5101 - ITS Chapter 2 Two PDF
5101 - ITS Chapter 2 Two PDF
5101 - ITS Chapter 2 Two PDF
CHAPTER 2 : GETTING READY FOR IT STRATEGY ................................................................................... 2
2.1 LEARNING OBJECTIVES ........................................................................................................................... 2
2.2 INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................................................... 2
2.3 EVOLUTION OF IT STRATEGY ................................................................................................................... 2
2.4 NEW DIRECTION OF IT STRATEGY ............................................................................................................. 8
2.5 NEED FOR IT ALIGNMENT WITH BUSINESS ................................................................................................ 16
2.6 CHANGING IT STRATEGY FOR DIFFERENT STAGES IN BUSINESS LIFECYCLE ........................................................ 19
2.7 A NEW ROLE FOR CIO ......................................................................................................................... 23
2.8 PLANNING FOR IT STRATEGY ................................................................................................................. 34
2.9 SUMMARY ........................................................................................................................................ 37
2.10 GLOSSARY ......................................................................................................................................... 39
2.11 REVIEW QUESTIONS ............................................................................................................................ 39
2.12 PROJECT WORK ................................................................................................................................. 39
2.13 BIBLIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................................... 39
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 2 of 41
Chapter 2 : Getting Ready for IT Strategy
2.1 Learning Objectives
This chapter should
- identify evolution of IT strategy and the direction of the same
- justify the need for IT alignment with business
- introduce changing IT strategy for different stages of business lifecycle
- explain CIO role under changing business scenario
- evolve preparation for IT strategy
2.2 Introduction
Corporate Board Member magazine in association with Deloitte reported a finding of a
survey in “2007 Board and Information Technology Strategies Report: MAXIMIZING
PERFORMANCE THROUGH IT STRATEGY”, published on CIOindex.com, which sums up
the need of IT alignment with business very well. It says, “When boards are actively
involved in IT, IT becomes more effective in supporting the business”. Board has
understood the value which IT can deliver for business, hence, they use it as any other
valuable resource and exploit for business advantage. It quotes that the board was not
so aware of strategic value earlier, now 62‐76% of boards approaches IT as board’s
issue. In financial organisations, where number and analytics play vital role, the
acceptance of strategic value is higher. Accordingly participation of CIO in strategy
formulation has gone up.
This rising participation of IT in business has been created by the unique value
proposition that it offers. This has also increased the responsibility of CIOs and IT
managers to understand the business imperatives and create more and more value for
the business by using IT. They needed to create right plan and help business managers
to visualize the upcoming values from IT without which the hesitant participation of
board and its members in certain industries and sectors will continue.
2.3 Evolution of IT Strategy
The capability of IT has been expanding manifold and accordingly the contribution to the
business. Till seventies, IT strategy was focussing to installation of a set of hardware and
few projects where data crunching was required. On hardware front purchase and
installation of mainframe or mini computers with dumb terminals and on application
side coverage of few functions like Accounting, Purchase and Inventory used to be part
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 3 of 41
of any IT strategy. During those days IS and IT were differentiated (Checkland and
Holwell), as “IS” was used to point to applications and software and the “IT” referred to
hardware and connectivity. However, later this differentiation became blurred and the
term “IT” was simplified for customers and users. Now IT includes software, hardware,
networking and services. These four branches and IT related services converged into
one, i.e. “IT industry”. The classification by stock exchanges and adoption of a new line
of business, i.e. software development and services business by corporate like IBM and
HP, which were traditionally in hardware and networking, also contributed to this
convergence. For our references too, IT includes hardware, software, networking and IT
enabled services.
However, during those days, certain packaged software for statistical analysis and
production planning used to be available, but they were neither very popular nor used
to be part of IT strategy. IT strategy used to follow bottom‐up approach. Speed of data
processing and retrieval used to be the main consideration for IT participation in local
business functions. Head of IT used to be third layer in the organisation management
and were not represented in top management directly. Even in progressive
organisations this function used to be under a business functions mostly under Finance
& Accounts, which used to be major users of IT. With rising capability and usage of IT
across business functions, IT functions across organisations were consolidated and
accordingly organisation design for IT changed. By late seventies, the representation of
IT function was elevated where by it started reporting to one of the top management
members.
By late seventies and early eighties, role of IT started getting attention of business
managers and they started considering it for solving business problems. IT started being
considered for functional integration, but not contributor to complete business process
efficiency. Use of EDI for data interchange started getting popular in 1980s. Slowly the
identification of opportunities for IT to contribute in business started happening in
higher management too. The costly mainframe/mini computer era started fading, and
hence, even organisations in SME sector, which could not have afforded IT setup earlier,
also started looking at this as an option. This phenomenon supported growth for IT,
even though the strategy of new entrant too started with accounting and number
crunching functions. The arrival of Personal Computer started impacting to different
facets of usage of IT and IT strategy making process.
Till seventies, the IT strategy used to be focussed primarily on hardware purchase,
installation and applications. Organisations used to have their in‐house IT function and
they used to concentrate on data services. Some methodologies like IBM’s “Business
System Planning” popularly known as BSP (supported by ISP – Information System
Planning) used to be proprietary technique to create IT strategy. Like IBM, everyone else
also used them for their prime client without any emphasis on sharing with industry. In
early eighties IBM brought these to public domain. This mainly concentrated on
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 4 of 41
Requirement and Process modelling and Project portfolio creation. With a focus on
evolving potential candidate for IT, it looked at process and data map. This could
successfully connect data classes with business process and created consistency and
integration map (Mclean et al. 2005). During 1980s many academicians started coming
up with their own concept and models that influenced approach to IT strategy itself.
During early eighties, the principles of Information Engineering by James Martin (1988)
brought a new revolution. This approach based techniques helped CIOs better align IT
with business by different modeling techniques. It captured business functions under
data and process models and aligned them with each other with emphasis on the need
for business process change and mapped them with IT. Business managers started
understanding the need for holistic change for business benefits. This shifted IT industry
from unstructured or semi‐structured approach era to more structured approach.
Slowly the business managers started using IT as one of the key enablers. They started
finding merit in IT capabilities, and then, IT strategy started being driven by business
purpose. Porter’s theory related to Competitive Advantage and Value chain helped
managers to re‐innovate IT for the business benefit. Managers started thinking of
exploiting IT to manage five competitive forces that Porter postulated earlier in 1979.
Evolution of IT strategy started becoming more structural and top‐down. Business
strategy started becoming the drivers for IT strategy.
During the decade of eighties, cost cutting and enabling users with personal computers
started taking shape in big way. Most of the IT investments were being justified by cost
benefit, whether it was through man‐power reduction, lead time reduction, timely and
structured presentation of information or improvement in fund utilization. This was the
era of booming isolated systems caused by rising demand for IT systems and
information from functional managers. IT strategy based on centralised systems could
not serve the demand either because of high cost of central systems against small
business benefits (perceived benefit) or due to limited capability and high lead time to
development and deployment. This created the demand‐supply gap which in turn
supported the commercialization of Unix and Dos based systems. Functional users
started managing their business and servicing information need from local systems
using mix of small locally developed applications and certain packaged software. Low
cost to development of such applications and packages created boom in availability of
software in different cost range.
All new IT projects have been transformational in nature and to be successful it needed
change in process as well as people capability. Till eighties technology interface to users
was not disruptive, as they continued to work on papers and trained employees at Data
Processing Department used to take care of the rest. But more and more introduction of
PC and other user end devices started putting more pressure on users and a holistic plan
for user training and learning became essential component of the IT strategy. Similarly
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 5 of 41
earlier implementations were more related to data services and automation where as
the new trend from late eighties started where by business re‐engineering became a
part of IT strategy. Business managers realised that they can reap better benefit if they
revamp processes before automating them and that could yield bigger advantage to the
business. This led to a complete plan on Process, People and Technology to become
essential component of IT strategy.
This was the trend with which Nineties started. By then IT strategy and investment
approval started happening based on Cost‐Benefit analysis. The value in terms of
financial saving or benefit to business became a standard practice. Even Hardware
sellers used to work with CIOs to quantify the benefit to create a case for purchase.
Some progressive companies in developing world too adopted this practice and made
this a component of their capital investment proposals. Some direct benefits such as
manpower reduction, space & facility rental saving, inventory reduction, fund
realisation, saving in working capital helped CIOs to justify new IT strategy and
investment plan. But some intangible ones such as improvement and flexibility in
decision making capability and quality of information could not be realised by business
managers till they went through the implemented projects. Slowly business managers
started getting the confidence that IT can deliver and in‐turn started encouraging newer
technologies and ideas. During the period Y2K issue and ERP emerged as key IT issue
and IT solution, respectively. They drew the attention of CIOs and business managers.
