What Is A Feasibility Study
What Is A Feasibility Study
The feasibility process is completed prior to project initiation or often, can be utilized
to see if a set of processes or procedures will enhance or harm project outcomes.
• Project Description – Identify the project name and purpose. Include details
including stakeholders, and end result expected.
• Goals – List long and short-term goals and what processes will be needed to
achieve those goals.
• Timeline – What will be the estimated time until project completion?
• Costs and Budgeting – Include all costs incurred for the project including the
cost of the feasibility study itself.
• Purpose – What purpose does the project have and whom will it benefit?
• Market Analysis – If applicable, will the market or market environment benefit
from the project. If so, list why.
• Resources – Identify all the resources both IT, technical, inventory, and
human that will be needed to complete the project.
• Project Process – How will the project flow? Include flow charts showing
project stages.
• Management and Teams – Who will manage and who will work on
scheduled tasks? Will project management outsourcing be needed?
• Observations– Statements that do or don’t support the project should be
included here. If for a client, does the client have the finances to complete the
project or are there alternatives? If for a project or process, will it work and will
it be beneficial?
• Project Problems – Does the study include risk or problematic areas that
need to be addressed and are they clearly identified?
• The Outcome – Ever study should identify the process, product, client
request, and goal and how they will affect the outcome; positively or
negatively. Will outcomes be beneficial or deterrent?
• Alternatives – Are possible alternatives available or suggested and
researched?
• Assessment – The assessment part of your feasibility study should
include risk management and controls, solutions, if the project is feasible, and
how the project should be implemented.
Fundamentally before taking any project the scope of the project and the magnitude
should be clearly spelled out based on the requirement of the project. Hence without
having a clear vision of the project objective it is impossible to make a successful
project. All the resource needed for the project should be presented in the report clearly,
scheduled completion date etc.
This is one of the most crucial steps in project feasibility analysis. When various
alternatives are being provided with regarding choice of technology, capacity, financing
etc. In fact the foundations will be strong when the following alternatives are supplied
along with the details of the project profile:
The spending for the project deliverables are always in terms of costs, irrespective of the
nature of the product such as research costs, labour costs, overhead cost etc. Therefore
it would be ideal to label all the necessary expenditure incurred during the project
implementation, which deserves to be treated as cost. The production cost depends on
availability of the information about the required resources, manpower, work
programme, type of technology, available resources, and distribution costs, skills of the
labour.
Deadline for the completion of the project is also an important factor in project feasibility
study. New techniques such as PERT, GERT, CPM, ZBB etc are used for effective time
management, in order to be precise in their completion date.
It is advisable to prepare the report under the supervision of experts since they are
aware time constraints, funds, and resource requirement for the project. To conduct a
feasibility study the ideal team members would comprise.
1. Industry economist.
2. Market analyst.
3. Management expert.
4. Technical head.
5. Project Manager.
Feasibility studies for a new project might be slightly different from already existing
projects whose interest is to expand their scale of operation and the scope of coverage.
Depending upon the size of the project, it should be clear from the new proposal
whether the existing internal organizational structure and supporting facilities will be
sufficient or need some adjustments.
Calculation of pre-investment costs varies from project to project. Since cost are vital
determinants of various types of pre-investment studies it is preferable to indicate the
magnitude of the cost.
Conclusion
It should be remembered that a Feasibility Study is more of a way of thinking as
opposed to a bureaucratic process. For example, what I have just described is essentially
the same process we all follow when purchasing an car or a home. As the scope of the
project grows, it becomes more important to document the Feasibility Study particularly
if large amounts of money are involved and/or the criticality of delivery. Not only should
the Feasibility Study contain sufficient detail to carry on to the next succeeding phase in
the project, but it should also be used for comparative analysis when preparing the final
Project Audit which analyses what was delivered versus what was proposed in the
Feasibility Study.
Feasibility Studies represent a common sense approach to planning. Frankly, it is just
plain good business to conduct them. However, I have read where some people in the IT
field, such as the "Agile" methodology proponents, consider Feasibility Studies to be a
colossal waste of time. If this is true, I've got a good used car I want to sell them.