A Practical Guide to Writing a Feasibility Study


Book Description

Given the significance of a feasibility study in decision making and implementation of the project, many people especially potential investors, financiers or even management lack the practical knowledge of feasibility study. In this regard, it becomes difficult to write a feasibility study which will provide a road map for a particular project. Based on this notion, this book sets to address those practical challenges in preparing a feasibility study. The purpose of the book is to provide practical guide to write a feasibility study to determine the viability of a specific project. Specifically, this will book will provide the description of every important section in a feasibility study with vivid illustration.




Financial Feasibility Studies for Property Development


Book Description

Essential for any real estate professional or student performing feasibility studies for property development using Microsoft Excel and two of the most commonly used proprietary software systems, Argus Developer and Estate Master DF. This is the first book to not only review the place of financial feasibility studies in the property development process, but to examine both the theory and mechanics of feasibility studies through the construction of user friendly examples using these software systems. The development process has seen considerable changes in practice in recent years as developers and advisors have adopted modern spread sheets and software models to carry out feasibility studies and appraisals. This has greatly extended their ability to model more complex developments and more sophisticated funding arrangements, saving time and improving accuracy. Tim Havard brings over 25 years of industry and software experience to guide students and practitioners through the theory of development appraisals and feasibility studies before providing internationally applicable worked examples and potential pitfalls using Excel, Argus Developer and Estates Master DF.




Project Feasibility


Book Description

This book presents a set of tools that will aid in deciding whether a project should go ahead, be improved, or abandoned altogether by pinpointing its vulnerabilities. It offers a review of project feasibility analysis, and more critically, psychodynamic aspects that are often neglected, including how stakeholders interact. It provides a complement to the common techniques used for analyzing technical, financial, and marketing feasibility. The goal is to identify "hidden truths" and eliminate those gray areas that jeopardize the success of a given project. The focus is on uncovering points of vulnerabilities in four key aspects of a project: People, Power, Processes, and Plan.




Noah's Ark


Book Description

This book on Noah's Ark is a one-of-a-kind compendiuum of information about animal-care methods, food-preservation techniques, animal-handling techniques, etc. It discusses in great detail how 8 people could have cared for 16,000 animals using pre-scientific technology. Whether or not the reader believes in the Bible or not, he or she can be fully confident that my book conveys substantive information about the workability of Noah's Ark and its inhabitants.




Feasibility Study


Book Description




A Compendium of Project Feasibility Studies


Book Description

True to Label, this book is a compendium of project feasibility studies. It particularly addresses the hands-on aspects of the trade, by providing explanations followed by worked out examples of analysis. The tendency in this book is towards expanding on the chapters concerning market study and financial feasibility. Quantitative analysis in the book largely prevails over the mere qualitative and descriptive approach, especially in calculating universal metrics that set a clear-cut demarcation between viable and non-viable business propositions.




Mineral Property Evaluation


Book Description

“Everything” sums up what must be considered for a properly documented property evaluation. Less than 30% of the projects that are developed in the minerals industry yield the return on investment that was projected from the project feasibility studies. The tools described in this handbook will greatly improve the probability of meeting your projections and minimizing project execution capital cost blowout that has become so prevalent in this industry in recent years. Mineral Property Evaluation provides guidelines to follow in performing mineral property feasibility and evaluation studies and due diligence, and in preparing proper documents for bankable presentations. It highlights the need for a consistent, systematic methodology in performing evaluation and feasibility work. The objective of a feasibility and evaluation study should be to assess the value of the undeveloped or developed mineral property and to convey these findings to the company that is considering applying technical and physical changes to bring the property into production of a mineral product. The analysis needs to determine the net present worth returned to the company for investing in these changes and to reach that decision point as early as possible and with the least amount of money spent on the evaluation study. All resources are not reserves, nor are all minerals an ore. The successful conclusion of any property evaluation depends on the development, work, and conclusions of the project team. The handbook has a diverse audience: • Professionals in the minerals industry that perform mineral property evaluations. • Companies that have mineral properties and perform mineral property feasibility studies and evaluations or are buying properties based on property evaluation. • Financial institutions, both domestic and overseas, that finance or raise capital for the minerals industry. • Consulting firms and architectural and engineering contractors that utilize mineral property feasibility studies and need standards to follow. • And probably the most important, the mining and geological engineering students and geology and economic geology students that need to learn the standards that they should follow throughout their careers.




Feasibility Study


Book Description

Jackson G. Majura graduated with a BSc (Hons) degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Dar es Salaam in the beginning of 1980. Since then, he has worked in various senior positions in the transport, wood processing, cement, and soda ash industries in Tanzania, South Africa, and Botswana. He is a professionally registered engineer with the Engineers Registration Board (ERB), Tanzania. As part of his Executive Development Program, he has gone through a wide range of comprehensive honing programs in project analysis and management, finance, marketing, and strategic management, at home and abroad. During his career, he has worked extensively in projects, engineering maintenance, and plant management. He has successfully initiated and steered several greenfield projects, from feasibility study to final implementation and handing over. After taking an early retirement at the end of 2011, he cofounded JSC Global Services Co. Ltd. One of its core businesses is the preparation of feasibility studies for small to medium enterprises (SME) projects for entrepreneurs. The company has completed several bankable feasibility studies for SMEs in agro-processing, municipal waste-to-energy, building materials, dairy and fish farming, waste plastic recycling, bottled water, and many more. A comprehensive list can be found at the company’s website: [email protected].




Preliminary Feasibility for Public Research & Development Projects


Book Description

Preliminary Feasibility for Public Research & Development Projects explains how to evaluate R&D business by exploring the five key features of policy implication, policy improvement, preliminary feasibility study, R&D evaluation, and R&D strategy and will help develop strategic measures for R&D preliminary feasibility studies.




Feasibility Studies for Hotels


Book Description

Inhaltsangabe:Abstract: The intensity of competition in the tourism business, especially in the hotel industry has continuously grown during the last years. This development leads to the situation that capital investments in the hospitality industry are connected with ever increasing risks. In order to minimize these risk potentials, a detailed evaluation of the competitiveness and market compatibility of a planned project is an essential part of any project development process. Those analyses are covered in the course of a feasibility study which encloses all aspects that influence the success of a hotel project. In this context, a feasibility study serves as an information tool for project developers, investors, tenants, hotel operators and financiers in order to make decisions with regard to a specific hotel project. The preparation of a feasibility study requires the combination of a multitude of aspects, hence input from all participants in the project development process. Getting hold of information and the appropriate usage of this information is crucial in order to ensure the success of a study. The main objective of this diploma thesis is to identify the most important and current issues in feasibility evaluation of hotel projects. In practice, many studies are prepared following a fixed model, which has not been changed for years. However, the hospitality industry is highly competitive and dynamic, new additions to the existing supply therefore need to be analyzed very carefully. The focus of this diploma thesis is specifically put on the hospitality industry. This means that feasibility evaluation for other types of project development in the tourist industry is not subject to this study. The aim of the thesis is on the one hand to point out aspects that have to be taken into consideration in any study, and to give suggestions for improvements on the other hand. The author has laid down the following four hypotheses that serve as the main source for the research questions. - Hypothesis 1: The sensitivity analysis is the most important component of a feasibility study. - Hypothesis 2: A feasibility study is the most important decision making factor for the investor in a hotel project. - Hypothesis 3: If the results of a feasibility study seem to turn out negative, then the operative concept of the project is changed. - Hypothesis 4: The level of the construction cost is the factor that is most difficult to estimate and is therefore [...]