The trade‐off was between additional investments to increase the life of existing system
and fresh investment for developing a new one. The cost and the risk of Y2K migration
were difficult to estimate and on the other hand ERP products and internet technology
were just emerging. Many organisations adopted strategy of upgrading the existing
systems, if they had one, to continue existing services, and opting for new system for
new and additional business functions. They had two options for new system, custom
development and ERP implementation. But none were clear winner. Newer business
started with emerging technology and in some case with new ideas and business model.
This platform was later called “.Com”.
The pressure of Y2K started taking the bigger place in the minds of CIOs and the
business managers. The fear of Y2K problem took undue attention and managers
started looking at alternatives. This made transition from current systems as major part
of IT strategy. Alternatives to so called COBOL era, was limited, even though new
technology platform was upcoming. All large organisations around the globe needed to
go through this transformation. CIOs and IT managers were so involved on Y2K during
late nineties that they found that the decade had passed while planning and organising
to come out of this issue. It was uphill task to get fund approval from the business
managers for this kind of tasks, where no extra benefits to business can be shown. The
justification for survival was not amusing to business managers. But even during this
period certain organisations relied on internet and created new business models based
on it. The new business models, like Ticket delivery by Ryan International and American
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 6 of 41
airlines, Account management by Meril Lynch, Investment Services by Charles Schwab,
Supply Chain management by Walmart, started early and got benefited. These new
ways to business also impacted organisation design. Business started realising power of
collaboration. A distinct shift in business attitude from full control and complete
ownership of business processes to outsource, collaborate and customer experience
started happening. IT was not only supporting this shift but influencing too. But it was
the beginning. The industry and users realised later that it was early hype, only careful
design based on good business model not only lasted long but also yielded business
benefits.
In India large companies like Tata Steel, SAIL and others planned a strategy to revamp IT
infrastructure in entirety by redeveloping new systems to circumvent Y2K issue. Y2K
issue made the western world first time realise that they don’t have enough people to
help them to fix this issue. They needed help of developing nations. The timely evolution
of emerging internet technology also came as a help to expand the team across
geographies to manage this Y2K. And this created a new strategy and business model,
popularly known as ‘Outsourcing’. Since then Outsourcing became one of the essential
components of IT strategy and that deserves due consideration, even now. Later it
expanded from Application development outsourcing to complete software lifecycle
outsourcing. Slowly it expanded to Business Process Outsourcing, IT infrastructure and
support and many other business and IT functions.
Just after when the world got a feel that Y2K issue had just passed through, managers
and governments returned back to “Business driven IT” principles. They found good
merit in it and the world’s big consultants too started attaching more importance to this
approach. The concept of considering IT a business enabler, and evaluating the IT
investment amongst other investment opportunities, started getting importance. IT in
21st century didn’t remain old IT, it became a good means for business growth. By then
it changed from utility support function to business transformation enabler.
In the mean time internet based capability as well as its convergence with other
technologies started maturing. People started making good business support
infrastructure based on IT. This helped in reaching large number of people and
facilitated direct participation of users, customers, suppliers and other external
stakeholders directly. Business managers capitalized this phenomenon and started
revamping their business models, processes and value chain. Rapid and large scale
benefits started coming to business. Even many used IT to create new business and
service delivery channels and many used it to evolve new business model altogether.
By now IT strategy formulation had entered in board room. Many leading organisations
started developing strategies based on IT capabilities to manage their business needs,
competition and improvement drives. After realising the potential of internet based
channel, eCommerce and other new models started evolving. Developed countries took
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 7 of 41
quantum leap in developing new business models based on IT, e.g. Dell’s and Amazon’s
(launched in July 1995) internet based order processing, Google’s search engine,
Walmart’s supply chain integration, DHL’s and FedEx’s mail and material tracking. This in
fact created a reverse theory that IT started influencing business strategies than
business driving IT. The new era came out from the technology limitations and entered
into idea limitations. Even in developing countries corporate started working out new
channels, service models and business models based on IT. Initiatives like Tata Steel’s
metaljunction.com Indian banks’ internet enabled services, eGovernment services in
India and many such business channels started taking shape besides infrastructure
bottleneck. The telecom advancement and spread has made significant contribution to
boost the capability of IT for business, government and people at large.
If we map the IT transformation, the map will look as figure 2.1 (Ref: Nolan, R.L., 2000,
and John Ward and Joe Peppard, 2002)
Figure 2.1: Changing mind map of IT strategy
The above picture clearly depicts that IT has been transforming through three roles.
(Ref: Spitz, James M. and dePaschalis, Edward G.). First, during early days, it played the
role of support organisation and performed the back office tasks. Second, it started with
transitional role when it was contributing to goals of business process reengineering.
And finally, it started focusing at business value, whether it comes within the
organisation or beyond. It facilitated collaboration and automation in big way.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 8 of 41
This changed view of IT strategy formation was also reflected in one of the McKinsey’s
survey, (McKinsey Quarterly, Spring 2007), where it identifies that close cooperation
between IT and business people are needed to form a good IT strategy. Amongst various
practices the priorities are given to “Collaboration of IT and Business People”, “IT
alignment to business strategy” and “Technology innovation”, in that order. The same
report has also highlighted the staged shift in IT focus from IT as Supplier (Service
information on operational demand) to Alignment and collaboration facilitator for
business goals and finally to competitive differentiator i.e. playing proactive role in
building competitive landscape in shaping business strategy.
Recently a concept of “Total Cost of Ownership (TCO)”, which was dormant for
sometime, re‐emerged and took a centre stage in value evaluation. This forced the
holistic approach to IT strategy, which covered capital and operational expenditure on IT
infrastructure and services, for evaluating the cost and the benefit. With this CIO started
defining their budget and controlling in entirety.
2.4 New direction of IT Strategy
IT helps the organisation in two ways, business internal and business external. During
early days it used to be mainly business‐internal focused. It strategy used to be entirely
organisation‐internal. This focus was so dominant that even internal cost reduction and
efficiency improvement was never seen as business benefit in customer and
competition domain. The new shift in IT strategy helped to bring this missing
perspective too. Now the business started looking at internal performance
improvement also in context to external factors. The new approach and mindset is to
reduce cost of operations for improve competitiveness and responsiveness in the
market. This integrated view of the business further helped IT to bring in larger
perspective and show better benefits and returns. Even today, the business internal
strategy mostly emerged based on traditional usage either for problem solving or for
capitalizing opportunities in operational domain and the business external strategy has
been influenced by customer need, technology capability, industry trend and
competition.
- Business internal
IT for control and governance
This legacy perspective is more carried from management practices,
where the management wanted to have visibility of operational data,
standard processes, control on operations, and Information based
management actions. Trade unions viewed it as management initiative to
tilt the balance of power and control towards the management and
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 9 of 41
hence, they opposed it. Better visibility to operations through data and
information led to improved plans, actions and synergy amongst different
functional areas.
IT for efficiency
The management started finding benefits from IT systems more than the
expected goals of “Control and Governance”. The sheer availability of
information in right context gave them more insights in the business.
Their actions started moving towards information based actions from the
judgmental and personal understanding. They could see through gaps
and opportunity to improve and used IT to cut inefficiency caused by
delay in information availability for decision making, process delays, poor
understanding of resource availability and deployment, inadequate
understanding of organisation capability for new strategy and many
others. Business managers started capitalizing it for innovating new
practices and all‐round business improvement. It also helped integrating
different functions for common goals.
IT for performance
IT contributed to business performance at various levels. It could
organise information aspect of business very well. Qualitative and
quantitative improvements brought by IT slowly started seeping into
business. Users from functional areas started looking at it as an enabler
to improve their functional performance. Technology evolution and
improved availability added fuel to this desire. Aligning business across
functional areas became easier. Senior managers started defining
measurements and reviewing through right set of data, made available
from IT. Thus it entered into organisational domain than just the
functional area. For speed, integration, correctness, process and
statutory compliance and many other functional performance, business
managers started looking towards IT.
IT for management effectiveness
IT changed management style and refined management decision making
process. It could easily collect, collate and present the desired data for
timely action. This was an additional help for business managers.
Wherever, based on certain information a decision, guidance, an alert or
an escalation was to be performed; it started doing so automatically
without delay. And wherever more analysis and understanding were
required for managers’ intervention, it started presenting the trend and
analysis to the managers. Thus it started imbibing Business Intelligence
and became a good aid to business managers.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 10 of 41
IT for results with optimum resources
During early days of IT when the business were not so competitive and it
used to make profit without much focus on cost of operation, investment
in IT used to be cost heavy. The capital investment on IT infrastructure
and operating expenditure on IT operations were not making business
sense to managers. But as the time changed, business became more cost
conscious and information hungry. Business managers wanted to
produce more and more with same resource. IT emerged as good option
for optimizing resources to achieve this goal. The investment gave
competitive performance. It not only cut cost around inefficiencies and
wastages but also improved by bringing change and better method to
work.
Slowly IT reached to a stage where it deserved to be. When one thinks of
efficiency, improved performance, good governance, cost cutting, optimization
of resources and better management practices, IT is getting strong
consideration.
