Feasibility study
Madarej Office for Administrative and Financial Consulting·RiyadhPrice
On request
Price
On request
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Definition of a Feasibility StudyA Feasibility Study is a systematic, structured evaluation and analysis conducted prior to the commencement of a new project or a business expansion. It is designed to investigate the viability of a proposed concept by objectively balancing its potential opportunities against its costs, risks, and technical challenges. In essence, it determines whether the project is "doable" and worth the required investment.🎯 Primary ObjectiveThe ultimate objective of a feasibility study is to answer one fundamental question: "Should we proceed with this project?"To achieve this, the study aims to:Validate that the project concept is grounded in market reality rather than assumptions.Identify potential roadblocks (technical, financial, or legal) before committing time and capital.Estimate the exact scope of resources (human, financial, and physical) required for successful implementation.👔 Importance to Decision-Makers (Investors & Management)A feasibility study serves as the primary risk-mitigation tool and decision-support mechanism for stakeholders because it:Minimizes Risk: It protects capital from being wasted by exposing structural flaws in the business model early on.Optimizes Resource Allocation: It provides objective, data-driven insights that help management choose the best alternative among competing project ideas.Secures Funding: It acts as the essential documentation required by banks, venture capitalists, and government bodies to approve loans, grants, or equity investments.Provides a Strategic Roadmap: It establishes preliminary operational baselines and performance indicators that guide the execution phase if the project is approved.📊 Core Dimensions of a Feasibility StudyA thorough feasibility study must evaluate five core pillars, often summarized by the framework (TELOS):Type of FeasibilityFocus & Key Questions Addressed1. Market FeasibilityAnalyzes industry trends, target demographics, competitor market share, and demand projections. (Is there a sustainable customer base for this product or service?)2. Technical FeasibilityAssesses hardware, software, physical plant requirements, logistics, raw materials, and labor expertise. (Do we possess—or can we acquire—the technology and capacity to deliver this?)3. Financial FeasibilityEstimates total capital expenditure (CapEx) and operational forecasting (OpEx). It calculates critical profitability metrics like Internal Rate of Return (IRR), Net Present Value (NPV), and the Break-Even Point. (Will the project generate a sufficient return on investment?)4. Legal FeasibilityEnsures total compliance with local laws, zoning regulations, data protection acts (like GDPR), environmental standards, and intellectual property rights. (Are there any legal barriers that could shut the project down?)5. Operational & Operational SchedulingEvaluates whether the organizational structure can sustain operations and determines if the project can be completed within a realistic timeframe. (Can we manage it, and will it be delivered on time?)Summary: A feasibility study is not a bureaucratic formality; it is the smartest investment made before the actual investment. The cost of canceling a flawed project on paper is virtually zero, whereas the cost of a failed execution can be catastrophic.