Tathress G. Masalunga Bsais-2C
Tathress G. Masalunga Bsais-2C
Tathress G. Masalunga Bsais-2C
Masalunga
BSAIS-2C
Objectives:
• Captures the reasoning for initiating a project or task. It is often presented in a well-
structured written document, but may also come in the form of a short verbal agreement
or presentation.
A justification for a course of action based on the benefits to be realized by using the
proposed solution, as compared at the cost, effort and other considerations to acquire and
live with that solution.
Used to access requirements against identified business goals and objectives to determine
importance.
It summarized the need, the business challenges, and the business outcome desired by a
program. The business case determines what will be included and delivered in the
transformation.
1. Need Assessment
The need is the driver for the business case. It is the relevant business goal and objective that
must be met. The need assessment identifies the problem or the potential opportunity.
2. Desired Outcomes
The desired outcomes describe the state which should result if the need is fulfilled. They
should include measurable outcomes that can be utilized to determine the success of the business
case or solution.
3. Assess Alternatives
The business case identifies and assesses various alternative solutions. Alternatives may also
include different ways of acquiring these and different timing options.
Scope: Defines the alternative being proposed. Scope can be defined using organizational
boundaries, system boundaries, business processes, product lines or geographic regions.
Feasibility: The organizational and technical feasibility should be assessed for each
alternative. It includes organizational knowledge, skills and capacity as well as technical
maturity and experience in the proposed technologies.
Assumptions are agreed-to facts that may have influence on the initiative. Constraints are
limitations that may restrict the possible alternatives. Risks are potential problems that may have
a negative impact on the solution.
The financial analysis and value assessment includes an estimate of the cost to implement and
operate the alternative, as well as a quantified financial benefit from implementing the
alternative.
4. Recommended Solution
The recommended solution describes the most desirable way to solve the problem or leverage
the opportunity. The solution is described in sufficient detail for decision makers and to
understand the solution and determine if the recommendation will be implemented.
Usage Considerations
1. Strengths
Provides an amalgamation of the complex facts, issues, and analysis required to make
decisions regarding change.
2. Limitations
Contains assumptions regarding costs and benefits that may prove invalid upon further
investigation
To prioritize projects:
Sometimes you need to conduct one or more projects to achieve the final solution
and the business case help you prioritize them. For these types of complex projects-
within-projects, the business case can explain for project team members the overriding
strategic goal and mission of the project so that the subprojects have context. Having this
type of documentation is extremely valuable even if it isn’t required for project approval.
The main purpose of the Business Case is to facilitate the investment decision about the
project. It summaries the cost, benefits, and risks and enables the organization to take decisions
about funding a project or not. It enables the business or organization to take an informed
decision based on realistic facts. The Benefits of business case will define the return from
completion of the project. Business Case is a reference document that provides a reference at a
point in time.
Reference:
A Guide to Strategic Analysis for Enabling Business Transformation (Purpose of business case
pp.49-52)