- Business External
Number of researchers and academicians used Porter’s competitive forces
framework and have shown that IT can bring competitive advantage to business.
Other writers too like Parsons, Rockart and Scott Morton, Ives and Learmonth
had identified many competitive opportunities which IT can create to manage
competition. Increasing customers’ switching costs, Improving functional
efficiency and effectiveness, Product and service innovation, using IT as a vehicle
to inter‐organisational synergy and customer collaboration, Substitution to
labour and satisfying customer with improved services have been amongst them.
Even Japanese strategy to excel in their operational efficiency and effectiveness
to make competition difficult to beat, succeeded with the help of information
network. The way they could integrate the complete supply chain with
manufacturing, successful delivery with better quality at lower cost became
evident. They integrated organisations and operated successfully for one goal
and created win‐win case for their own business as well as to their suppliers. This
kind of business strategy worked based on integration amongst people, process
and IT. The famous story of managing Accounts payable at Toyota by very few
employees than large work‐force for Ford at US, presents the case for IT enabled
business model.
Below are few examples of new horizons of IT strategy where IT could influence
the business and helped them making their strategies work.
Building barrier for competition
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 11 of 41
It helps to take lead over competitors offering, in terms of improved service,
lead time, over all customer experience. Self service option provided by
Airline reservation, Internet banking and similar customer direct services
have created such a good experience to customers that today no competitor
can plan a competitive business without these services. In India even local
Cooperative banks and public sector banks are compelled to match this to
retain their customers.
Customer Management
It helped the retailers and other service providers to understand the
customer and their purchase need better. Offerings based on customers’ last
purchases could easily be made with the help of IT. Even item placement
strategy is being decided based on consumer (visiting & targeted) behaviour
that are captured and analysed by IT. It helped the sellers and service
providers to personalize products and services. Simple things like volume
based discounts and services loyalty points persuade customers to stay loyal
and buy from the same channel or retailer. This helped in retaining
customers and creating barriers to switch. In many case cost to switch as well
as personal familiarization to process, people and IT enabled services make
customers think to stay in relationship.
Cost cutting
Some of the IT enabled services have helped the industry to bring down the
cost so much that it created big barrier to entry and competition. “Low price
– No frills – Walk in” airline services could be enabled because of IT. Senior
airlines found it tough to compete with these low price ones on price,
efficiency and lead time. Similar barrier has been created by “Any time – Any
where” banking, and “On line services” by Leisure and hospitality industry.
Integration of suppliers with logistic service provider and customer systems
led by Walmart and Toyota has created barriers for other suppliers. It has
helped to bring the cost down and efficiency through out the complete chain.
New Business Model
New and emerging business models based on online purchase, payments and
delivery has created business barriers for others to scale and match the
service. Amazon, UPS and FedEX are in top list of these kinds of services.
Most of the automations which integrate information from operations to
supply and delivery come under this umbrella. Warehouse automation, GPS
based routing and many such IT enabled services created new business
models and processes which moved customers from one supplier or service
providers to the early adopter. Direct delivery by GE on order booked by the
customers on Dealers network improved the lead time to delivery which
became benchmark for others. This gave continued leadership to GE.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 12 of 41
The modern IT strategy is relatively matured. The good thing is that the IT strategy and
the approach to draft it are keeping pace with evolving technology, transforming
business and emerging concepts. This agility has made it contemporary in every era. The
demand and expectations from business has also contributed to this evolution. During
every period, CIOs collected good wisdom as what worked and what didn’t. This
learning has helped in evolution of new approach. They remained focussed to make IT
strategy work. Few important learnings are being listed below (ref: John Ward and Joe
Peppard, 2002), even though some are related to IT strategy and others relate to its
execution.
- Apply structured approach
- Focus on contribution to business
- Involve business people and make strategy to develop and support them
- Provide composite solutions rather piece‐meal approach
- Make system agile as far as possible as business will keep changing
- Re‐engineer business processes for visible benefits
- Extend project management techniques to IT implementation
- Need support from organisational structure, process and policies
- Keep watch on emerging technology and the usage that can give edge over
competitors
- Have holistic approach to manage IT
Their thoughts were also influenced by many factors including changing business
scenario and practices, evolving technologies and services, emerging business
opportunities and upcoming theories from academicians as well as experienced
consultants. All these inputs went into to make new incarnation of IT strategy as it looks
today.
Slowly the organisations realised that IT is not just the technology management, it is
much beyond that. Now, the creation of IT strategy is much more matured approach
than what it used to be earlier. It has seen many disruptive transformations and it will
continue to do so till new technologies and innovative ideas to use the technology in
holistic sense keep emerging. Many local as well as international events and policies
such as WTO agreements, UN climate summit, Free trading partnerships, Sarbanes‐
Oxley Act, Money laundering regulations in international business and Trade restrictions
will influence the direction by posing new constraints as well as creating new
opportunities. IT managers and CIOs needed to keep abreast with these changes,
especially if those are impacting the business for which they are managing IT.
Modern approach to IT strategy starts along with business strategy. Number of
methodologies is used for developing business strategies and many of them lead to IT
strategy too. Accordingly consultants and literatures are available to guide.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 13 of 41
Today IT strategy has the following business imperatives
- It must have business goal
- It must work in close collaboration with business
- Its growth must be planned in line with people and process
- It should be managed like any business investment
- It should be able to capitalize technology for organisations’ capability
- It has to be integral part of business service delivery
- It must be sustainable in long term i.e. grow with organisation and technology
- It should provide flexibility to business
Finally it should depict a roadmap of technological transformation of any
organisation, such that the change remains manageable and achievable.
The Porter’s theory on strategy in the 1980s, John Kay’s (2002) "Distinctive Capabilities"
(innovation, architecture and reputation) and Gary Hamel’s and C.K. Prahalad’s
"Strategic Intent" and "Distinctive Competencies" influenced modern IT strategy and its
approach a lot. Though their thoughts were centred around Business strategies, but IT
came into picture when the focus was taken to make business strategy work. Many of
the authors even included IT strategy into business strategy.
The way IT grew and influenced business, it became synonymous to innovation and
change. Business managers started expecting IT to bring positive changes and it has
been certainly introducing visible and promising change. Though the struggle continued
for many years as who is responsible for managing changes in the organisation,
especially on people and process front. But after many researches by academicians,
consultants and business organisations themselves, it was established that the main
reason for failure of managing changes and IT projects were because of passive
participation of business and functional team, and poor integration of IT objective with
business. Thus they recommended holistic innovation and effective change
management. Similar views were expressed by many including Stuart Crainer, in an
interview with Costas Markides, published under “The innovation solution” under
“News and Events” at London School of Business. He points out that the companies
need to start thinking of holistic innovation without separating Product innovation with
Technological innovation, Process innovation and Business model innovation. He
recommends that the managers must act upon with knowledge that they will be
benefited more if they take all of them together and act upon.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 14 of 41
Even during one of the presentation telecast (Forrester_BT), Forrester expressed that IT
should be looked as Business Technology and CEO should directly be driving rather than
CIO. The speaker further justified that CIO would have much smaller domain under
his/her control than what IT could influence to. Today IT has been able to contribute
towards many facets of business; hence, it acquired an importance where it deserves
management’s and board’s attention. All these must be reflected in IT strategy.
These concepts and theories presented integrated view of IT strategy with business
strategy. These lines of thoughts further led to evolution of Enterprise Architecture (EA)
approach to develop IT strategy. EA not only helped to integrate IT strategy with
Business but also aligned IT strategy with business.
Wikipedia defines EA as “Enterprise Architecture (EA) is a management practice for
aligning resources to improve business performance and help agencies better execute
their core missions.”.
Architecture is generally referred as assembly of different components to make a
complete structure, presenting unified value. Thus architecture must reflect three
elements, building blocks, their synergy and the emerging properties, e.g. The
architecture of a software system (Ref: Roel Wieringa, 2004) has building blocks:
software components, synergy: the way these components of the software are
collaborating and unified value: functionality, services, behavior, interfaces, reliability
and usability. Similarly, if we look at Enterprises, we find that resources, people, assets,
technologies and knowledge are bound together with common vision, mission,
objectives, goals, strategies, structures and processes to produce value to customers,
society and other stake holders. This representation of any organisation is the base in
creating IT strategy. The coherent and consistent view of IT across organisation gives
rise to common IT architecture and thus aligned IT strategy. That’s why, under EA, IT
gets self aligned with business.
The FEAF (Federal Enterprise Architecture Framework ‐ 1998) and open group’s EA
definition (TOGAF ‐ The Open Group Architecture Framework) covered four types of
architecture: Business architecture, Information architecture, Application (System)
architecture and IT infrastructure architecture. In this book we cover the last three
under Enterprise IT architecture and IT strategy while referring to the first.
