benefit shortfall

{{Short description|When the actual benefits of a venture are less than the projected or estimated benefits}}

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When the actual benefits of a venture are less than the projected or estimated benefits, the result is known as a benefit shortfall.

If, for instance, a company is launching a new product or service and projected sales are 40 million dollars per year, whereas actual annual sales turn out to be only 30 million dollars, then the benefit shortfall is said to be 25 percent. Sometimes the terms "demand shortfall" or "revenue shortfall" are used instead of benefit shortfall; see volume risk.

Public and private enterprises alike fall victim to benefit shortfalls. Prudent planning of new ventures will include the risk of benefit shortfalls in risk assessment and risk management.

The discipline of benefits realisation management seeks to identify any benefits shortfall as early as possible in a project or programmes delivery in order to allow corrective action to be taken, costs to be controlled and benefits realised.

See also

  • Boondoggle – A project continued despite awareness of a benefit shortfall
  • {{annotated link|Cost overrun}}
  • {{annotated link|Cost-benefit analysis}}
  • {{annotated link|Downside risk}}
  • {{annotated link|Efficient contract theory}}
  • {{annotated link|Hiding hand principle}}
  • {{annotated link|Optimism bias}}
  • {{annotated link|Planning fallacy}}
  • {{annotated link|Reference class forecasting}}
  • {{annotated link|Underconsumption}}

References

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  • Cost Management: Book: Measuring, Monitoring & Motivating Performance By K. P. Gupta

Category:Problems in business economics

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