Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program

This dissertation explores factors that influenced key performance indicators for project implementation success in broadband infrastructure projects funded by the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP), part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). Key perfo...

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Main Author: Hundley, Meredith
Other Authors: School of Public and International Affairs
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/86277
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-862772020-09-29T05:37:14Z Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program Hundley, Meredith School of Public and International Affairs Cook, Brian J. Rees, Joseph V. Midkiff, Scott F. Jensen, Laura Smietanka implementation project management Recovery Act digital divide organizational capacity grant administration This dissertation explores factors that influenced key performance indicators for project implementation success in broadband infrastructure projects funded by the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP), part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). Key performance indicators for project implementation success were operationalized as finishing within the 36-month grant period (schedule), within the proposed budget (budget), and constructing the planned number of network miles (outputs). Drawing on research in policy implementation, public administration, nonprofit management, and project management, a framework was created to identify and categorize these factors as project-specific, organization-centric, physical environment, interorganizational, or legal environment (POPIL). A mixed methods approach investigated factor-indicator relationships using Ordinary Least Squares regression and other quantitative analyses of 67 BTOP-funded Comprehensive Community Infrastructure projects and a qualitative postmortem analysis of Citizens Telephone Cooperative's successful New River Valley Regional Open-Access Network (NRV-ROAN) project. Strong and significant regression equations were developed for the schedule adherence, output adherence, and overall project implementation success indicators. Deficient capacity of organizations to implement proposed projects was a significant and strong negative influence on each of these three indicators along with interorganizational relationship issue reports regarding the principal-agent relationship and relationships with other actors. The postmortem analysis included 17 participant interviews and further underscored the importance of sufficient organizational capacity and strong partnerships to enable organizations to overcome challenges they may encounter during implementation. In addition to testing the POPIL framework, this dissertation highlights the importance of alignment of goals and metrics across the legislative, programmatic, and project levels of implementation to ensure that programs and projects do not work at cross-purposes. For practitioners, the findings also emphasize that projects should be designed within an organization's capacity, and prospective partners should have the expertise and resources both to implement a project as proposed and respond to unexpected events. Ph. D. 2018-12-09T07:01:08Z 2018-12-09T07:01:08Z 2017-06-16 Dissertation vt_gsexam:11610 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/86277 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic implementation
project management
Recovery Act
digital divide
organizational capacity
grant administration
spellingShingle implementation
project management
Recovery Act
digital divide
organizational capacity
grant administration
Hundley, Meredith
Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
description This dissertation explores factors that influenced key performance indicators for project implementation success in broadband infrastructure projects funded by the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP), part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act). Key performance indicators for project implementation success were operationalized as finishing within the 36-month grant period (schedule), within the proposed budget (budget), and constructing the planned number of network miles (outputs). Drawing on research in policy implementation, public administration, nonprofit management, and project management, a framework was created to identify and categorize these factors as project-specific, organization-centric, physical environment, interorganizational, or legal environment (POPIL). A mixed methods approach investigated factor-indicator relationships using Ordinary Least Squares regression and other quantitative analyses of 67 BTOP-funded Comprehensive Community Infrastructure projects and a qualitative postmortem analysis of Citizens Telephone Cooperative's successful New River Valley Regional Open-Access Network (NRV-ROAN) project. Strong and significant regression equations were developed for the schedule adherence, output adherence, and overall project implementation success indicators. Deficient capacity of organizations to implement proposed projects was a significant and strong negative influence on each of these three indicators along with interorganizational relationship issue reports regarding the principal-agent relationship and relationships with other actors. The postmortem analysis included 17 participant interviews and further underscored the importance of sufficient organizational capacity and strong partnerships to enable organizations to overcome challenges they may encounter during implementation. In addition to testing the POPIL framework, this dissertation highlights the importance of alignment of goals and metrics across the legislative, programmatic, and project levels of implementation to ensure that programs and projects do not work at cross-purposes. For practitioners, the findings also emphasize that projects should be designed within an organization's capacity, and prospective partners should have the expertise and resources both to implement a project as proposed and respond to unexpected events. === Ph. D.
author2 School of Public and International Affairs
author_facet School of Public and International Affairs
Hundley, Meredith
author Hundley, Meredith
author_sort Hundley, Meredith
title Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
title_short Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
title_full Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
title_fullStr Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
title_full_unstemmed Connecting Communities: Factors Influencing Project Implementation Success in the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program
title_sort connecting communities: factors influencing project implementation success in the broadband technology opportunities program
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/86277
work_keys_str_mv AT hundleymeredith connectingcommunitiesfactorsinfluencingprojectimplementationsuccessinthebroadbandtechnologyopportunitiesprogram
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