Gartner had published a survey, based on more than 200 EA programs in March, 2007,
depicting different drivers for EA and Business‐IT alignment has been the most
important reason that the people adopted EA approach. The survey summary appeared
as below in Figure 2.2
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 15 of 41
Figure 2.2: Gartner Report
In the next chapter we will elaborate more on techniques to deliver IT strategy and that
will include EA.
A very recent phenomenon which is becoming common now‐a‐days is assessment of
Information assets during merger and acquisition. This is in line with take‐over strategy
that asset value of target organisation is rightly assessed. Today it not only includes
physical asset but also intellectual and information assets. During M&A, many
companies have started evaluating IT Strategy and the potential costs and benefits of
integrating IT systems besides workforces, facilities, processes and business functions.
Some strategist and value assessor also derive the cost of transformation and alignment
effort from current state of IT. A new approach is emerging through which better and
quick assessment can be made with IT systems of target organisation. Tata Steel, which
has been acquiring companies since long, has always been evaluating this aspect. As a
good practice, they do perform due diligence on this aspect and IT alignment as well. It
has become priority item for them in making the merger successful. We also observe
that IT not only represents the value of information asset but also presents the
behavioural and attitude part of the management. Let organisation behaviour specialist
see through information base and they will foretell about the culture and the
management practices.
On the other hand many business organisations have made information as part of their
product and services based on which their business runs. Well known organisations like
Dun & Bradstreet and Standard & Poor base their business mainly on information
assets. Today many companies collect information, transform them to suit to their
valued customers and sell. Interactive Prospect Targeting, UK, has been one of such
companies which created complete business model based on information collection and
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 16 of 41
services. Status of IT and Information base with companies such as Investment banking,
Credit rating, Marketing and customer profiling and many others, present their intrinsic
value.
Another area of strategy which has received prominence in IT strategy is use of
convergence technology for business efficiency and smooth operation. This includes
integration of data with voice, image, video, geographical maps, sensors and others. The
trend to encompass all the aspects to make business process complete, automated and
efficient with the help of convergence technology will continue to move up. And hence,
IT strategy has to address this aspect to integrate data with this technology to make
best out of information.
This topic just elaborated the expanding horizon of IT strategy, where it has retained its
legacy in improved form and adopted many new areas. The current focus of business
improvement and enablement has driven it to this stage and the same will take it even
higher in future.
2.5 Need for IT alignment with business
The way IT has evolved from tactical role of supporting business to strategic, as key
enabler, the perception of IT has changed in business context. This demanded IT being
proactive and transformational in nature. Early role of just defining “As is” and creating
application for business use changed to evolving “To Be” and enabling business
functions. This required serious participation, collaboration and transformation. The
evolution of new way to business needed creativity with knowledge, will to be better, a
roadmap to reach there and buy in of stake holders. These being the core management
function, CIOs participate in business evolution and strategic planning process with
different mind set than purely technological. CIOs bring similar perspective from
information to what CFOs bring for financials. Realising information being another
valuable resource for business, CEOs and the board welcomes inputs from CIOs.
While working through IT for such a long time, we observed that slowly business process
knowledge gets embedded in IT. Sometimes IT people could explain and justify the
current practices similar to, if not better than, the business people. This also happened
because the IT people could see the organisational processes beyond functional and
departmental boundaries. They have been more useful in evaluating and evolving
business processes which could be more practical and acceptable to all the stake
holders. (This observation is in no way to undermine the contribution of the functional
teams, who can also contribute to what would make more sense to business in
upcoming scenario.) The value in advice of IT managers and CIOs will depend on the
relevance of their knowledge and inferences in context of the business, either existing
practices or future processes. Therefore, when CIOs meet board or senior managers, the
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 17 of 41
Business operations alignment to business strategy itself is a difficult process and need
effort and strategy to achieve. Not only small organisations, which have limited
resources and skill to quickly shift and align to new business goals and strategies, have
problems but also the large organisations. In a recent SCTV telecast during November
2009, “New Ways of Working Together in the Consumer Goods‐to‐Retail Supply Chain”,
the speakers, Jim Falnney, Inez Blackburn and Mat Deeter shared their observations
from assessment of organisation alignment with organisation goal at P&G. Large
organisations are aware of this difficulty and they take steps as well to improve
organisational alignment with organisations strategy and goals, because they know that
they can reap benefit with alignment. The similar effort the management must make for
IT alignment to reap benefit.
In an article, “What is Strategy”, in HBR, November‐December 1996, Porter suggested
that organisation must create sustainable strategic position. He elaborated that in a
value delivery process chain all activities must fit and reinforce one another. Each
activity must be strong in itself and complimentary to other links to yield competitive
advantage. They should be consistent, reinforcing and optimizing effort. He explains
with examples how the strengthening a series of activities, which produce competitive
value, creates bigger barrier for competition. Finally he concludes that strategic fit
amongst different activities is fundamental to competitive advantage and its
sustainability. He calls it homogenisation. IT is also viewed in same perspective, and
hence, it is expected that it must be aligned to the business, reinforcing business
processes and optimizing effort to produce better value for an organisation; otherwise it
works as negative force and turns out as retarding agent.
On IT Alignment with the Business Plan, Grover S. Kearns and Albert L. Lederer, 2001,
expressed five high level check points,
‐ The IS Plan reflects the business plan mission.
‐ The IS Plan reflects the business plan goals.
‐ The IS Plan supports the business strategies.
‐ The IS Plan recognizes external business environment forces.
‐ The IS Plan reflects the business plan resource constraints.
The authors could argue that CIOs’ participation during evolution of business strategy
improves IT alignment to business and quality of IT strategy, as they could understand
the business perspectives and priorities better. They would align the effort and
resources to achieve certain goals which they pick from the business strategy and
business managers’ perspective. We have seen the CIOs changing IT portfolio due to
shift in new business strategies and priorities, rather sticking to what have already been
initiated and held. This strategy works and helps to command respect and co‐operations
from business managers.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 19 of 41
2.6 Changing IT strategy for different stages in business lifecycle
There is neither one strategy which fits to all organisations nor one which works at each
stage of the business. The same is true for the IT strategy too. Therefore, it is important
to keep IT strategy aligning with changing business strategies and priorities of the
organisation as well as emerging technologies. In emerging countries where government
policies, business scenario and customer demography are changing fast, IT strategy can
not be fixed for 5‐10 years. But this doesn’t mean either that an IT strategy can’t have a
long term perspective or it is stationary for life time.
If we see “The influence and Impact” model by John Ward and Joe Peppard, in new
context as below, it emerges clearly that the business environment is never static and
hence, the IT strategy has also to be as agile as the business is (Figure 2.3).
Figure 2.3
While business planning or strategy development, business managers take assumptions
for certain business components to be static and others changing over a span of time.
For example, rarely a business establishment takes product line or the factory location
changing in short term, but market conditions could be changing quickly. This means, for
certain components they plan on long term horizon and others on short term. The
enterprise architecture and business strategy for infrastructure, product line, targeted
customers are generally planned to be static over longer period but strategy for
unskilled labour, intermediate stock level and price incentives are planned on shorter
term. Same way, basic strategy for IT infrastructure, direction of IT services in the
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 20 of 41
organisation, line of technology platform, employee development and participation are
made for long term but user‐end machines, resource deployment and H/W
maintenance strategy could be of shorter duration. This division of what should be
considered on long term horizon and what should be on short term, depends on many
factors, including business strategy, strategic intent of IT, time taken to build and
stabilise, cost and organisation preparedness to frequent changes, manageability and
technological evolution. Market pressure and will to stay ahead are the other reasons
which drive change. CIOs must consider the above factors and few more which are
pertinent to their environment while preparing IT strategy.
We have experienced two very specific needs from business managers from both, the
emerging economy as well as the developed ones. They have been information hungry.
They always wanted more and more information, in line with their business needs, and
secondly, they wanted it quickly. Most of the CIOs and the IT managers have the
challenge to meet these expectations. By the time one system is ready and
implemented, users return with some new requirements or the changes. Earlier, the
system development and implementation used to take lot of time, long enough to
change certain business needs. This happens more with the organisations which are
relatively new to IT and evolving. This compelled IT industry and CIOs to change their
strategies, including some good modelling techniques and tools which can give longer
life to information infrastructure. This is what we discussed earlier that business users
have been driving rather compelling IT industry to innovate and innovate on all
dimensions. The IT industry has been coping with these phenomena with regular
delivery of higher capability machines and user friendly and industry specific software
packages. Business Process Management (BPM), Service Oriented Architecture (SOA),
Virtualization are few of them which supports agility over stability while increasing life
of IT infrastructure. CIOs too have to keep these in mind and exploit these offerings
from industry to create additional value for the business, without getting into the
jargons of IT. They need to manoeuvre as per the business users’ preferences i.e.
evolving systems of shorter lifespan as well as stable and integrated system with
reasonable life. CIOs need to understand this agility and create matching strategy.
