220 - Feasibility Study
220 - Feasibility Study
220 - Feasibility Study
Feasibility Study
Boniface Theuri
2/27/2014
BONIFACE THEURI
CM13/0369/13
Project Management
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Project planning
It is an act of formulating a program for a definite course of action; also a process of
drawing layouts for some project or enterprise. The following are the importances of project
plans;
Planning is an ongoing process that is conducted throughout the project life cycle.
The basic components of a project plan are discussed below:
ObjectivesThe objectives should be very detailed in outlining what the project is expected to
achieve
Policies and ProceduresDevelopment of a project policy involving general guidelines for carrying out project
Contractual RequirementsThe portion of the project plan should outline reporting requirements
Project ScheduleThe project schedule signifies the commitment of resource against time in pursuit of
project objectives
Resource Requirements
Project resources, budget, and costs are to be documented in this section of the project
plan
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Tracking, Reporting, and AuditingThese involve keeping track of the project plans, evaluating tasks, and scrutinizing the
records of the project
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12. Plan Quality: Plan Quality is the process of identifying quality requirements and/or
standards for the project and product, and documenting how the project will demonstrate
compliance.
13. Develop Human Resource Plan: Develop Human Resource Plan is the process of
identifying and documenting project roles, responsibilities, and required skills, reporting
relationships, and creating a staffing management plan.
14. Plan Communications: Plan Communications is the process of determining project
stakeholder information needs and defining a communication approach
15. Plan Risk Management: Plan Risk Management is the process of defining how to
conduct risk management activities for a project.
16. Identify Risks: Identify Risks is the process of determining which risks may affect the
project and documenting their characteristics.
17. Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis: Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis is the process of
prioritizing risks for further analysis or action by assessing and combining their probability of
occurrence and impact
18. Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis: Perform Quantitative Risk Analysis is the process
of numerically analyzing the effect of identified risks on overall project objectives.
19. Plan Risk Responses: Plan Risk Responses is the process of developing options and
actions to enhance opportunities and to reduce threats to project objectives.
20. Plan Procurements: Plan Procurements is the process of documenting project
purchasing decisions, specifying the approach, and identifying potential sellers.
Project Feasibility Analysis
The most important step in any project after a project plan should be determining the
viability of the idea. This is called Feasibility study /analysis.
Feasibility analysis (FA, also called feasibility study) is used to assess the strengths and
weaknesses of a proposed project and present directions of activities which will improve a
project and achieve desired results. The nature and components of feasibility studies
depend primarily on the areas in which analyzed projects are implemented.
Feasibility literally means whether some idea will work or not. It knows before
hand whether there exists a sizeable market for the proposed product/service, what
would be the investment requirements and where to get the funding from, whether
and wherefrom the necessary technical know-how to convert the idea into a tangible
product may be available, and so on. In other words, feasibility study involves
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ii.
Usually involves some form of consultation with stakeholders, community, users, etc.
iii.
Focuses on analyzing, clarifying and resolving key issues and areas of concern or
iv.
uncertainty
v.
Very often involves basic modeling and testing of alternative concepts and
approaches
There is no universal format for a feasibility study. Feasibility studies can be adapted and
shaped to meet the specific needs of any given situation.
A feasibility study is designed to provide an overview of the primary issues related to a
business idea. The purpose is to identify any "make or break" issues that would prevent your
business from being successful in the marketplace. In other words, a feasibility study
determines whether the business idea makes sense.
A thorough feasibility analysis provides a lot of information necessary for the business plan.
For example, a good market analysis is necessary in order to determine the project's
feasibility. This information provides the basis for the market section of the business plan.
Because putting together a business plan is a significant investment of time and money, you
want to make sure that there are no major roadblocks facing your business idea before you
make that investment. Identifying such roadblocks is the purpose of a feasibility study.
A feasibility study looks at three major areas:
a) Market issues
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b) Organizational/technical issues
c) Financial issues
Again, this is meant to be a "first cut" look at these issues. For example, a feasibility study
should not do in-depth long-term financial projections, but it should do a basic break-even
analysis to see how much revenue would be necessary to meet your operating expenses.
Why Do Feasibility Studies?
Developing any new business venture is difficult. Taking a project from the initial idea
through the operational stage is a complex and time-consuming effort. Most ideas, whether
from a cooperative or an investor owned business, do not develop into business operations. If
these ideas make it to the operational stage, most fail within the first 6 months. Before the
potential members invest in a proposed business project, they must determine if it can be
economically viable and then decide if investment advantages outweigh the risks involved.
Many cooperative business projects are quite expensive to conduct. The projects involve
operations that differ from those of the members' individual business. Often, cooperative
businesses' operations involve risks with which the members are unfamiliar. The study allows
groups to preview potential project outcomes and to decide if they should continue. Although
the costs of conducting a study may seem high, they are relatively minor when compared
with the total project cost. The small initial expenditure on a feasibility study can help to
protect larger capital investments later.
