“CIO Master” Book Tuning: Five Questions to Improve IT Maturity

Q1: How do you determine the strategic value proposition of IT to the business?The main problem is that business executive still limits their vision of IT as “IT supports a strategy.” As a matter of fact, digital technology is often the disruptive force for business transformation. IT is not just to support strategy, IT strategy is an integral part of business strategy. The IT strategy is the responsibility of the CIO and works as a foundation for driving business success. Organizations need to empower their IT leaders to lead digital transformation as a forerunner. CIOs role as C-level is to contribute to the formulation of the business strategy where new trends of technology will provide strategic business capabilities to the business that will enhance the competitive advantages of the organization. The CIO is not simply the leader of the enterprise's IT departments, The CIO role is an enterprise leadership & executive role who is the enterprise executive responsible for leadership of the information agenda, which includes driving customer engagement and experience as a cross-functional enterprise responsibility. The IT Strategy as an integral component of the business strategy is how to leverage the resources and assets of the IT departments to create the optimal business value - which in the next step, will generate revenue growth, brand or increased market shares.
Q2: How do you evaluate the evolving IT capabilities of that could outperform competitors?In today’s business dynamic, digital capabilities are a fundamental building block in digital transformations with which companies can transform customer experiences, operational processes, and business models, to reach high-level business agility and maturity. A business capability is the set of abilities needed by an organization in order to deliver value. It’s the ability of an organization to do things effectively to achieve desired outcomes and measurable benefits and fulfill business demand. IT is the key enabler for building business capabilities. IT also needs to have a set of capabilities: the necessary operational capabilities to keep the lights on, and the unique capabilities (change, innovation) to make a difference. CIOs as IT leaders must be able to develop and optimize IT operational functions and harness value added IT capabilities within itself. It is also something to have IT resources (people and operational IT processes) refined to the point that they are nimble, can adapt to changing business demands in a timely fashion. It is critical as well to define performance indicators and evaluate & measure IT and business capabilities to achieve the expected result if you can only manage what you measure.
Q3 How do you allocate dollars across the portfolio of IT investments to ensure a healthy return?The de facto best practices of managing IT project portfolio need to include such as, only manage a business project, not for technology's sake, IT should not just run the business today, but help to “grows the business” for tomorrow. The goals of portfolio management are not only the strategy alignment and value leverage; it's also a mix of short, mid and long-term projects that need to make up a project pipeline. IT leaders must also have a good understanding of the projects and programs they are facilitating, particularly the objectives and benefits to be delivered. Overall value, therefore, has to be judged at the enterprise level considering the overall satisfaction over each combination of cost, schedule, performance, and satisfaction of the customer, user, and each stakeholder. prioritize the portfolio, and manage full application life cycle.As a set of questions to evaluate the business value of every project: What are the key drivers behind this project? What problem or event is driving the need for the project? What immediacy does this problem or event have and why does it need to be addressed now? What is wrong with maintaining the status quo? What impact are these problems currently having (either to the organization or the community)? Can the impact of these problems be measured and quantified and if so what is the quantum of the problems., etc. A healthy IT program portfolio makes a good balance of “run, grow, and transform” projects.
Q4: What ideal IT spending ratio, what tradeoffs are you making in managing IT performance/cost?All IT spending must be rationalized against the business benefits. This discussion and these arguments are not new. IIT needs to stay in the mix; they need to find ways to move up the stack and provide business value, such as innovation and not spend their cycles "keeping the lights on" as just a cost center. For example, just keep the lights on to contribute 25 percent of the profit sounds better than just keep the lights on as an act of pure overhead cost. IT is always striving to improve its value to the business. Some of the "long poles in the tent" tend to be labor; depreciation and new capital spend. It isn't just the IT spending ratio as a percentage of budget numbers (70/30, 85/15), but the question of what is real: tangible or measurable business value? And who is measuring or driving the perceived value? When all departments truly collaborate with IT to improve the vision, realized of using IT as a competitive leverage.

To improve IT maturity, IT needs to change the emphasis to an “outside-in” approach with that vital focus on users. IT has both internal customers and end customers as well. Cutting out waste such as shrinking the gap between business and IT could make a significant contribution and the sooner it starts the better it will be for all involved. At the higher level of maturity, IT is the business driver and innovation center.Follow us at: @Pearl_Zhu
Published on May 29, 2016 23:29
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