This continuous evolution of IT does not let the IT department stabilise ever and yield
the expected benefit. At the same time longer stability can leave it out dated and
behind the industry. Therefore, a trade‐off and a new strategy need to be adopted and
that is careful balance and separation between evolution and stabilisation. Business
managers too have to play a role in guiding IT team with necessary business need and
direction. One need to plan with long term strategy in mind while keeping eye on
fundamental drivers and change agents which can give good guidance as what part
needs more of research, trial and evolution and what needs stability. A constrained
business strategy as well as implementation of new ideas will always be changing more
frequently than core and main line of business. CIOs need to differentiate them as well
as think of a mix that they can create to provide agile support to business. It is generally
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 21 of 41
a good practice that a goal or an explicit expectation is created in the beginning itself.
Continuous measurement and reviews must be held to keep the strategy and execution
aligned. The achievements must be formally registered on every review. If IT strategy is
on continuous change, matching the expectation of business for swift changes become
difficult, it is recommended that a fresh start is made rather than creating too many
work‐around, which finally makes the strategy and the system brittle and vulnerable. It
would be good idea to educate business managers with likely implication in this case.
McKinsey’s “3 Horizon” framework for growth management is also applicable to IT. It
gives good understanding why a business has a mix of fast changing and stable business
activities and why a CIO should also adopt both strategies at the same time. It indicates
that the business starts working on “Extending and Defending core business” as first
horizon, “Building emerging businesses” as second and “Creating Viable options” as
third. Depending on the current strength and strategy it focuses on one more than the
rest two. In case business strategy is focussing more on internal efficiency and
strengthening delivery capability, horizon one will get higher priority and accordingly IT
should be aligned. But the other two horizons should continue to be on radar with an
objective to quickly align IT strategy to new focus if the business strategy and focus shift.
It is obvious that business scenario and the capability & maturity of the organisation will
keep changing and accordingly priorities and look‐out of the business will change. What
CIOs can do better that they don’t let their eyes off from the other two dimensions.
Thus flexibility, scalability and upgradeability must be key feature of IT strategy.
McKinsey experts also suggest the same that Organisation keep pursuing all three
dimensions together, only the vigour to pursue some will be more than the other/s.
Unconsciously or consciously, CIO do work on similar strategy when they focus on
delivering current need of business but continue to explore and work on emerging
technologies and solutions for the future and upcoming business needs.
During nineties, CIOs faced a dilemma of whether to spend on their existing systems to
make Y2K compliant or to create new IT base for emerging business opportunities.
Organisations which continued to keep their focus on all the three horizons came out in
better shape after year 2000 to meet business requirement than those which just
focussed only on Y2K compliance. The first category of organisations understood the
opportunities offered by the web technology and used the same to reach to their
employees, customers and partners who are at distance while working on current
systems. They helped the business to connect to their business partners and create
value to business. Where as the organisations of second category became laggard. In
some cases, time being the essence of the business where early transformations
provided lead to the business, the second category needed to do a lot to catch up. Quite
often CIOs come across this kind of dilemma, which are posed by either business
condition or the technology evolution. The IT infrastructure as well as capability
mismatch are quite common constraints for IT organisations which does not allow swift
changes to match the business expectations.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 22 of 41
Similarly business keeps changing their focus to different facets of their entire
operations. Business strategy too moves around, based on their SWOT analysis.
Sometimes it looks for strengthening their weak link in business and at others they want
to exploit their strength. Its strategy is driven at one time by threats from competition
and product substitution and at others by opportunities in the market. All business
managers want their organisation to move and shift swiftly as per their strategy, and IT
is no exception. It depends upon the CIOs, how they tune IT strategy and align with
business quickly.
Current state of IT in organisation becomes one of the serious bottlenecks in this agility.
CIOs work under constraints such that neither they can scrap existing strategy and
infrastructure in one day nor they can be ready with new one next day. That’s why
McKinsey’s “3 Horizon” model is important. This helps CIOs to respond to the changes
quickly. They can keep the divide the team and be prepared to attend to static
operational needs as well as transformational need of the organisation. The business
managers must encourage and support CIOs for maintaining preparedness on all the
dimensions.
CIOs need to create different strategy for IT upgrade and service scope expansion
especially for those corporate, which are already having some infrastructure in place
and providing certain services to the stakeholders. This is called IT strategy for transition
and expansion. We would recommend here as well to evaluate the transition from
business perspective. CIOS need to evaluate the impact of continuing the current status
and take the business manager in confidence for this transition. The case will be easier
to justify when the likely impact is explained in terms of business. These could be
collapse of service, trailing behind the business competitor, inability to service the
growing business or increasing obsolescence and cost of operations. One can draft a
strategy, which includes plans for service continuity, upgrade plan, transitioning people,
process and systems, for the stake holders. In these cases well orchestrated move from
one stage to the next stage is necessary, as transitioning stake holders from a stable
phase is not an easy task. A proper risk assessment and controlled mitigation is
necessary to have and demonstrate to the stakeholders. Stakeholders’ needs at next
stage such as integrated view of past and current must be taken care off. Some
examples are like,
- Easiest approach in transitioning the financial systems is to switch at the
beginning of financial year with a strategy of getting past closed data in earlier
system and new and live data in new system. This is most popular strategy
where IT is taking quantum leap from small base.
- Post M&A, switch to the best system and practices at once with a conscious
decision that there would be some hiccups for the other case which would be
resolved with some or more effort but not what it would take for systematic and
long drawn migration. This approach is followed when big organisations merge.
Generally the bidder’s systems and practices prevail.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 23 of 41
2.7 A New role for CIO
CIOs, who participate in business planning (F2), are more likely to understand business
objectives and to link IT strategies closely with organizational strategies (Jones et al.
1995). CIO participation in organizational planning further improves the blending of
technical knowledge with business and supports the goals of the business by creating
alignment between IT and business strategies (Andreau and Ciborra 1996).
CIO’s role is influenced by many things including the business dependence on IT, CEO’s
game plan, stages of existing IT, growth and expansion plans, business focus and
approach and attitude of business. The role has multifaceted dimension and that’s why,
the organisations have different expectations from IT.
In an article “Federal CIO Roadmap” published by Touchstone Consulting Group, Inc., a
wholly owned subsidiary of Systems Research and Applications Corporation, a CIO is
defined as critical role in any organisation. This has summarised specific CIO
responsibilities, as specified in law, regulation, and OMB (Office of Management and
Budget, US) circulars and guidance, and are as follows. The expectations from CIOs in
government governed organisations remain more or less same across governments.
Strategic Planning
It supports the idea that information is critical resource to organisations and the CIO is
expected to play a strategic role for Information resource management. This expects
CIO to manage complimentary resources like skilled IT workforce, technology and
infrastructure, so that organisation is benefited. But being biased to Federal
organisations, it also expects to create strategies around budgets.
IT alignment with Business
This mainly leads to IT alignment and IT modernization in line with Government’s
Agenda and Scorecard. Even in government federation, it is important that IT is aligned
to the structure and policies of the government. CIO uses different models including EA
for IT alignment to business. She has to take initiative for performance improvement
within IT and the business domain, create infrastructure which can be interoperable,
secure, portable, scalable and cost effective. The system integrates with other
organisations in government and administration, as expected under government
framework. US government promotes these practices in line with FEA (Federal
Enterprise Architecture) reference model.
Budget Formulation and Capital Planning & Investment Control (CPIC)
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 24 of 41
CIO is expected to participate and guide the IT related investment and Control process.
In government they may not have to do much of influencing or selling activities for
investment proposal and approval, still they need to contribute initially to budget
formulation and later to utilization. Generally CIO will be responsible to proper
utilization and outcome of investments. They must take care of visible and justifiable
usefulness of investment. Touchstone group indicates that under US federal structure
CIO follows SELECT‐EVALUATE‐CONTROL approach to monitor.
E‐Government and IT Implementation
Every government takes help of IT for improving its business in governance, citizen
centric services and efficient administration. It has become a good tool to
communicate, listen and be transparent with citizens. Thus CIO’s role becomes
important in these initiatives and drives. CIOs need to develop strategy for eGovernance
and promote such projects which align with government’s objective and expectations of
citizens, the customers of government. With limited resource but with wide scope, CIOs
play key role in IT implementation. They need to keep in mind that they will get the
budget in tranche and hence, the project should create its useful functionality in every
sanction so that stoppage or late approval of further budgets does not waste
investment.
Program Management and Performance
This role is connected to planning and execution of Programs. A strategy to implement
such a structure that funds are efficiently used, stakeholders are timely reported and
benefits as well as connection to the governments’ objectives and policies are measured
and demonstrated. In consultation with the senior officials, a CIO must take due
initiative in forming a suitable structure (Steering Committee) for program governance.
She should ensure that necessary policy & guidelines, standards, role definitions,
monitoring and review practices are documented and followed.
