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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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CMS ROI - Factors for success By Geoff Choo, TechRepublic January 22, 2002 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/business/soa/CMS-ROI-Factors-for-success/0,139023166,120263066,00.htm
As today's economic downturn cuts deeper into IT budgets, CIOs often have to justify investments in more expensive initiatives, like a content management system (CMS). Buying and building the technology for a CMS is the (relatively) easy part. The hard part is justifying the business need and getting upper management to shell out the significant investment needed to get a CMS off the ground.
After you've determined that a CMS will fulfill a true business need, often the next thing that upper management will want to see is an ROI. In this article, I'll relay some factors you should consider when determining the cost of a CMS effort, and I'll explain how to calculate ROI.
Justifying the business expense Business justification typically involves making a case for a significant capital investment by proving to upper management that the initiative in questionâ€"in this case, a CMSâ€"will either help the company save money, or make money, or even both. -It's critical to do a broad-based business justification for the project as a whole," said Tony Byrne, founder and managing editor of CMSWatch, an independent information and analysis site that focuses on Web content management. -However, that business case may include an ROIâ€"or perhaps not," he added. The conventional wisdom in IT development is that no project can move forward until a clear ROI has been established. -Doing an ROI on a CMS project can be very difficult and, at times, beside the point," explained Byrne, who provides CMS consulting and training to enterprises and government agencies. For organisations where content is the business, investing in better management is an essential infrastructure costâ€"the cost of doing businessâ€"just as the cost of a phone system or a firewall is for the enterprise. How much will CMS cost my company? Byrne advises companies to consider three factors when estimating the costs of a CMS:
According to a January 2001 report on content management by Forrester Research, the price of enterprise content management solutions easily surpasses the half-million dollar mark, with actual cost depending on the complexity of the site, the level of customisation required, and the number of users. Calculating ROI Byrne offers a simple formula for calculating ROI. The first step is quantifying costs and then adding up all the hard dollars and cents your company will see in:
Then, quantify and add up all the "soft" benefits, which include:
-Compare your costs laid out above against the benefits you expect to gain from a CMS," explained Byrne. Although the benefits may be difficult to quantify at times, at some point, your company will simply decide that, ROI or not, it can't live any longer with the (likely growing) pain of not effectively managing your content." Byrne also added one final piece of advice for CIOs trying to make a business justification for a CMS: -Don't spend so long doing the ROI that your business suffers unduly from content bottlenecks and missed opportunities in the meantime."
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