Jump to content

Time to value

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Time to value (TTV) is a measure of the length of time necessary to undertake a project and realize the benefits of the solution. The concept is used to help decision makers evaluate the proposed benefit of an investment in time and/or money.[1] It is a similar concept to return on investment (ROI), but instead of realizing the financial success of an investment, it implies achieving the effectiveness of an investment. This is applied mostly to added technology—data center hardware, network infrastructure, system security, etc. whereby the promised improvement becomes measurable. It can even be argued that in cases such as data security, TTV is more important than ROI since the security may only have financial benefits in banking and commercial industries, but has value in the protection of personal and/or corporate data—in every industry.[2]

Limitation

While the concept is easy to understand and explain to management or investors, one problem is that "completion", "benefit", and "value" are not as easy to define, can change over time, and the technology may even obsolesce before the installation is completed.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ George Pitagorsky (28 July 2010). "Time-to-Value and the Value of Time". PMtimes.
  2. ^ Kolsky, Esteban. "Ruminations on ROI vs TTV". estebankolsky.com. Retrieved 19 December 2017.