Security and Privacy
This is vital function. Right strategy and implementation only can control and release
information access. CIOs must create infrastructure, structure and policies to manage it,
as lapses could lead to information leakage, misinterpretation, loss of confidence and
some embarrassing moment for the government. There are many federal as well as
local acts such as Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA), The Privacy
Act of 1974, E‐Government Act of 2002, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act (HIPPA), Data Accountability and Trust Act (DATA)‐ H.R. 2221 in US are to be abided
by. Every government has some what similar acts, which govern the data access and
control practices. ‘RTI (Right to Information)’, ‘Information Technology Act, 2000’ from
government of India and The ‘1998 Data Protection Act ‘, ‘Census (Confidentiality) Act
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 25 of 41
1991’, ‘Health and Social Care Act 2001 ‐ Section 60’ from UK government are the
examples of similar nature. CIO must ensure that relevant sections specifying the data
accessibility and security vide different acts from respective governments are
implemented and enforced in related IT systems.
At high level CIO’s role in non‐government business organisation will be little different
than that in government. Even though CIOs will do strategic thinking and participation in
strategy formulation, budgeting, Program management and Information control as
mentioned above, but organisation’s perspective and more space to operate would
make to play the role differently in business establishments.
Niloufer N Vazifdar, General Manager for Internal‐audit and IT at Forbes and Company,
expressed in an interview with "Searchcio Online” that soft skills are more important for
CIO. He thinks, "The role of a CIO is not just limited to technology, but about
management” (www.techtarget.in, 2010). He quotes that the ability for Multi‐tasking,
Coordinating skills, Team building, Thinking at C‐Level, Chemistry with boards, mental
toughness, Right Balance makes CIO more effective player in the management. In our
experience the following skills are must to play CIO role in any organisation, effectively.
Salesperson
First and the foremost, a CIO must be a good sales person. Sensing and understanding
business needs and selling solutions to business managers is key role of any CIO and IT
managers. It is suggested (Austin et al., 2009)that CIOs should be playing a role of
consultant and advisor to senior management which should give him close proximity to
influence policy. And they have also demonstrated the business benefits. But first the
CIOs themselves became passionate about making IT play significant role in business.
They need to understand it clearly that IT is for business purpose and more the value
business manager perceive more the IT will become integral part of the business. This
demands early and active participation of CIO in any business planning activity. Like any
sales manager, she needs to understand the customer, customer’s business and
customer’s industry, and then show a value map through IT. It is not an easy task, unless
CIO understands business and speaks same language as the business people. The key
function will be conceptualizing a strategic IT plan and selling and delivering firmly
based on Business need.
Visionary and Business Focused
The basic responsibility to bring IT infrastructure and services to a level, where business
finds IT as a valuable aid for growth and sustainability, lies with CIO and IT managers.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 26 of 41
Therefore, they need to be equally visionary if not more than the business managers.
They need to understand upcoming need of the business and accordingly organise IT.
Rather keeping IT ahead of business has become the need of the hours. Having this
vision throws big demand on CIOs. They need to understand the business, business
scenario including product/services, customers, market, competition, statutory need
and many other key parameters and present a right technology solution for them. These
solutions could be for managing current problems and issues or for the future. This
creates goodwill amongst business managers and they start respecting this kind of CIO
and IT managers.
This attributes also covers the responsibility of aligning the IT vision with Company’s.
Irrespective of the organisational strategic and tactical view, IT must play a vital role of
supporting business (Weill et al., 2009). IT is a critical resource and a CIO must make
sure that this resource must be fruitfully utilised for business and that can only happen
if IT is helping business to perform. It may work as planning tool, enabler to business
process or tool to measure performance for analysis and corrective actions, but the goal
and effort must remain in the same direction as of business. Even expectation of high
investment in a small business, investing effort to implement non‐priority systems while
leaving strategic area out‐of‐focus , creating an application which can not be absorbed
by the business people or planning to outsource where support services are seriously
constrained are cases of misaligned IT strategy. Where as creating even a smaller
systems which can support vital and strategic need of the business while adapting to
business constraints is successful alignments. A small IT system (resulting from low
investment) supporting maintenance requests, analysis of symptom and root cause,
alerts and recommendation for preventive actions based on last reported solutions will
classify as significant alignment to the business, than sophisticated system for payroll
calculation for 200 employees. A CIO must restrict himself/herself from making
decisions and adopting a strategy purely based on technology and personal likings,
rather orienting all decisions to business will bring benefit to the business and buy‐in
from business people.
Business Transformation and Change Agent
CIO creates a roadmap and expands horizon for IT, based on business focus for today
and tomorrow. A CIO is expected to not only create learning and performing
organisation within IT functional area but also proactively influence to whole
organisation. Supported by many innovations in technology and business practices, a
CIO is expected to come up new and innovative ideas regularly (Smith, 2006). I
remember when I faced such expectations from a profit centre head and colleagues on
my first assignment in this role. They always expected that I would come up with some
better process and technology solution to a business problem and upcoming business
practices. Later I became permanent member to business process innovation team.
They not only expected that we will provide better solution but implement too. This
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 27 of 41
threw a new dimension of our learning i.e. understanding of business, the industry and
the customers’ business. For example, it helped me to understand why the customer
wants standard mix of product variants in a lot than random mix at a time; and that
influenced change in production planning process where dispatches were planned with
respect to target customers. Again a business understanding of assembly process at
client’s factory helped to analyse and isolate cause of regular complain of component
failure. A close association like this develops relationship and makes the IT team a
partner and change agent. An IT strategy must create such opportunity for co‐creation
of value.
In an article in CIOCareer (www.ciocareer.com, 2010), “The IT Organisation of Future”,
the author summed it up this role very well. An IT organisation needs to have 4Es
(Explore, Engage, Enable and Evangelize) roles. It emphasizes that for a transformational
role; exploration of suitable technology and solution, engaging all stake holders from
inside and outside the organisation, enabling business functions to make business
strategy work and institutionalizing this change and mindset are necessary.
Information Asset Promoter
- Information Asset Value Creator and Protector
The way CFO works continuously to ensure that the organisation has the funds
available for the business and the financial assets are in good health and of good
quality, a CIO must constantly try for the same objective with information as asset.
The quality and the value of information asset are ruled by its availability for
operational and strategic purposes of the business. Other related assets like
Software and hardware come next. A business strategist would attach more value to
HUL’s IT asset in reference to its business than to what a coal mines have, and the
reason being contribution and criticality of information for the business. A
structured set of information and its integration and participation in business
enablement increases its value. Therefore, a CIO must be on continuous watch to
increase the valuation of this asset. Though the valuation of IT asset is not fully
reported in published balance‐sheets, but the trend has started.
Protecting the value is equally important to value creation and addition. Theft,
misuse and damage of information can erode the value and cause loss to the
organisation. The asset must be protected from falling in wrong hands such as pirate
and competitors. There are many interested parties across the globe who indulges
into this for personal and organisational benefit. Therefore, information must be
secured from authorised users as well as unauthorised users, internal as well as
external parties and through soft and physical mans. Framing good policies and
practices and instituting them to protect these assets is responsibility of a CIO.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 28 of 41
- Risk Manager and Whistle Blower
In pursuit of increasing value of IT asset, a CIO has to play an entrepreneurial role.
One can’t afford to take back seat as the role and function has inbuilt risk too. Most
commonly risk happens around shift in business strategy and changing technology,
which leads to obsolescence of this asset. Since both the risks are agile, IT can’t
stand stationary. Thus making long term call on IT strategy and infrastructure would
be difficult, but this, in no way, justifies no strategy and no plans. To mitigate the
risk, some part of strategy need to be developed with long term perspective and
some for a short term. But regular review will be a good practice, as long term in
reference to IT is not the same as in the case of setting up a manufacturing unit. As
usual in every business a risk is associated with reward, IT too appears having similar
characteristics.
A CIO must take two calls, one what appears core static like basic infrastructure,
over certain period of time and another, what have short life. Accordingly one needs
to evaluate the benefit and necessity and plan for investment. An obsolete
infrastructure, skill or legacy system would put more drag on business than
becoming an enabler. The business people also need to be more open minded to
consider cost of revitalizing IT as part of the cost of strategy implementation rather
than taking it as overhead. Ignoring IT investment could become a costly proposition
and risk to business. Knowing well the mind set of business managers, CIO must
ensure that the business managers are aware of the risk as well as the benefit they
will reap from the investment in IT. Selling IT in any organisation is not an easy task
except for few lucky CIOs whose counterparts in the business are enlightened with
capabilities of IT. This too works on normal selling and buying principle and i.e. the
value and the valuation. Therefore a CIO must make sure that the balance between
the value (usefulness) and the valuation (investment) are presented in favour of IT.
