Managing Business Case Development
Structures business case documentation with financial impact, risk assessment, and decision criteria for investment proposals, capital projects, and strategic initiatives.
When To Use
- Justifying a new capital expenditure, technology investment, or headcount request
- Documenting a make-vs-buy or build-vs-partner decision
- Preparing an initiative proposal for executive or board review
- Comparing competing project alternatives with quantified trade-offs
- Supporting annual planning with prioritized investment recommendations
Inputs To Gather
- Problem statement or opportunity description — what triggers the investment need
- Strategic alignment — which corporate objectives, OKRs, or strategic pillars this supports
- Cost estimates — one-time (capex, implementation) and recurring (opex, maintenance, licenses)
- Revenue or savings projections — volume assumptions, pricing, efficiency gains, cost avoidance
- Timeline — implementation phases, key milestones, expected go-live
- Baseline metrics — current-state KPIs to measure improvement against
- Risk factors — market, execution, technology, regulatory, and dependency risks
- Stakeholder input — sponsor expectations, finance assumptions, operations constraints
- Discount rate or WACC — confirm the rate used for NPV calculations [VERIFY]
- Tax treatment — depreciation method, amortization schedule, tax credits if applicable [VERIFY]
Workflow
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Frame the decision — Define the problem or opportunity in one paragraph. State the decision being asked of the audience (approve, fund, prioritize). Identify the decision-maker and approval threshold [VERIFY].
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Define alternatives — Present at minimum three options: (a) do nothing / status quo, (b) recommended option, (c) one or more viable alternatives. For each, summarize scope, approach, and high-level cost range.
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Build the financial model — For each alternative, construct:
- Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) over the evaluation horizon (typically 3–5 years)
- Net Present Value (NPV) using the confirmed discount rate
- Internal Rate of Return (IRR) where cash flows are estimable
- Payback period — simple and discounted
- Sensitivity analysis on the two or three variables with the highest uncertainty (e.g., adoption rate, unit cost, implementation timeline)
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Assess non-financial factors — Score each alternative on:
- Strategic fit and alignment
- Implementation complexity and organizational readiness
- Scalability and optionality for future phases
- Stakeholder and change-management impact
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Quantify risks — For each material risk, assign likelihood (high/medium/low), potential financial impact, and a mitigation action. Use a risk-adjusted NPV or expected-value adjustment where data supports it.
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Formulate the recommendation — State the preferred alternative, the primary financial and strategic rationale, and the key assumptions that must hold. Present a concise decision matrix comparing all alternatives on cost, benefit, risk, and strategic alignment.
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Define implementation roadmap — Outline phases, resource requirements, governance checkpoints, and the criteria for a go/no-go decision at each gate.
Output
The business case document should contain:
- Executive summary (one page) — problem, recommendation, headline financials, and ask
- Strategic context — linkage to corporate strategy, market drivers
- Options analysis — side-by-side comparison table of alternatives
- Financial analysis — TCO, NPV, IRR, payback, and sensitivity tables
- Risk assessment — risk register with likelihood, impact, and mitigations
- Implementation plan — phased roadmap with milestones and resource needs
- Decision matrix — weighted scoring across financial and non-financial criteria
- Appendices — detailed assumptions log, supporting data, model inputs
Quality Checks
- Every financial projection traces back to a stated assumption; no orphan numbers
- Sensitivity analysis covers at least the top three variables by impact magnitude
- The "do nothing" option is costed realistically — not set up as a straw man
- NPV, IRR, and payback calculations are internally consistent and use the same cash-flow timeline
- All assumptions are explicitly labeled; uncertain inputs are marked [VERIFY]
- The recommendation clearly states what happens if key assumptions prove wrong (downside scenario)
- Approval thresholds and governance requirements match the organization's delegation of authority [VERIFY]
- Document is structured for the audience — executive summary is self-contained for senior leadership; appendices carry the detail for finance reviewers
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