Business Case
The Business case is defined by Murray, Andy & Co. (2009)
Contents |
Big Idea
The purpose of the business case is to establish a basis for judging whether the project is and remains desirable, viable and achievable as a means to support decision making in its continued investment.
Application
A Business case can be used to determine whether a project justifies to be invested in. It is a static process which should be maintained through the project and it should continuously be updated with current information on costs, risks and benefits.
Below is the figure of the development path of a business case from PRINCE2.
It is seen that after each step there is a milestone of verifying and/or confirming to make sure that the Business Case is up to date, and that it is first after the final delivery stage that the Business Case stops being updated and used.
Limitations
Any opportunity is likely to be offset by an element of risk. Therefore in order to make the judgement of ’business justification’, the Project Board needs to understand not only the benefits and the project costs, but the set of risks that may either reduce/enhance the benefits or reduce/increase the cost.
The Business Case should include a summary of the aggregated risks (and it is suggested that this is in the form of a summary risk profile) and highlight the major risks that will have an effect on the business objectives and benefits (therefore covering both the project delivery and the ongoing operations and maintenance). For example, the risks for the office relocation could include unforeseen moving costs (e.g. asbestos removal) or impact on business continuity (e.g. loss of key staff unwilling to relocate).
References
Annotated Bibliography
Further reading about the template for making a Business case: http://www.projectmanagementdocs.com/project-initiation-templates/business-case.html#axzz4XoPzbU80
Murray, Andy & Co. (2009), Managing successful projects with PRINCE2, 5th edition, p. 21-28, United Kingdom, TSO.
Annotation: The book has a seven page chapter about Business Case, and describes in details how to develop it.
Maylor, H. (2010). Project Management, Pearson Education ltd, 4th edition, p.184-191, GB, ISBN: 9780273704324
Annotation: The development of a Business Case is explaned in seven pages with different examples and descriptions.