will be required.  Training for staff needed.

Performance: 70% improvement over the old system in time.

As you can see, deciding on the best alternative is often not simple - management have to take many factors into account. There are often complicated relationships between cost, performance and benefit.

 

Challenge see if you can find out one extra fact on this topic that we haven't already told you

Click on this link: feasibility study