Author List: Keil, Mark; Mixon, Richard; Saarinen, Timo; Tuunainen, Virpi;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 1994, Volume 11, Issue 3, Page 65-85.
Information technology (IT) projects can fail for any number of reasons, and can result in considerable financial losses for the organizations that undertake them. One pattern of failure that has been observed but seldom studied is the runaway project that takes on a life of its own. Such projects exhibit characteristics that are consistent with the broader phenomenon known as escalating commitment to a failing course of action. Several theories have been offered to explain this phenomenon, including self-justification theory and the so-called sunk cost effect which can be explained by prospect theory. This paper discusses the results of a series of experiments designed to test whether the phenomenon of escalating commitment could be observed in an IT context. Multiple experiments conducted within and across cultures suggest that a high level of sunk cost may influence decision makers to escalate their commitment to an IT project. In addition to discussing this and other findings from an ongoing stream of research, the paper focuses on the challenges faced in carrying out the experiments.
Keywords: escalating commitment; escalation; information systems failure; runaway; software project management; sunk cost.
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#139 0.396 project projects failure software commitment escalation cost factors study problem resources continue prior escalate overruns taken failing troubled sunk fail
#51 0.123 results study research experiment experiments influence implications conducted laboratory field different indicate impact effectiveness future participants evidence test controlled involving
#110 0.121 theory theories theoretical paper new understanding work practical explain empirical contribution phenomenon literature second implications different building based insights need
#220 0.086 research study different context findings types prior results focused studies empirical examine work previous little knowledge sources implications specifically provide