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Follow-up Bootstrap Case Study

Follow-up Bootstrap Case Study. The Measurement Choice. The follow-up decision was defined as whether to proceed with the project as planned or make a significant reduction in scope by removing functions ( ) The VIA of this decision indicated that risk of cancellation was a key variable

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Follow-up Bootstrap Case Study

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  1. Follow-up Bootstrap Case Study

  2. The Measurement Choice • The follow-up decision was defined as whether to proceed with the project as planned or make a significant reduction in scope by removing functions ( ) • The VIA of this decision indicated that risk of cancellation was a key variable • Further calibrated estimates and decomposition were uninformative and insufficient historical data exists for creating an “actuarial” model • Bootstrapping the chance of cancellation was judged to be the most feasible measurement method • Additional investments may use this bootstrap model

  3. Bootstrapping Overview • Historical analysis of IT investments • First Workshop: • Review history • Identify Success Factors • Confirm possible ranges • Design test assessments • Second Workshop • Calibrate for binary questions • Conduct collaborative assessment • Independent assessments • Compute regression model • Confirm model

  4. Questions for Initial Planning • Is bootstrapping necessary? (explain alternatives and when bootstrapping is good) • Have a kickoff: explain objectives and approach w/ specific examples/success stories, studies show that bootstrap are improved • What is the scope of the portfolio? • What outcome is to be bootstrapped? • What historical information is obtainable and where? • Who are the decision makers? • Who will be attending the workshops? • Schedule the workshops, interviews, and the presentation to validate the model

  5. Project Planning Estimates • Historical data gathering: 1-2 people, 1-3 days • Preparation for 2 workshops: 1-2 people, 2-4 hours each • Conduct 2 workshops: 1-2 facilitators + participants, 1/2 day (3-4 hours) each • Construct initial bootstrap list: 1 person, 1-3 hours • Construct final bootstrap list: 1 person, 1-3 hours hour • Build regression model: 1-2 people, 4-8 hours • Prepare for presentation to confirm model: 1-2 people, 6-8 hours • Conduct presentation to confirm model: 1-2 presenters + participants, 1 hour

  6. Historical Analysis • Determine scope of historical data needed • How far back do we need data? Up to 30 examples • Do we need investment size, duration, status, objective, etc.? (have standard list) • Identify historical data available on IT investments • Budgeting process/accounting data • IT staff memory • Any metrics efforts • Past strategic IT plans • Collect investment data • Consolidate data into single table for hand out

  7. First Workshop Objectives • The first Bootstrap workshop is meant to be a free-form brainstorming forum to address the following: • Introduce concepts/objectives to new participants • Review the historical data and attempt to spot trends and success factors • Which investments were extreme examples for the variable being bootstrapped • List potential predictive variables • Determine realistic values of predictive variables including combinations of values • Define criteria for bootstrap output • Agree on input consolidation rules – shall we just average the group, throw out highest/lowest, etc.

  8. Results of First Workshop • We identified the scope of the portfolio as any randomly chosen this organizations investments • There were 4 participants • We identified the following variables as pertinent to a follow-up measurement on chance of cancellation: • Is the investment a documented strategic initiative? • 90% confidence interval for time remaining (months) • Is some part of the investment a compliance requirement? • The number of business units involved • Is sponsor business, IT or corporate? • % over-budget and % over-schedule • Test score of staff regarding project plan knowledge • Project manager and sponsor evaluation of project • % deliverables complete

  9. Design Test Assessments • Using the identified predictive variables, generate a list of hypothetical investments • The range of individual values should reflect the actual portfolio – ie. You should not have mostly investments over $50 million if that size is rare for this client • The combination of values in each hypothetical investment should be realistic – ie. The size and duration should fit each other • Make sure list represent investments in a range of possible bootstrapped output values • Produce a short table that lists each investment with hypothetical values and blanks for their input (perhaps 10 investments)

  10. Second Workshop • Calibrate for binary questions • Present trial investment list (just 5 investments), explain values shown and inputs needed • Discuss each investment as a group • Identify changes to list • Obtain calibrated estimates for each • Explain next steps

  11. Prepare Final Bootstrap • Modify constraints based on findings from second workshop • Clarify definitions/units of measure • Add/drop variables • Confirm input ranges • Generate new list of hypothetical investments • The list should be enough to produce at least 100 responses total and no less than 30+# of variables per evaluator • Randomize list order • Options: • Make some investments duplicates (for measuring consistency) • Include a few best/worst case investments

  12. Calibrated Estimation Results • Each evaluator assessed chance of cancellation for 48 investments • Variance between evaluators was often very large but may have been less if we did the trial evaluation or calibration • Olympic scoring throws out highest and lowest • Disagreement among evaluators averaged 16% but was as much as 60% • Difference between Olympic scores of duplicates was 6% • Nobody stood out as particularly inconsistent or consistent but Ando and Vinay were clearly more optimistic than Jean-Rene and Cecile • Clearly, these chances of cancellation are high for any RAVI project 100% 90% 80% 70% VKU 60% JRR 50% CPP AAN 40% Olympic 30% 20% 10% 0%

  13. Compute Regression • Aggregate inputs of various estimators • Convert input into quantities • Pivot tables on un-ordered and discrete but non-binary variables • Graph continuous variables against output to look for obvious non-linear relationships • For each output variable (confidence of success, chance of cancellation, etc.) compute a regression model • Try combinations of higher order terms where you think there is a compounding effect • Size is always a good candidate for higher-order terms • Compare model error to evaluator inconsistency (model error should be less) • Test changes in “controllable” success factors – this may identify sub-zones

  14. Confirm Results • To confirm results show each of the following: • Plot of the original estimates vs. the model • The test classification chart • Plot actual projects on classification chart and discuss discrepancies • Determine volumes in each zone to check if support is realistic • Present results to group

  15. Regression Results • Each investment was described by 12 but the model reduced this to 8. • After a few regression models were tried, one was found with an R squared of 0.91 • Higher-order variables were added such as one which considered level of over-budget only if the investment was neither strategic or compliance • Part of the variance from the Olympic to the Model was due to evaluator inconsistency, not actual error in the model Comparison of estimates to model 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 Model Estimate 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 Olympic score of calibrated estimates

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