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Will your IT team surprise you in 2011?

It’s customary at this time of year for the media commentators to do one of two things:

  • A retrospective on what 2010 brought – the events, mishaps and surprises.
  • A look forward to 2011 – predictions and forecasts of what will take the world by storm and what, specifically, CIOs will need to be able to grapple with.

We’re well into 2011 now, so here’s our take on what we think the year has in store for senior IT executives, but with a twist.  We aren’t technologists; our focus is on what it takes to extract value from technology , and what we believe 2011 will bring is an increasingly loud and clear call for CIOs to go beyond project delivery and ‘keeping the lights on’ – into the whole arena of business value.  We see more and more evidence that senior management teams are waking up to the fact that delivering technology projects to time and budget is only part of the story.  More and more emphasis is rightly being placed on what you need to do to get value from the system long after the project team has gone away.

Will your IT team surprise you this year?

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What skills do you need in your IT team?

We’ve previously written about the emergence of the technology function from the back office and how IT teams are increasingly playing their rightful role in leading and enabling new business models.  Clearly, the role of the technology function must have implications for ways of working, skills and performance measures.  But is the core capability so different, whether you are looking for process efficiencies or leading the transformation to updated or new and innovative business models?

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Measuring up to the unmeasurable: the future for IT

“Everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted” (Einstein)

What gets measured gets done, and we recently had a fascinating conversation with the IT Director of a FTSE 100 company on the topic of IT performance measures.  He’d recently worked with business colleagues to come up with more meaningful measures of his own team’s performance.  ‘Availability across 100% of service desk hours’, for example, has been replaced by ‘availability of business analytic reports, on time, in full and accurate’.  It’s not that service desks aren’t important any more, but business analytics have more impact on the success of the business – decision-makers need timely and accurate information against which to plan and deliver business objectives.  It’s putting the information back into IT.

But these are still lagging measures of performance.  What are the leading measures that IT teams need to sign up to?  How can you measure in advance if IT is able to deliver what the business needs?

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Value from technology – lunatics or gold dust?

Imagine you are a senior operational manager.  It’s six months or a year since you cut over to a new system, and the executive team is asking for an update on the business case – how’s it going with the faster / bigger / better targets that were set?

You’re tempted to pick up the phone to the IT team, but they formally handed the system over to you several months ago, and they’re all now busy off-shoring their applications and trying to get the company to standardise on a single platform for mobile computing.

It’s all down to you – and the lunatics in the asylum.

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Posted September 13, 2010 by fionazealley. Comments (0).
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Would you want Nick and Dave to sponsor your next IT project?

They may be busy cutting every major IT project this country ever thought of, but just look at the leadership and sponsorship that oozes out of their every pore.  Forget their politics, they are in this together and are making every effort to take us all with them.

Not so different from what most big (or even small) systems implementations need.  Generally, you see an embattled IT manager busting all he has to meet the deadline, with the business sponsor giving the occasional set-piece motivational speech (or perhaps just an e-mail).  An exaggeration perhaps, but how often do you see business and IT leaders really showing that they share the same ground?  Let’s see what Nick and Dave are doing….

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Using consultants in tough economic times

It’s the most common and most predictable question in any social conversation I have at the moment.  I usually wait to be asked it, simply because I’m interested to see how quickly the subject comes up.  it does, very quickly, very often.  And the question is, ‘how is your business being affected by what’s been going on in the financial world?’ 

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Posted October 19, 2008 by Tim Connolly. Comments (0).
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