Experience has shown that more planning and skill are necessary to develop, sustain, and successfully deliver what can be deemed a "megaproject" than for a conventional construction project. The information in this appendix can be used by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) as a benchmark against generally accepted successful project characteristics. The characteristics described do not define a process. They are formatted as a checklist for comparing the characteristics of a DOE project with the characteristics of other successful projects.
Checklists are reminders for good managers. The following checklist can be used for all important projects—when the project is being prepared for the development of baseline parameters, as a post-mortem for identifying lessons to be shared with other project managers, or at any other time to check the health of the project and identify likely sources of problems.
The many characteristics of successful megaprojects are complex and are not well documented. Information is usually assembled to document what went wrong with a project rather than to document the circumstances of success. The list of characteristics of successful megaprojects that follows is based on the collective experience of more than a dozen highly knowledgeable professionals with experience in large-scale projects. Of course, not every item listed must be present in order for a megaproject, or any project for that matter, to succeed. If there is a good correlation, particularly if the characteristics listed as "essential to success" in each category are there, then the project should have a good chance for success. If there is little correlation and only a few of the essential characteristics are
present, the parties responsible for the project should consider what can be done to improve the chances of success.
Although a sound, reliable project management system is very important to project success, the project management system alone does not guarantee success. Successful projects must be run by trained, skilled, talented, and experienced managers who can not only plan and manage the work well, but who can also handle external factors effectively. The organizational structure must also be designed for project success.
The conditions, qualities, and characteristics that follow will require sizing, shaping, and fitting for the wide range of DOE projects, which have very different scopes or purposes (e.g., environmental cleanup, retrofitting facilities, routine construction, one-of-a-kind science projects). But a standard is a good place to begin the process of fitting and adjusting and setting up the project in a way that increases its chances of success.
The following general characteristics apply to the project setting, surroundings, and sponsor. These conditions are generally external to the project itself but are significant factors in its success or failure. These conditions are divided into three categories: conditions essential to success; conditions important to success; and conditions beneficial to success.
The following characteristics relate to a particular project and apply to the owner, the contractor, the contract, budgets and funding authorizations, project operations, and similar project-specific characteristics.