Three Aspects to Build IT Credibility

Underpromise, and over-delivery: Many IT organizations suffer from overloaded tasks and overwhelming information, they intend to serve customers better via taking orders and say “YES” to all the requests from business users. Though the attitude is good, the outcome is not always so great, and sometimes the opposite is true; if you over promise, and under-delivery, you could end up committing to projects that you cannot successfully deliver without an additional budget, and lose accountability, and now you bolster a reputation in the company that "IT can't deliver”; or, most of IT projects just try to fix the symptoms, but not cure the root causes. To gain the respect from the business and build a good reputation as a trustful business partner for the long term, IT should set the right priority, leverage the invaluable resources, get to know “When to say yes,” and “when to say No,” with the good reason, “under-promise,” and "over-delivery," focus on doing things really matter to the business and customers. When CIOs are able to position and maintain the IT organization with the good credibility to ensure it addresses both "IT effectiveness" and "IT efficiency," to achieve operational excellence, they have earned their stripes.
Continuous improvement and innovation: Besides doing fundamental right, to build the good credibility and reputation, IT needs to move up its maturity, the challenge for the IT leader is to set the right priority, manage the limited budget and resource, to “Do more with Innovation,” and making continuous improvement. The CIO has to look forward and actively position the business in the right place to take full advantage of opportunities and manage innovation in a structural way. Driving digital transformation is not a passive activity, it is a proactive pursuit. IT-driven digital transformation is the journey of continuous delivery and improvement. Increasing speed of changes and unique challenges become more appear as IT leaders push the limits of the available technology, also pull resources and talented to figure out a solution to the problem on hand, continuously try to improve/develop/change everything in a prioritized order as long as it creates a more long-term business advantage. Once they do that and make a unique, valuable, independent contribution to the business outcomes that they can demonstrate in these terms, they will gain credibility and value beyond what any "provider" can deliver. And they can build a good reputation as the trusted business partner.

To put simply, IT faces unprecedented opportunity to refine its reputation, also needs to take more responsibility as a true business partner. CIOs have to get the transformation agenda right to refine IT reputation, as well as focus on business outcomes. Every IT project is the business initiative, business is no more interested in IT if it continually delivers projects without delivering value. The CIO must be concerned as to whether the operational ecosystem will function as expected, but they also need to become Chief Innovation Officers to run IT as innovation engine and digital catalyzer, and build a good credibility to make continuous delivery with high maturity.
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Published on April 06, 2017 23:11
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