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Articles and Presentations
MEASURING INTRANET RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Reprinted
from Intranet Communicator
By George McGrath and
Anthony
Schneider
The
surge in interest and media coverage of intranets recalls the early and
heady days of the World Wide Web's burst on the corporate mindscape. Intranet
is the new corporate hero, dazzling the covers of business magazines and
leading the panel discussions at business conferences. It seems that about
the only thing intranets can't do is make coffee.
Review the existing return on investment studies or question company executives
on their claims of multimillion dollar savings, and one finds that calculating
intranet ROI is more art than science and more guesstimate than calculation.
Like the sweeping claims made for corporate Web sites a few years ago,
many of the projections of ROI measured in thousands of percent may fade
as organizations begin to experience the cost of ramping up, maintaining
and administering intranets across thousands of users. Not to mention
incorporating the inevitable upgrades and conducting enterprise-wide training.
That said, it is apparent to anyone who has used this technology that
intranets offer tremendous potential as a communication, collaboration
and knowledge building tool that will create new, more efficient ways
of doing business. Selling the benefits to senior managements who do not
have this "hands on" experience can be more difficult. They are balancing
many other information technology investments, such as costly "Year 2000"
conversions, and want to see where and when an intranet will generate
a payback.
The key is to link intranet ROI to bottom line issues that senior management
cares about. These include cost savings, increased productivity and gaining
competitive advantage.
COST SAVINGS
Most organizations are striving to reduce the cost of doing business to
deal with the pressure of a highly competitive, global marketplace. The
starting justification for many intranets is the decreased cost of producing,
accessing and distributing information within an enterprise.
Analysts estimate that 18% of corporate printed material becomes outdated
within 30 days. Documents that are printed and mailed, such as internal
phone books, policy and training manuals, requisition forms and marketing
materials, can be put on an internal web server and updated for a fraction
of the cost of reprinting material. It is not only the publishing but
the updating of information that leads to savings.
Intranets also allow information to be rapidly and economically deployed
to a dispersed group of employees. A marketing planner for a global pharmaceutical
concern notes that before the deployment of an intranet, his division
was spending about US $30,000 per month on information mailings to sales
representatives. He adds that "by the time the information arrived to
our global representatives and affiliates it was usually out of date."
The development costs of an intranet database "were more than offset by
savings in printing and mailing."
Fast access to information is another key intranet cost saving. If an
intranet means that every employee in an 50,000 person corporation saves
10 minutes per day, the cumulative cost saving is enormous - much greater
than the savings from reduced printing and mailing costs.
A case in point are the savings achieved by a leading management consulting
firm, as reported in a recent study conducted by International Data Corporation.
The firm established a knowledge database of best practices, job histories,
resumes, threaded messages and ideas for clients, accessible to all employees.
The consultancy calculated that over a three year period it saved US $390,000
through the elimination of phone calls, overnight mail and faxes. In addition,
the company saved an estimated US $22 million by reducing the time required
to find and access employee data and collaborative information.
INCREASED PRODUCTIVITY
Productivity increases from intranets arise from more rapid and easier
access and exchange of information. Intranets also allow for flexibility
in the time of delivery of information. For example, by making training
materials accessible through an intranet to the desktop, employees can
schedule training during lull times, rather than be interrupted during
key projects.
Benefits from increased productivity are more difficult to measure than
savings from the reduced cost of printing and distributing manuals. Businesses
that budget, track and bill employee time in hourly increments, such as
accountancy, consulting and law firms, have an advantage in this regard.
In addition to making information more easily and quickly accessible,
an intranets facilitate a global exchange of information that enables
true "24x7" organizational productivity. For example, an intranet linking
design centers in Asia, Europe and the US helped engineers craft the 1996
Ford Taurus.
Sales support is the arena in which intranets may ultimately generate
the greatest return on investment. Here, productivity gains are measured
in sales closed rather than minutes saved. Many companies are using intranets
to efficiently connect the field sales force personnel to the home office
and link sales representatives each other to obtain product information,
or collaborate on pursuing sales leads.
For example, a major pharmaceutical firm recently announced plans to launch
an integrated Internet/intranet and extranet program to launch three new
prescription drugs. The public external Web site offers information for
consumers. The intranet gives 2,500 mobile sales representatives access
to a database of product information, federal regulations, research tools
and marketing materials to use in calling on physicians. Sales managers
will also be able to send sales reports over the Web to headquarters.
The sales representative can also give the physician a password to use
in accessing the company's extranet, which contains information on drug
research, testing and medical journal articles.
By integrating its external and internal Web sites, a company can create
a powerful, holistic information system to distribute and gather information
from customers to tailor the sales approach to their needs, close the
transaction, and provide low cost after the sale service. In today's highly
competitive global marketplace, that translates into a competitive advantage
in terms of shorter cycle times in identifying and closing prospects,
and building ongoing customer relationships to maintain and build business.
DEMONSTRATING INTRANET ROI
From fledgling organizations to multinational corporations, the early
anecdotal evidence and research studies indicate that intranets have the
potential to generate a significant return on investment. However, the
reaction of senior management may be somewhat skeptical. They know that
new technology usually costs more and delivers less than promised.
If your intranet is still in the proposal stage, or if you are trying
to make the case for expanding your organization's intranet, here are
some suggested strategies for addressing senior management's typical questions
and concerns.
- Pilot
intranet applications with a small test group before rolling them out
to a broad audience. This allows you to test the most cost effective
technologies, identify the true costs of maintaining the internal Web
24 hours per day, 7 days per week, and get a realistic picture of the
payback period.
- Research
the costs involved in a short list of communications in your organization
and conduct experiments to quantify the savings in moving these communications
over to an intranet. For example, identify the cost per copy, including
distribution of a document that is easily ported to an internal server.
Model the potential cost savings over five revisions to the document.
- Focus
on intranet applications that have revenue generation potential as well
as cost saving benefits. In terms of total return on investment, an
intranet targeted to improving the productivity and effectiveness of
a company's sales force may make a better case for the technology than
employee access to an online benefits manual.
In the view of the skeptics, intranet deployment is not easy and cost
savings are not guaranteed. "Ramping up" the technology and dealing with
the human factor, including training employees are reengineering work
processes, are formidable hurdles to achieving the high and rapid return
on investment some organizations have claimed. On the other hand, intranet
advocates observe that as the technology proliferates and becomes a business
necessity, the question of quantifying return on investment will become
moot.
Until that happy day arrives, business communicators would be well advised
to focus intranet applications on solving the problems senior management
cares about such as building sales, increasing organizational speed,
and supporting customers, and make the case accordingly.
Reprinted with permission from Intranet Communicator.
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