Theories of Big
How does one best deliver big, ambitious projects in business and government?
Atif Ansar and Bent Flyvbjerg
The public sector, even in market economies such as the US or the UK, accounts for nearly half the share of national income (Offer, 2003).† Public spending has grown over the past half a century, and so have major public projects. Public spending on long-term commitment goods such as energy, transport infrastructure, healthcare, or defence, typically takes the form of major projects. With growing wealth has come growing demands for government to preserve and promote collective welfare and solve intractable new problems — poverty, crime, economic opportunity, public health, or climate change. A timeless question arises whether public policy responses to big societal problems should occur in big bold leaps or in small repeatable steps.
We will interchangeably use “bespoke,” “big one-off”, and “quantum leap” to describe strategy designed to achieve big goals in one bold step. As a point of departure, Miller and Friesen (1982) offer a useful review of what they call the “Quantum View.” “The quantum view advocates that changes in structure must be both concerted and dramatic” (p., 870). Miller and Friesen build the case for rapid and dramatic change by arguing that organizations or societies are greater than the…