majordisorder wrote:1) They're specified and developed by the massive SI's like Accenture, Capita, Cap etc
2) In my experience the public sector staff "responsible" for these project are scared of making any meaningful decisions and going beyond the absolute minimum effort required to stay employed.
Agree wholeheartedly with #2 having worked on at least one public sector project which made me go

I thought that I was brought it to review a certain flagship project's purpose, progress and management. Actually no, as far as I ever worked out why I was brought in it was to write a glowing report so that the programme's SRO (the person ultimately accountable for the project) could get promoted into the senior civil service. Nothing like knowing that your taxes are well spent.
Pretty much completely disagree with #1 (disclaimer, I used to work for one of the SIs mentioned) as I've seen big consultancies do a great job and middle-sized ones do a crap job, as well as the reverse. The reason you hear more about big SIs screwing up is self-selection: they tend to only work on big projects which therefore make the news when they go tits up, and the public sector tend to use them for big IT implementation & BPO (outsourcing) gigs which have a bad reputation for going wrong owing to their sheer size and complexity, because government procurement guidelines discriminate heavily against companies that would go bust if you sued the crap out of them. Not, of course, that the government ever do sue the crap out of them because the depths of incompetence involved would then be revealed to all and sundry.
In one recent example, I was brought in to review a merchandising & supply chain system implementation which went horribly wrong when the medium-sized firm involved decided that change control and (amongst other things) could go out of the window. It wasn't clever and it wasn't pretty, but the look on the IT director's face will stay with me forever when told that pretty much the entire project would have to be binned and he'd wasted about £5m.
Bottom line: Projects are risky. The bigger the project, the riskier it is. Beware when getting any kind of consultant in to work for you, as all firms are structured in such a way that selling is better rewarded than delivery (NB - They may not start out like this, but they pretty much all end up like this.)
T'other Gaz