Three Learning Lessons to Harness IT and Business Relationship

Quick Wins: Most IT organizations get stuck at the lower level of maturity, they have been perceived as cost centers by the business partners. Often times, there are a lot of projects/activities going on in an organization.Therefore, to build trust relationship, present IT value and share some success stories of quick win is significantly important. For example, a CIO might be interested in a summary of the IT ROI and TCO as a business case for change. Regardless of the analysis and design, and numerous spreadsheets of proven tangible and intangible benefits of IT project portfolio, an abstraction is created to convey to the business the value of change, identify and reap some quick wins. There are a lot of objects, components, and web services being created, however, the context for those IT initiatives is not clear. To reap some low hanging fruit and get some quick wins, IT needs to create a decent business capability map and use that to frame these activities or artifacts. Then IT management can use the capability map to drive portfolio management, and IT leaders can set the right priority, do the gap analysis and find a solution, demonstrate the value via showing some quick wins.
Learning from Failures:At the age of innovation, failure is seen as a fruit full of experience. Failure is part of innovation. It depends on how you read failure. The point is to fail fast and fail forward. Learning from others’ mistakes, also share the failure lessons with others are the great way to harness communication and build trust relationships. The other condition necessary to make failure a learning opportunity is self-insight. It is the insight into the cause of the failure and the alternative courses of action that could have been pursued that makes it a real “lesson learned.”Part of being a leader is taking the risk. If you take risks in doing innovation, you are going to fail at some of them. What makes leaders successful is what they do after they fail at something. What gives them the chance to do something else. The point is always to learn from the failure and fail forward. Without the shared insight, the likelihood of the same situation repeating itself again in the future is higher. Through the insight shared and lessons learned from failures, IT and business can work more closely to avoid innovation pitfalls and achieve common business goals.

IT needs to attribute business value to its company in building close companionship with the business peers, customers, and partners, advance high effective IT leadership, also in developing multi-dimensional views of KPIs that show how IT is improving business and enforcing business competency for long-term prosperity. More than technology, the effective relationship can bridge business success. Still, the professional relationship goes beyond 'buddy' type. The better your management skills, the more you will be appreciated and the more productive your ideas will become, and the organization as a whole will become an integrated, agile and high mature digital leader.
Follow us at: @Pearl_Zhu
Published on July 13, 2016 23:26
No comments have been added yet.