It's a very interesting quantification game with huge projects like these that include a large service provider. On one hand, it's very easy to quantify the transition to and from capitalization because of the contract(s). Within a majority time and materials (TM) contract, very often the actual software product components can be fixed price - but only those, and only when there is very specific acceptance criteria in place that is independently verifiable.
That verification often takes place in one of the huge independent testing facilities, of which there are several around the country,where they can take the software and simulate 10's of thousand of users banging away on it. And for good reason- the service provider wants to get paid and wants a hard stop on anything fixed price. Too much risk for them otherwise. So, acceptance would happen long before any visible beta.
The vast majority of these projects are under TM contracts because success is largely out of the providers hands and dependent on the quality of the requirements, underlying infrastructure, staff competence and access provided by the contracting Company.
This is where the big overruns almost always happen - in the heavy TM phases like Performance and Tuning, Data Migration, and the user facing components. That's where the meter really starts running.
We all got to experience that first hand with MDE even after NextGen was in production- disappearing accounts and FP's after almost every maintenance patch, along with blue Mickeys, etc. That was after production rollout, after the delay of that rollout. How long that went on is probably the best indicator of how much the project overran its allocations.
I've been thinking about this a lot (20 hours of driving in 2 days will do that) because I have seen it before- where huge projects like these are under capitalized with the intent of yty operational monies to foot the bill as a way of hiding the true cost externally. It's totally above board to throw enhancements and P&T and the like into the yearly buckets.
@ParentsOf4, you don't think Disney would want to keep the true full cost away from folks who would be asking questions about the return on that investment - they wouldn't do that, would they....?
The other thing that's unique: (and
@WDW1974, kind of ironic) this project is almost a "reverse Shanghai." There's no mention of the Partner(s) in this anywhere externally - no "NextGen, powered by (insert Partner)" or NexGen, brought to you by (insert Partner)" or even the press releases saying "Disney and (insert Partner) have entered into an agreement to create the most advanced Guest Management Solution in the Industry."
Nothing
It's unusual because it's a good thing to show they've reduced the risk of the project by bringing in an expert. Plus, it's a way to share blame if the project doesn't go well or overruns. The "We put it in the hands of the experts" excuse.
And for the Provider, they want to be able to say "look at the great job we did at Disney - nobody else could do that". It's their strongest and best Marketing message - really their only way to differentiate themselves from the rest.
Disney's gone to great lengths to make this an "all Disney" project externally. To make it that way, you pretty much have to contractually spell it out.....