Here we recount eight tech blunders--costly mistakes for the people involved and lessons for the rest of us. They range from application upgrades gone awry to wholesale strategy shifts that landed in the muck. There's the publicly traded company that prematurely unplugged its accounting system, the federal agency whose failed upgrade opened the door to fraudsters, the utility company that plunged much of North America into darkness because of a failed server reboot, and more. What follows are business technology fiascoes, some lesser-known, that continue to serve as shining examples of what not to do.
McDonald's Restaurants undertook a project so grand in scale and scope that, well, it couldn't be done. In 2001, the fast-food chain conceived a project to create an intranet connecting headquarters with far-flung restaurants that would provide operational information in real time. Under the plan, dubbed Innovate, a manager in the company's Oak Brook, Ill., headquarters would know instantly if sales were slowing at a franchise in Orlando, Fla., or if the grill temperature at a London restaurant wasn't hot enough. McDonald's always has been tight lipped about Innovate--the company didn't return calls seeking comment for this story--but there's no doubt about its far-reaching scope. According to a white paper by Mpower, the consulting firm McDonald's hired for early planning and technology procurement, the idea was to create "a global ERP application that will eventually touch every one of McDonald's stores." In other words, about 30,000 restaurants in more than 120 countries. Piece of McCake, right?
Among all companies, the billion-dollar IT extravaganza has gone the way of the McDLT sandwich: It's more than anyone wants to bite off.
Rule #1: Don't Bite Off Too Much

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Nothing funny about a $170 million write-off![]()
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The filing revealed what most experienced IT project managers could have told McDonald's from the start: An attempt to create a worldwide network delivering real-time information to thousands of stores, some in countries that lacked network infrastructure, was destined to fail. "Although the terminated technology project was projected to deliver long-term benefits, it was no longer viewed as the best use of capital in the current environment, as the antici-pated systemwide cost over several years was expected to be in excess of $1 billion," the filing says.
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