It's an interesting question because there's no clear answer, largely because the financials vary from project to project or from overall program to program on a transformational project, and they come in different sizes and shapes.
I can only talk about the one I was personally involved in. When we looked at it, we saw that it was between a three-year and five-year payback. That's why I mentioned that we fell within that benchmark of a three-year to five-year payback.
Payback came in a couple of fashions. One was your resources, with “resources” meaning the people on your staff. You have merged companies and you're simplifying the whole IT and delivery mechanisms from a consolidation point of view, but what do you do with these people?
You have two choices. One, if your company is in a growth mode, meaning you're doing more things more effectively, you can redeploy the people to do something differently. You'll always have some talent that does not fit the need, but at the end of the day, you've finally found a set of people who are doing other work that they didn't get done before.
The second part of the benefit, coming purely from the private sector, is how you deal with the end market and the customers. From the customer's side, the benefit is absolutely direct, because the last thing any private organization would want is to deal with 16 different customers in 16 different ways and have training done differently in trying to deal with that.
So that benefit, in terms of both effectiveness and dealing with customers, is absolutely direct. There are no two ways about it.