In project and program delivery, the success of any initiative depends on effectively identifying drivers, barriers, and enablers, as well as quantifying and measuring benefits. Often, objectives may be loosely defined, but the drivers are not fully understood, and the benefits aren’t quantified or tracked throughout delivery. For example, in my career, I once worked with a utilities company implementing enterprise SaaS capabilities. Despite winning the RFP, the business case lacked documentation of the transformation programmes benefits, leading to its rejection by the board. To avoid substantial delays, I had to quickly teach my team how to guide the organization through this process.
Understanding drivers and benefits is critical for ensuring that delivery not only meets tangible and intangible objectives but also delivers sustainable value to shareholders and stakeholders. Defining and documenting drivers and benefits can elevate delivery from mere execution to a strategic value creation effort that drives organizational growth and innovation. As a professional services and technology supplier, I believe the best time to engage with a customer is at the beginning, helping guide and shape downstream activities. I hope my contribution helps others see why this domain is so important.
Research from Harvard, Gartner, and others, along with a longitudinal analysis by Frans Riemersma and Sonja Stojiljković of MartechTribe, shows that over the past 20 years, between 30% and 90% of CRM implementations have failed. The primary reasons include:
This is incredibly concerning.
MartechTribe’s analysis highlights two key issues:
It’s clear that many companies have struggled to understand their value drivers and define the benefits they should expect when implementing enterprise software over the past 20+ years.
I developed the following diagram while consulting for a company that didn’t understand the different frameworks or "strata" of delivery. Everything was labelled "agile," but delivery was failing. They didn’t understand that context is incredibly relevant. I’ve seen this repeatedly. There is no one-size-fits-all approach, especially in sales and professional services. However, there is a principle: "tailor to suit." Agile can scale up to project, program, and portfolio levels. While frameworks like SAFe require enterprise-wide commitment to work effectively, they are beyond the scope of this article. Instead, I will focus on the lime-green areas of my topological diagram to provide a visual guide on how it all comes together.
To quote John Ward and Elizabeth Daniels from their book Benefits Management: “To be comprehensive, the business case should clearly state how the intended project will contribute to the strategy and performance of the organization.” Therefore, the identified drivers, investment objectives, owners, and benefits need to be included in the business case to frame downstream activities.
In my opinion, it starts with understanding your organizational competence. I’ve seen many companies that don’t fully grasp their competencies, strengths, or weaknesses. They attempt to execute a strategy that diverges from their talent and core competence. To keep things simple, the following table helps executives balance decision-making. I won’t dwell on this area, but if you’re pursuing a cost-out or revenue-up strategy, knowing how your resource base and people create value is a great strategic starting point.
A few weeks ago, I wrote about the importance of synthesizing strategic themes and how this allows practitioners to focus on and communicate what is truly important. Drivers are the internal and external forces prompting a business to implement change to ensure a positive, adaptive response. Value drivers, also known as business drivers, are the fundamental elements that significantly impact the success and value of any strategic investment objective. Identifying these drivers requires a deep understanding of the organization's strategic goals, market dynamics, and stakeholder expectations. Documenting your drivers and linking them to the "why" of your investment objective provides systemic clarity throughout delivery.
Drivers:
Investment Objectives:
Benefits are the positive outcomes and value realized from an investment objective. They represent the tangible and intangible gains that stakeholders experience because of successful delivery. Defining and measuring these benefits is critical for demonstrating the program's value and justifying investments.
Benefit:
Disbenefit:
Benefit Owner:
Stakeholders:
Many strategic initiatives can be boiled down to objectives of "cost out" or "revenue up." However, these goals are often more nuanced when broken down into departmental segments across the value chain. I prefer a simple approach when implementing an initiative that will result in change. Essentially, we will:
These types of change are influenced by degrees of tangibility, meaning they can be calculated, quantified, measured, or observed. This provides a level of explicit tangibility with which to define and measure the benefits throughout the delivery lifecycle.
Expanding further, defining and tracking drivers and benefits can also include improvements on:
Ward and Daniels advocate for a simple process to define and measure benefits:
Step 1: Identifying and Structuring the Benefits
Step 2: Planning Benefits Realization
Step 3: Executing the Benefits Plan
Step 4: Reviewing and Evaluating the Results
Step 5: Establishing Potential for Further Benefits
To maximize the impact of defining drivers and benefits, they must be integrated into the program delivery from the beginning. This integration involves:
Effectively identifying and documenting drivers and benefits is essential for achieving delivery excellence in any strategic initiative. By designing projects and programs with clear value drivers and anticipated benefits, organizations can better ensure successful outcomes that create sustainable value for shareholders and stakeholders. The high failure rates in CRM implementations highlight the importance of a structured approach to defining the "why," "what," and "how" of delivery initiatives. Tailoring delivery frameworks to the context, engaging stakeholders, and emphasizing ownership are vital steps in mitigating risks and maximizing benefits.
Ultimately, delivery excellence is about transforming processes into strategic endeavours that drive innovation and organizational growth. By integrating clear definitions, continuous monitoring, and strong stakeholder collaboration into the delivery process, organizations can move beyond mere execution to create long-term value that aligns with their strategic goals and resonates with their stakeholders.