When $100 Million Technology Projects Fail, It’s the Board’s Fault—Every Single Time

2. January 2025
Kategorien
Subscribe to our newsletter

In Switzerland, rumors suggest that both Bank Julius Bär and Raiffeisen Schweiz are grappling with failed technology projects, each costing over $100 million so far. Bank Julius Bär is reportedly trying to replace its existing core banking system for the Swiss booking center with Temenos, while Raiffeisen Schweiz is attempting to build a modern e-banking app.  

Both organizations have allegedly hired third parties to review what went wrong and determine who’s to blame. While learning from failure and engaging external reviewers is sensible, the question of blame should already be crystal clear.  

When a multi-million-dollar technology project collapses under its own weight—costing shareholders, employees, and stakeholders dearly—there’s no escaping the brutal truth: the fault lies squarely with the board.  

You can explore my 20+ technology project failure case studies. Without exception, the boards involved failed to fulfill their responsibilities.  

The Board’s Job Is Oversight, Not Rubber-Stamping

Boards exist to govern. They approve strategy, allocate resources, and oversee risks. They are not passive observers—they are active stewards of an organization’s success. Yet in failed projects, it’s evident that many boards sleepwalk through their responsibilities. They fail to ask tough questions early, challenge overly optimistic assumptions, or ensure mechanisms are in place to detect and address problems before it’s too late.  

A board’s oversight role is not ceremonial. If a project spirals into disaster, the board either ignored the warning signs, delegated oversight to those ill-equipped for the job, or worse, never bothered to establish adequate checks in the first place.  

If a board lacks the expertise to fulfill its duties, it must seek external help. This could mean forming an advisory board with independent specialists or adding a temporary board member with the requisite expertise and experience. 

Failing Is Acceptable; Failing Late Is Not 

Failure is a natural part of innovation and growth. No board can eliminate risk entirely—nor should they try. But there’s a monumental difference between failing fast and failing late.  

Early failure allows a company to pivot, salvage resources, and preserve credibility. Late failure, on the other hand, is catastrophic. It burns cash, destroys morale, and erodes stakeholder trust.  

Boards must demand stage-gated project governance that clearly delineates when to proceed, pivot, or pull the plug. If a multi-million-dollar project reaches the point of no return before its inevitable demise, the board has failed in its primary responsibility—to safeguard the organization from reckless escalation.  

Why Boards Get It Wrong

So why do boards allow projects to go off the rails? Common reasons include:  

> Blind Faith in Leadership: Boards often rely too heavily on the CEO or project sponsor’s assurances. Trust is important, but blind faith is a recipe for disaster. A board’s role is to verify, not just trust.  

> Lack of Expertise: Some boards lack the technical or industry-specific knowledge to challenge assumptions. Instead of addressing this gap, they defer to management, undermining their oversight role.  

> Cognitive Biases: Boards are just as susceptible to biases as anyone else. The sunk cost fallacy, groupthink, and overconfidence often lead boards to double down on failing projects instead of cutting losses.  

> Weak Governance Processes: Many boards fail to establish robust governance frameworks for major projects. Without clear accountability, transparency, and regular checkpoints, projects are allowed to drift toward failure.  

The Path to Accountability  

To prevent future multi-million-dollar disasters, boards must:  

> Ask Hard Questions Early: Why are we doing this? What are the critical assumptions? What would make us stop? These questions must be asked before a single dollar is spent.  

> Insist on Independent Assurance: Boards should mandate independent audits and reviews for major projects. An objective view can often identify risks that insiders miss.  

> Monitor Progress Ruthlessly: Quarterly updates are not enough. Boards must demand real-time reporting on key metrics and intervene when milestones are missed.  

> Be Willing to Pull the Plug: The hardest decision for any board is to stop a failing project. But it’s also the most responsible one. Better to write off millions now than to lose billions later.  

In a Nutshell

When a multi-million-dollar project fails, the board cannot claim ignorance or absolve itself of responsibility. Failure at this scale is a governance failure, plain and simple. Boards that tolerate late-stage disasters are not just failing the organization—they’re failing every stakeholder who placed their trust in them.  

The lesson is simple: you can fail, but not that late. Boards must act as the last line of defense, ensuring that failure—when it happens—is swift, contained, and instructive. Anything less is negligence. 

That could also be of interest for you

Another Great Leading Indicator for Future Trouble – Issue Resolution Time

10. February 2021

I have a very simple metric for determining the health of a project or an organization: the age of issues.  Issues are like fish; when they get old, they stink.  A sure sign of a lack of leadership and upcoming trouble is old issues or issues that take longer than necessary to resolve.  Issues are

Read more

A Great Leading Indicator for Future Trouble – Missing Milestones

31. January 2021

I have done quite a number of inflight reviews and post-mortems of troubled and failed large system implementation projects.  One pattern that emerges very clearly is the one of missing milestones whilst keeping the go-live date the same.  It rarely ends well. I see it again and again. Multiple important milestones are missed. Sometimes by

Read more

Can a Task Force Rescue Your Failing Project?

9. January 2021

We’ve all witnessed projects in trouble—the ones that required a quick and firm intervention in need of help from a task force to bring it back on track.   No executive wants to be in such a difficult situation, especially not with one of his or her own projects.   But how do we, as

Read more

How a Transformation Office Can Help Your Transformation Initiatives Succeed

2. January 2021

A new year has just started, but also in 2021 companies will be talking about digital transformation often. I think digital transformation is a terrible description for what is just another transformation. See my article “Digital Strategy Does Not Exist” on why that is.    But we shall use the term for a moment to

Read more

Project ≠ Program ≠ Portfolio ≠ Strategy

13. December 2020

I have had many heated discussions around these terms. People mix these up and it confuses your organization and its people.  This is my take on it.  If your organization is running many projects at the same time it is impossible to make the right decisions if all projects are performed in isolation. Therefore projects

Read more

Project Failure Is Largely Misunderstood

26. November 2020

For many years, organizations, researchers, and practitioners have analyzed how to manage technology projects successfully.  Among them is the Standish Group, which regularly publishes its findings in its Chaos reports. In 1994, Standish reported a shocking project success rate of only 16 percent; another 53 percent of the projects were challenged, and 31 percent failed

Read more

User Enablement is Critical for Project Success

14. November 2020

Systems do not create value. Usage does. You can implement the most advanced CRM, ERP, or core system on the market. If your organization does not use it properly, the return will be marginal at best and negative at worst. Data quality drops, processes fragment, workarounds emerge, and the old ways of working quietly reappear

Read more

When IT Owns Business Decisions, Value Disappears

18. October 2020

Executives do not struggle with IT because they do not understand technology. They struggle because they have delegated decisions they should never have delegated in the first place. The frustration is familiar. Technology costs keep rising. Capabilities expand. Programs consume time and attention. And yet, the business impact remains unclear or disappointing. Systems go live,

Read more

What Executives Need to Know About Project Management

11. October 2020

I work exclusively with executives and when there is one thing that I have learned over the years is that effective executives have at least a basic understanding about project management and their roles in it.    When you look in a dictionary for the word «executive» you will find an entry similar to the

Read more

Project Inputs, Activities, Outputs, Outcomes, Impact and Results

27. September 2020

Many people and organizations seem to have serious trouble separating between the inputs, activities, outputs, outcomes, impact, and the results of a project.    This leads to lot’s of confusion, bad communication, disappointed project teams, and disappointed stakeholders.   Below you will find my take on these terms and their relevance for your project.  

Read more