Sometimes, a CIO also needs to play a role of whistle blower. Organisations
processes and disciplines are built into the IT system. The prevailing practices and
health reflected by information is good indicator about the health of business and its
practices in any organisation. We support the idea that CIO should have her own
scorecard which not only reflects the health of IT system but also the health of the
business. A CIO can give a real analyst view as an outsider, as she is not part of day‐
to‐day business operations. When the system and the practices in IT offer better
value to business continuously, CIO has covered the occurrence as well as impact of
the risk.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 29 of 41
- Program Manager
A business spends significant amount of fund from IT budget on new development,
change transition and operations of IT systems. A CIO must manage it like any
business manager, rather a profit centre head, even though the organisation
considers it a cost centre. This is not because she would generate profit in real term
but always be conscious about generating more value for business than the
investment and the effort. More efficient and effectively a project is managed the
benefit will be that much significant. This will also answer to some of the eye raising
questions where business managers want to compare the investments between IT
and other opportunities based on returns. This brings total shift in perspective and
to make this happen she needs to be a good Planner, Organiser and Implementer
too. The value is generated all through the organisations in various forms, when IT
helps in making good decision, achieving strategic goals, reducing cost , improving
lead time and competitiveness and bringing efficiency and effectiveness in different
business areas. As a business enabler strategy maker and committed to make this
program successful, a CIO must take the business people together. It would be good
idea to inducing them to participate and develop ownership so that the success of
the implementation is ensured.
Business managers and the CIO’s peers look forward to the CIO for developing right
IT strategy and implementing within the budget and stipulated time. This leadership
requires a skill of good project manager, who can assemble different events and
components in a right chain and ensure that they yield right result within given time
and budget. This will need support from various agencies, colleagues and other
stakeholders aligning to the main objective and working in tandem with the leader,
the CIO. Thus developing good relation and inter‐dependence will help. Like any
business, a good strategy and a matured plan create good foundation for execution,
but effective and efficient execution along with the team is also necessary to reach
to the destination, IT projects also need similar approach. This skill makes a CIO, a
good Program Manager. A successful IT strategy and IT project adds tremendous
amount of value to the information asset.
‐ Knowledge Asset Creator
Quite often, we hear that instead of having a good IT system users are not using it,
rather they prefer their paper or self designed spread sheet for managing their
business. The challenge remains for CIOs when they want to integrate these systems
with each other. A business manager must understand that the value of information
increases manifold when the information systems are integrated and are integral
part of the value chain. Value gets added when users share common data and
platform for their respective functional area in a complete value chain process.
Again, the valuation of information asset moves up when it crosses boundaries of
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 30 of 41
one specific function or user and become part of an organisation and organisational
process. More and more structured information participate and influence business,
more the value it will have. Once information becomes essential component of
business operation, improvement initiative and strategy formulation for various
business functions, the information becomes knowledge and organisation becomes
knowledge driven. A CIO needs to address this facet of asset building at a priority.
The business goals, the strategies, the process, the performance and the
measurements along with their linkages clearly depict the management approach
and effectiveness. This set of information presenting the current status of any
organisation and its business performance, influence management actions and
reactions, in future. That’s why; it is also termed as business knowledge. The key to
knowledge is whether information helps in making inferences and learnings or not. A
CIO must focus on the strategy to transform organisation data into information and
establish knowledge base while promoting its usage not only for regular operations
but also for improvement drives and future strategies. This will help in
transformation of business organisation. A CIO must endeavour to achieve this goal,
obviously with due support from CEO and the peers, as it needs cultural shift.
A smart plan for education and willing participation from users, managers and senior
executives will help in this culture building. Under this plan information users and
managers help to design the data and its source to make their role and effort more
effective. Mostly the usage, inferences and direction for further refinement are pre‐
decided based on emerging data and trend. This work is led by functional subject
matter expert. This helps the general users also to take a direction based on the
information and initiate further exploration so that they can conclude the direction
and initiate new set of actions to re‐align with the goals and the strategies. The
approach can be applied to any functional area including customer & competition
management, operation, Sales and planning and others. A suitable policy and
strategy for knowledge acquisition, storage, retention, distribution and usage must
be part of IT strategy.
I saw a good example of this culture building, when I met a CIO who used to prepare
proactively certain statistics and reports for even weekly coordination meeting
based on the agenda of the meeting and importance of the business issues. He
found that a good mechanism to facilitate useful discussion based on information,
prioritisation of issues and setting up new goals or alarms during reviews. This made
IT an important organ of that organisation.
IT Manager (Organisation Management)
This is operation oriented role. Most of the people remain in this role without
recognising implied expectations and opportunities. Under this role one needs to
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 31 of 41
manage a functional department of an organisation as custodian of IT assets and
expand/extend usage on demand. Incremental change and obsolescence management
are business expectation. The focus is purely local where one tries to stay abreast of
emerging technologies and propose new investment before it becomes critical. To
make prudent use of infrastructure she organises IT staff and other local logistics. She is
also expected to assist organisation in framing local policies, practices and standards
pertaining to IT function. Even though it sounds like internal orientation and non‐
strategic in nature, but from strategy execution point of view this operation is
important. Keeping IT infrastructure ready to deliver information in time and in place is
critical to IT as well as to business. This too demands Knowledge and understanding of IT
along with business understanding. However, having sole responsibility of technology
and technology direction, she must have good skill to understand the need and deploy
the right technology, while protecting the organisation from the bad effect of
technology hype.
Most of the CIOs will agree that this role is obvious but hardly the organisation realises
that the structure, reporting and support are necessary element for its effectiveness.
We recommend that IT must be represented in the top management and during
meetings for business strategy creation and review, not only for being aware of what
emerges but also for active participation. And CIO must hold direct responsibility for
this.
A CIO is responsible to create right organisation structure while keeping eye on the
demand from business users and business priorities. A good governance practices must
be put in place for effective operation and utilization. McKinsey’s “3‐Horizon”
framework must be kept in mind. A federated organisational structure, as below (Figure
2.4), is recommended for a CIO to manage IT function in any organisation.
Figure 2.4: Organization Structure
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 32 of 41
Some of the responsibilities related to the compliance with local and country rules and
regulations also come under this role. They look for more information, transparency and
evidence of compliance to the rules. . They read and infer a lot about the organisation
practices through reported data. As McKinsey Quarterly indicated in the article “Five
trends that will shape business technology in 2009”, the government scrutiny and the
regulatory expectations are on rise and CIO need to be vigilant about fulfilling these
commitments on behalf of the organisation. Rules and Acts such as below have serious
impacts and need to be adhered.
- Part 11 – Electronic Records; Electronic Signatures (FDA, US)
- Patients personal data protection (HIPPA‐US)
- Public company accounting and reporting (Sarbanes‐Oxley ‐ US)
- Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA‐US).
Many of these are not only the bindings on the businesses in and around the same
country but also to the interfacing organisations from different countries. In India also
ministry of company affairs started demanding more and frequent reporting, after
Satyam’s episode, to assess business health and identify if financial irregularities are
creeping in. All these regulatory reporting originates from information and CIO is
custodian of the same. Therefore, CIO must lead the practice in any organisation to
establish such systems, which meet government and regulatory mandates at
manageable cost and minimal disruption.
Creating a Culture of Performance and Value
This is again strategic in nature. Every business head wants to have IT people who
possess knowledge of IT and be business oriented while delivering innovative solution
and value to business. These kinds of people are respected and are able to lead others
too to make new things happen.
The good thing is that workforce in IT is still young, full of energy, interested in
innovation and impatient to deliver. A CIO must channelise this energy and commitment
for the business. No wonder HR managers think that motivating IT people is easier as
well as difficult. With little encouragement and support from top managers, IT people
will be able to influence respective business users and harness their skills and capability
for the business. This is most prevailing practice in emerging countries and also seen in
some cases in developed nations, where IT envisioning happens at the top and under
the leadership of CIO the strategy is driven. Business people are not very willing partner
to this transformation. This lets the organisation put extra effort, investment and time
to achieve the same goal what could have been easier otherwise. But time is changing,
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 33 of 41
competition, efficiency and personal interests are bringing more and more business
users into this initiative.
Knowing well that IT is a game of mind and people are greatest resource, a CIO must
(Ref: Creating an adaptable workforce: important implication for CIO, March, 2008)
- Create agile and committed team : Recruit, train and retain
- Nurture enterprise‐wide collaboration within and across organisational
boundaries, time zones and cultures
- Offer new challenges and portfolio of solutions
- Manage growth potential and expectations of employees
- Instil the confidence of fairness in reward, recognition, development,
performance evaluation, nurturing innovation, supporting ideas and soliciting
advices, exposing them to bigger role and offering opportunities.
Infosys Business Consulting team has presented the following chart depicting role of the
IT organisation, and CIO being the leader must make the organisation to come up to
that expectation. His biggest role would be to make the team perform up to the
expectation of the stake holders.
