LLMEnterpriseAdoptionResearch

Impact Analysis: Organizational Scope Correction

Comparison of Single-User vs. Multi-Departmental Reality

Critical Corrections Made

Labor Cost Impact

Assumption Model Staff Affected Annual Labor Cost Net Savings Error Factor
Original (Single User) 1 person part-time $1,087.50 $840 Baseline
Organizational Reality 40-120 people $14,500-$26,100 $14,470-$26,070 17-31x higher

Implementation Complexity

Factor Original Assumption Organizational Reality Impact
People to Train 1-5 users 80-120 staff members 16-24x more complex
Departments Involved 1 central team 40 departments/BUs Requires enterprise change management
Timeline 6-12 weeks 12-18 months 2-3x longer implementation
Change Management Departmental Enterprise-wide Cross-functional coordination required

Financial Analysis Revision

Metric Original Organizational Scale Strategic Implication
Annual Savings $840 $14,470-$26,070 Much stronger business case
Implementation Cost $1,000-3,000 $38,630-$62,200 Higher upfront investment required
Break-even 2-3 months 25-37 months Longer payback but higher absolute returns
3-Year Net Benefit $2,500 $15,100-$65,000 6-26x higher long-term value

Strategic Decision Impact

Original Framework Decision

Revised Organizational Framework Decision

Key Insights from Correction

1. Business Case Strength

The organizational reality makes document automation a strategic imperative rather than a nice-to-have efficiency improvement. Annual savings of $14K-26K justify significant implementation investment.

2. Implementation Approach

Success requires enterprise change management across 40 departments, not a simple technology deployment. This changes the required skills, timeline, and governance structure.

3. Risk Profile

Higher complexity but lower relative risk - the substantial savings provide significant buffer for implementation challenges and cost overruns.

4. Success Metrics

Need department-by-department tracking rather than overall adoption metrics. Success depends on achieving critical mass across diverse organizational units.

Lessons for Future Analysis

Critical Questions for Organizational Tech Projects

  1. Who actually uses the current process? (Not just who owns it)
  2. How is work distributed across the organization? (Centralized vs. distributed)
  3. What’s the true scope of change required? (Technical vs. organizational)
  4. How do benefits scale with organizational complexity? (Linear vs. multiplicative)

Framework Improvements Applied

The organizational scope correction transforms the project from a small efficiency improvement to a significant business transformation opportunity, requiring appropriate planning and investment to realize the full potential benefits.