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    The changing landscape of IS project failure: an examination of the key factors

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    Publication date
    2017
    Author
    Hughes, D.L.
    Rana, Nripendra P.
    Simintiras, A.C.
    Keyword
    Failure factors
    IS project failure
    Project management
    Rights
    (c) 2017 Emerald Publishing Group. Full-text reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.
    Peer-Reviewed
    Yes
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Information systems (IS) project failure has been a recurring problem for decades. The purpose of this paper is twofold: first, to examine the key factors that influence project failure and an analysis of the major areas that can have a significant impact on success; and second, to explore some of the key aspects that have an impact on project management performance from the practitioner perspective and discusses the problems faced by organizations in the closer integration of change and project management. Design/methodology/approach: This study critically reviews the IS failure literature developing a synthesized view of the key issues and common reasons for projects to fail. The approach taken in this study is one that focuses on a number of key questions that pull together the relevant themes in this genre of research whilst highlighting many of the implications for practitioners and organizations alike. Findings: Key questions remain on the underlying causes of instances of poor project management as an IS failure factor. The literature has omitted to develop a deeper analysis of the associations between failure factors and the potential causal relationships between these factors. The realization of project benefits relies on the success of both change and project management yet the formal integration of these two disciplines is constrained by separate standards bodies and an immature body of research. Research limitations/implications: This study is limited by its theoretical nature lacking an empirical element to provide a deeper analysis of IS failure factors and their interrelationships. This specific area is a recommendation for future research, where causal relationships between failure factors could be developed via a mathematic-based method such as interpretive structural modeling. Practical implications: With failure rates of IS projects still unacceptably high after decades of attempts to significantly change outcomes, a deeper analysis of this topic is required. The research gaps and recommendations for practitioners highlighted in this study have the potential to provide valuable contributions to this topic of research. Originality/value: The intent of this study is to present a new perspective of this genre of IS research that develops the main arguments and gaps in the literature from the practitioner viewpoint.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10454/18090
    Version
    Accepted manuscript
    Citation
    Hughes DL, Rana NP, Simintiras AC (2017) The changing landscape of IS project failure: an examination of the key factors. Journal of Enterprise Information Management. 30(1): 142-165.
    Link to publisher’s version
    https://doi.org/10.1108/JEIM-01-2016-0029
    Type
    Article
    Collections
    Management and Law Publications

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