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Managing the Information Technology Resource: Leadership in the Information Age

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This book prepares readers for the challenge of integrating the technology resource. In order to understand the industry today, one must understand the ways companies align, partner, and communicate through technology to grow their business. Managing the Information Technology Resource presents a set of powerful tools to ensure users' understanding of the strategies, tactics, and operational endeavors CIO's employ to assimilate technologies across the firm. Examples in Action boxes highlight real-world company examples in each chapter, lending a practical feel to the book so readers can see how this material relates to the actual workforce. Seven sections illustrate the critical topics inherent to IT in today's firm--Alignment, Partnership, Technology, Human Resources, Governance, Communications, and Metrics. Emphasis is placed on the tactical and operational role of the CIO. For anyone involved with IT in a company.

Contents

Preface

1. Introduction
2. IT Strategy
3. Strategic alignment maturity
4. The role of the CIO
5. IT processes
6. Planning-related IT processes
7. managing emerging technologies
8. Organizing IT
9. Human resource considerations
10. Management of change
11. IT governance
12. IT business communications
13. Measuring, reporting and controlling
14. Assessing the value of IT

432 pages, Paperback

First published May 8, 2003

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About the author

Jerry N. Luftman

6 books2 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Oginni Jeremiah.
24 reviews
October 4, 2023
What you do with IT is what matters. Great book for those wanting to evolve in the IT space.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Alejandro Teruel.
1,373 reviews262 followers
February 24, 2014
This is a 2014 review of the first edition (2004) of a book currently in its third edition.

Originally written as a graduate or advanced undergraduate level textbook, if you update several of the excellent but turn of the century examples, even now the book provides good baseline reading to the subject of IT management.

Its strongest chapters are on planning IT strategy (IT Strategy, Strategic Alignment Maturity, Planning-Related IT Processes), and to a lesser degree Managing Emerging Technologies. The chapter on IT processes, even though it was written before the new versions of Cobit and ITIL, provides a good overview on the variety of ways IT activities may be grouped into processes (from 9 processes to over 70 processes) and I would definitely recommend reading it before plunging into any IT management framework. I would also recommend reading chapter 13 Measuring, Reporting and Controlling which includes some very practical and very sound advice on Service Level Agreements (SLAs).

Chapter 9 (Human Resource Considerations)is well researched and covers interesting ground, even though I feel the ethics of IT deserves a chapter to itself and chapter 10 Management of Change was a careful, well developed chapter.

On the other hand the chapter on Organizing IT was disappointing, as was the chapter on IT Governance; IT Business Communications was cursory, while I found the last chapter Assessing the Value of IT unfortunately exclusively focused on financial value and incomprehensible due to my admittedly very weak knowledge on financial management.

A book worth plunging into, if you study or practice IT Management -I hope the third edition has updated the material and examples appropriately and strengthened the weaker chapters.

Profile Image for Robin.
3 reviews
March 29, 2017
I found this book to be dry. However it is a textbook and it has great reference material.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews