The document discusses the purpose and process of conducting a feasibility study for a proposed project. It outlines the key areas a feasibility study should examine including technical, economic, legal, operational, and scheduling feasibility. It also lists common components and steps to follow in conducting a thorough feasibility study.
The document discusses the purpose and process of conducting a feasibility study for a proposed project. It outlines the key areas a feasibility study should examine including technical, economic, legal, operational, and scheduling feasibility. It also lists common components and steps to follow in conducting a thorough feasibility study.
1. Feasibility Study: A Feasibility study is simply an assessment of the
practicality of a proposed plan or project. A feasibility study is an analysis that takes all of a project's relevant factors into account-- including economic, technical, legal, and scheduling considerations- to ascertain the likelihood of completing the project successfully. Project managers use feasibility studies to discern the pros and cons of undertaking a project before they invest a lot of time and money into it. Feasibility studies also can provide a company's management with crucial information that could prevent the company from entering blindly into risky businesses. The goals of feasibility studies are as follows: To understand thoroughly all aspects of a project, concept, or plan To become aware of any potential problems that could occur while implementing the project To determine if, after considering all significant factors, the project is viable that is, worth undertaking 2. Five Areas of Project Feasibility A feasibility analysis evaluates the project's potential for success; therefore, perceived objectivity is an essential factor in the credibility of the study for potential investors and lending institutions. There are five types of feasibility study-separate areas that feasibility study examines, described below. 1. Technical Feasibility: This assessment focuses on the technical resources available to the organization. It helps organizations determine whether the technical resources meet capacity and whether the technical team is capable of converting the ideas into working systems. Technical feasibility also involves the evaluation of the hardware, software, and other technical requirements of the proposed system. As an exaggerated example, an organization wouldn't want to try to put Star Trek's transporters in their building-currently; this project is not technically feasible. 2. Economic Feasibility: This assessment typically involves a cost/ benefits analysis of the project, helping organizations determine the viability, cost, and benefits associated with a project before financial resources are allocated. It also serves as an independent project assessment and enhances project credibility-helping decision-makers determine the positive economic benefits to the organization that the proposed project will provide. 3. Legal Feasibility: This assessment investigates whether any aspect of the proposed project conflicts with legal requirements like zoning laws, data protection acts or social media laws. Let's say an organization wants to construct a new office building in a specific location. A feasibility study might reveal the organization's ideal location isn't zoned for that type of business. That organization has just saved considerable time and effort by learning that their project was not feasible right from the beginning. 4. Operational Feasibility: This assessment involves undertaking a study to analyze and determine whether and how well-the organization's need can be met by completing the project. Operational feasibility studies also examine how a project plan satisfies the requirements identified in the requirements analysis phase of system development. 5. Scheduling Feasibility: This assessment is the most important for project success; after all, a project will fail if not completed on time. In scheduling feasibility, an organization estimates how much time the project will take to complete. 3. Suggested Components of Feasibility studies: Once you have finished your basic due diligence, you might consider the elements below as a template of items to include in your study: 1. Executive summary: Formulate narrative describing details of the project, product, service, plan, or business. 2. Technological considerations: Ask what it will take. Do you have it? If not, can you get it? What will it cost? 3. Existing marketplace: Examine the local and broader markets for the product. service. plan, or business. 4. Marketing strategy: Describe it in detail. 5. Required staffing What are the human capital needs for this project? 6. Schedule and timeline: Include significant interim markers for the project's completion date. 7. Findings and recommendations: Break down into subsets of technology, marketing. organization, and financials. 4. Types of Feasibility: 1. Technical: A technical feasibility study involves evaluating the engineering aspect of the project which includes the fields of civil and structural engineering. 2. Managerial: A managerial feasibility study involves evaluating the organizational structure and management capability of the project. 3. Economic: An economic feasibility study involves evaluating the economic benefit and loss that may result from the project. This is crucial to proposed non-profit development plans. 4. Financial: A financial feasibility study involves evaluating the capability of the organization to come up with the funds needed to complete the project. 5. Cultural and Social: Cultural and social feasibility studies involve evaluating the compatibility of cultural and social practices, beliefs and status affected by the proposed project. 6. Safety: A safety feasibility study involves evaluating whether the project can be executed and operated safely with nominal harmful influence on the environment. 7. Political: A political feasibility study involves evaluating the status of the political climate that may affect the viability of the project. 8. Environmental: Environmental feasibility studies involve evaluating the capability of the project to secure licenses, approvals and permits in a timely and cost effective way. 9. Market: A market feasibility study involves evaluating the project's impact on the market and its competitors. This also includes the profitability analysis of the project. To conclude, the goal of feasibility/assessment studies are to analyze and outline methods of attaining business success. It is a crucial part of the development project and should be utilized by investors before implementing proposed plans. 5. Key points of a feasibility study A feasibility study in project management usually assesses the following areas: 1. Technical capability: Does the organization have the technical capabilities and resources to undertake the project? 2. Budget: Does the organization have the financial resources to undertake the project, and is the cost/benefit analysis of the project sufficient to warrant moving forward with the project? 3. Legality: What are the legal requirements of the project, and can the business meet them? 4. Risk: What is the risk associated with undertaking this project? Is the risk worthwhile to the company based on perceived benefits? 5. Operational feasibility: Does the project, in its proposed scope, meet the organization' needs by solving problems and/or taking advantage of identified opportunities? 6. Time: Can the project be completed in a reasonable timeline that is advantageous to the company? 6. Steps of feasibility study: Anyone who conducts a feasibility study must follow several steps. These actions include: 1. Preliminary analysis: Before moving forward with the time- intensive process of a feasibility study, many organizations will conduct a preliminary analysis, which is like a pre- screening of the project. The preliminary analysis aims to uncover insurmountable obstacles that would render a feasibility study useless. If no major roadblocks are uncovered during this pre- screen, the more intensive feasibility study will be conducted. 2. 2. Define the scope: It is important to outline the scope of the project so that you can determine the scope of the feasibility study. The project's scope will include the number and composition of both internal stakeholders and external clients or customers. Don't forget to examine the potential impact of the project on all areas of the organization. 3. 3. Market research: No project is undertaken in a vacuum. Those conducting the feasibility study will delve into the existing competitive landscape and determine whether there is a viable place for the project within that market. 4. 4. Financial assessment: The feasibility study will examine the economic costs related to the project, including equipment or other resources, man-hours, the proposed benefits of the project, the break-even schedule for the project, the financial risks associated with the proposal, and very important the potential financial impact of the project's failure. 5. 5. Roadblocks and alternative solutions: Should any potential problems surface during the study, it will look at alternative solutions for the project to go ahead successfully. 6. 6. Reassessment of results: A holistic look at the feasibility study with fresh eyes. particularly if any significant amount of time has passed since it was first undertaken, is essential. 7. 7. Go/no-go decision: The final aspect of a feasibility study is the recommended course of action in other words, whether the project should proceed or not.