Figure 2.5 : Different facets of CIO Source : Infosys Business Consulting published in CIOCareer
While writing about CIO’s role or new incarnation of a CIO, we realised that CIO needs
to be champion of soft as well as professional skills. Does it mean that he/she need to
be from special breed and most ideal professional on this earth? The answer is Yes as
well as No. As discussed earlier, depending upon the business condition and road map
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 34 of 41
to the destination, she will need better skill in one area than the others. On the other
hand the expectation remains the same from all professional managers and executives
that they excel in multiple skills. The good point is that the technology has offered a big
lever to the business and the benefit depends on how much it can be leveraged. Thus
achieving and demonstrating the business benefit is much easier than ever. All said and
done, CIO also has limitations what she can do herself and what would need
cooperation and participation from others. It is up to the senior managers to see that
the IT and the CIO are not choked in their organisation. The outcome from IT still
depends on business process transformation and collaboration, a CIO must learn to
collaborate, lead and share the success. IT is just one out of three essential elements
(People, Process and Technology) to successful transformation. A CIO, having good
support from organisation, can easily amalgamate technology with the other two to
deliver best in the industry.
2.8 Planning for IT strategy
Ideally the management initiate the task of IT strategy formulation after giving due
guidance. Just in case it’s not, CIO should initiate this task after taking CEO in
confidence. Irrespective of the case, the tasks are the same, only this exercise becomes
far easier, if it is driven by business strategy owners and key managers participate
willingly.
Collect data related to business
We discussed above that IT Strategy must be business oriented hence all preparation
must start from the understanding of business. And a good point (Ref: Beveridge, Colin)
to start this is collecting information related to
- What drives the business
• Vision, Mission and Objective
• Short and long term goals and strategy
- What business we are in
• Industry and sector
• Line of product and services
• Key customers and competitors
• Key market and market trends
• Business Model
• Business drivers and transformation plan
• Role and state of IT in the above
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 35 of 41
- How we are organised to deliver
• Organisation chart
• Roles and Responsibilities
• Formal and Informal processes
• Key measurements
• Key Suppliers
• Pain Areas
• Role and state of IT in the above
- Expectations of Business from IT
These are basically to understand where the organisation stands today. This step will
also be helpful to identify opportunity for improvement. A good strategist should try to
understand the behavioural aspect of the organisation as well, as factors like
organisation culture, inter‐personal as well as inter‐departmental dynamics,
bureaucracy, management style (management by exception, management by objective),
and power centres do influence IT strategy.
Prepare Management Team
It is important to take the important and influential stake holders of IT strategy in
confidence and organise a briefing session to achieve their suggestions and
concurrence. This briefing should contain
- Why IT Strategy is important
- How this supports to the management strategy
- Who all should be involved
- What will be the outcome and how the full journey will go
- Why their participation and guidance are important including what is expected
from them to create a good strategy.
Depending upon the organisation culture and management’s opinion about IT, the
briefing should be organised and minute to be circulated. Sometimes, CIOs also hold
one‐to‐one meeting with key managers before this briefing session. The success
depends on how the benefits to the business in general and functional area of
respective managers in particular are shown. It is sales process and CIOs prepare a lot
for this session. The outcome of this meeting gives first glimpse of fate of IT strategy.
A CIO must get the management commitment to drive it like any Business Planning
session and the approval for steering committee, suitable team structure and members
with defined goals and timeline.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 36 of 41
Initiate Collaboration Plan
CIO must identify key stake holders and manage relationship with them for support and
guidance. As more and more organisation culture becomes democratic even top person
wants collaborative work and decision making than taking hard decision and pushing it
downwards. Though in family driven business as well as business where top man is in
strong position, push works, but dos not yield always a desired result. The resistance
and the indifference derail this process and further execution.
I have seen couple of CIOs successfully getting the commitment from senior and
powerful managers, not by delegation or through circulars and office orders from top
person, but by attaching significant role and showing extra respect to them. One just
need to keep in mind that the best strategy may not be the one that CIO thinks but it
would be the one that works and organisation is benefited. CIOs must control their ego
and then facilitate collaboration. On items or agenda where stalemate is likely must be
resolved separately before participants take egoistic stand and make it win‐lose or lose‐
lose case. There could be a case where a CIO needs to take commitment and agreement
on personal basis to move forward, but that should be avoided as far as possible.
Create mind set for Process Re‐engineering and Business alignment
There is always opportunity for improvement, especially in business domain. A CIO must
take this opportunity for improvement and alignment. Process Re‐engineering and
Business alignment quite often gives good result. Therefore, it is worth influencing the
respective business manager to think differently or out of box to identify such
opportunities. A CIO should prepare and come out with ideas and thought provoking
questions that can be placed before the team, working out IT strategy, such that the
team explores possibilities with open mind. The examples could be like switching from
centralised IT service stations to user driven self‐service mode, introduction of
information based preventive maintenance practices than break‐down based or
prioritizing sequence of inspection of incoming materials based on demand from stock
manager and the past complains with respect to supplies from suppliers than first‐in
first‐out.
The business priority must be central theme of IT strategy. SWOT analysis of the
business might have indicated the high yield and focus area, and IT strategy must be in
accordance to the same within certain parameters. It would be worth preparing to
discuss demand from customers, suppliers, government, industry and other stake
holders to set the tone for improvements. If current status is available a comparative
statement would trigger good discussion and the outcome.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 37 of 41
More the IT strategy is aligned, more the chance it will have for buy‐in and overall
success. The CIO must get ready to control the expectation building too, as some
managers may look forward to very optimistic change and the benefit. It could be based
on their readings of success stories or the technology hype. A CIO must prepare to help
them to elaborate and have realistic view with respect to their organisation. At the
same time, this would be right occasion to slowly set the expectation of upcoming
changes in respective areas, so that all participants are getting mentally prepared for
self change as well as influencing others in and around their domain.
Focus at Business benefit and Investment
A CIO must keep in mind that selling of IT strategy will happen in accordance with the
benefit that it can promise and achieve. Fortunately and unfortunately the benefit
comes out from the business domain which is not under direct control of CIO.
Therefore, this team must be persuaded in a way that they also identify the benefits
clearly, whether they are tangible or intangible. At times, CIO may need to help them in
this process. They need to evaluate the benefit in view of upcoming investment or
effort. Fortunately, the willing participants apply their mind to innovate and come out
with brighter ideas, having more benefits. Another way is to show them their current
processes and value chain, and suggest some changes in process or introduction of IT
that can improve benefits and help them to achieve the targeted goal from the strategy
that they had formulated. A CIO must work with them to visualise such opportunities
and reap the benefit. It will be worth considering the statutory compliances that
organisation needs to achieve and the cost of non‐compliance. These benefits become
good guidance for creating IT strategy as well as prioritizing the investment and actions.
These preparations followed by regular team meeting is the beginning of the good It
strategy. In the next chapter we will discuss the technique at length.
2.9 Summary
In this chapter, we started with evolution of strategy, where we discussed the way it has
been evolving over few decades. We discussed the changing focus and the approach
from last few decades and the way emerging technology, business practices and
business problems have influenced it. Learnings from successes and failures have also
influenced the direction and the approach. Slowly the whole IT and Business community
converged to the idea that IT strategy must be aligned to Business strategy for its
success and benefit to the organisation. There are different approach and techniques to
achieve the same but a top‐down approach with Enterprise Architecture has been
gaining more popularity. We also discussed that no strategy work for all the time and at
all stages of business. Strategy for technology upgrade for sustenance and business
improvements for managing competition will be different as they have different focus
but they can be combined together to be part of one common strategy.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 38 of 41
Changing times demand change in roles and perspective. A CIO needed to be more
business oriented and maintaining balance between internal as well as external focus. A
good understanding of business imperatives and collaborative approach always help to
shine this role. Till CIO understands the management perspective and appreciates the
perspective of individual influential pockets, she can manoeuvre well and get buy‐in
from respective stake holders. She must be ready to create win‐win situation and to
keep focus on business benefit, which can make the job easier.
IT strategy process requires certain preparation. We call it “Strategy for IT Strategy” and
it is recommended to every CIO that she pay attention to them. There could be few
extra tricks too, but the main objective here should be to get the commitment and
participation from all the stake holders.
Chapter 2: Getting ready for IT Strategy Page 39 of 41
2.10 Glossary
CIO Chief Information Officer
CSF Critical Success Factors for success in business
IT Information Technology
IT Alignment This term implies that output of technology investment should
support business goals
Change This defined as change that is required in an organization to
Management achieve a new and desired state
Y2K This refers to the problems that the business world suffered at
the start of year 2000. During this time, because of
programming logic problem, the world went through business
turmoil.
2.11 Review Questions
1. How IT Strategy has evolved over years?
2. What is role of CIO?
3. What are required qualifications of a CIO for a manufacturing organization?
4. What is outsourcing?
5. How collaboration ensures business integration?
2.12 Project Work
Please form a team of five members and visit a manufacturing organization which,
would have existed for last ten years. Discuss with head of IT department about the role
of IT in achieving business objectives. Find out evolution of IT over years and the way
the role of IT has changed in these years. Based on this discussion, draft a report on
changing role of IT in a manufacturing organization.
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www.CIOIndex.com
www.gartner.com