Feasibility studies are useful and valid for many kinds of projects. Evaluation of a new
business ventures, both from new groups and established businesses, is the most common, but
not the only usage. Studies can help groups decide to expand existing services, build or
remodel facilities, change methods of operation, add new products, or even merge with
another business.
A feasibility study assists decision makers whenever they need to consider alternative
development opportunities.
Feasibility studies permit planners to outline their ideas on paper before implementing them.
This can reveal errors in project design before their implementation negatively affects the
project. Applying the lessons gained from a feasibility study can significantly lower the
project costs.
The study presents the risks and returns associated with the project so the prospective
members can evaluate them. There is no "magic number" or correct rate of return a project
needs to obtain before a group decides to proceed. The acceptable level of return and
appropriate risk rate will vary for individual members depending on their personal situation.
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The proposed project usually requires both risk capital from members and debt capital from
banks and other financers to become operational. Lenders typically require an objective
evaluation of a project prior to investing. A feasibility study conducted by someone without a
vested interest in the project outcome can provide this assessment.
General requirements and potential benefits of conducting feasibility study include:
i.
ii.
Taking a project from initiation of idea to operational stage is a complex and time
consuming effort.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
Though the cost of conducting a study can seem high, almost always, these costs are
relatively minor when compared to the total project cost.
vii.
Small initial expenditure on a feasibility study by a group can help to protect larger
capital investments later.
viii.
ix.
Feasibility study is a useful tool and is valid for many kinds of projects
An effective feasibility analysis will provide the client with a solid foundation upon
which a project is built.
x.
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xi.
1) Need Analysis
2) Process Work
3) Engineering & Design
4) Cost Estimate
5) Financial Analysis
6) Project Impacts
7) Conclusions and Recommendations
A feasibility report should have the following structure:
1.Executive Summary:
It provides a quick overview of the main points of the assessment, helping to form a
picture of the proposal along with the recommendations. It should be concise and
include the major findings covered in the main body of the report.
2. Need Analysis
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-Levels of around -5% to +15% are common at this level of a project plan.
-Estimates of capital investment, recurring and nonrecurring costs must be there
-Sensitivity analysis can be carried out on the estimated cost values to see how
sensitive the project plan is to the estimated cost values
5)
Financial Analysis-
-The analysis should consider rates of return, inflation, sources of capital, payback
periods, breakeven point, residual values, and sensitivity
-This is a critical analysis since it determines whether or not and when funds will be
available to the project
6) Project Impacts-
This portion of the feasibility study provides an assessment of the impact of the
proposed project
-Environmental, social, cultural, political, and economic impacts may be some of the
factors that will determine how a project is perceived by the public
7) Conclusions and Recommendations-
The feasibility study should end with the overall outcome of the project
-This may indicate an endorsement or disapproval of the project.
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We may have the technology, but that doesn't mean we have the skills required
to properly apply that technology.
May need to hire new people
Or re-train existing systems staff
Whether hiring or training, it will impact the schedule.
Assess the schedule risk:
Environmental Feasibility:
Often a killer of projects through long, drawn-out approval processes and outright active
opposition by those claiming environmental concerns. This is an aspect worthy of real
attention in the very early stages of a project. Concern must be shown and action must be
taken to address any and all environmental concerns raised or anticipated. This component
also addresses the ability of the project to timely obtain and at a reasonable cost, needed
permits, licenses and approvals.
Market Feasibility:
This area should not be confused with the Economic Feasibility. The market needs analysis
to view the potential impacts of market demand, competitive activities, etc. And market
share available. Possible competitive activities by competitors, whether local, regional,
national or international, must also be analyzed for early contingency funding and impacts
on operating costs during the start-up, ramp-up, and commercial start-up phases of the
project.
Tangible and Intangible Benefits:
Estimating benefits and costs in a timely manner is very difficult. Benefits are often defined
as:
a. Tangible benefits for which money may be reasonably quantified and
measured. Examples are
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
Increased sales
vi.
vii.
Reduced expenses
b. Intangible benefits that may be quantified in units other than money or may be
identified and described subjectively. Examples are;
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i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
Better decision-making
Costs are significantly more difficult to quantify, at least in a timely and inexpensive manner.
The minimum costs that must be determined are those that specifically are used for
comparison to the benefits. These include:
i.
ii.
Future period costs that are expected and can be planned for.
Intangible costs that may be difficult to quantify. These costs are often omitted if
quantification would contribute little to the decision-making process.
There must be careful documentation of all known constraints and assumptions that were
made in developing the costs and the benefits. Unrealistic or unrecognized assumptions are
often the cause of unrealistic benefits. The go or no-go decision to continue with a project
could very well rest upon the validity of the assumptions.
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