Discussion 1
“Strategy Methodology” Please respond to the following:
• Analyze the impact of economic factors on the development of IT strategy decisions at the enterprise level of the organization.
• Review IT strategy methodology on page 88 of the Lane text. Explain how the IT strategy methodology can be developed to minimize economic factors. Justify your answer.
Discussion 2
“Economic Factors” Please respond to the following:
• Reflect upon the economic factors that would lead a CIO to consider outsourcing or offshoring critical IT segments (i.e., help desk support, software development, and quality assurance) as a viable option for an organization. Analyze three economic factors that could lead the CIO down the path of outsourcing or offshoring.
• Assess whether or not economic factors lead to the same level of IT outsourcing or offshoring decisions, despite the business or industry. Explain your answer.
C09 07/22/2011 10:15:25 Page 88
IT leader who had just been hired and would be focused on developing a long-term IT
strategy for the company.
This chapter shows how to develop a strategy for your IT organization and avoid
getting overwhelmed with day-to-day issues. Many CIOs get caught up in tactical
issues and never take the time to establish a future strategy for the organization. The
process is not new or difficult, but many CIOs fail to devote the time to this area and
end up like Fred.
OVERVIEW
Developing an IT strategy is critical for IT leaders. Unless your organization has
developed an understanding of your future goals and objectives, you will not be
successful in leading it forward. In the same manner that you must first decide where
you want to live and build your dream house before engaging the architect and building
contractors, you need to develop a future strategy in order to successfully build your
IT organization.
This chapter is written for someone who has never developed an IT strategy in the
past or needs to revise an existing strategy to align with the company’s future direction.
We first review the methodology you can use to develop your strategy and then go
through the actual steps necessary to complete the strategy. It is important to note that
this is a collaborative process between the IT organization and its business partners. You
must actively engage them during the process and solicit their input during the
development of the strategy. The IT strategy should be considered a component of
an effective business strategy. Finally, we recommend that your strategy is a living
document that is updated on a regular basis to support the evolving nature of your
business. If you decide to enter a new market, offer new products or services, or change
your business model, the IT strategy must be revised to support the
business.
IT STRATEGY METHODOLOGY
The methodology for creating your IT strategy consists of three steps, and development
of your improvement road map encompasses three critical elements, as shown in
Figure 9.1.
The first step is to understand the current state of the IT organization. Key questions
for determining current state include:
& Has the organization been successful in meeting the needs of the business?
& Are the relations between the IT organization and its business partners collaborative?
& Does the business feel that investments in the IT organization are providing the
desired benefits?
It is important to take an objective view of how the organization is operating today
and not assume that things are going great.
88 &
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Defining the future vision for the IT organization is the next step. During this step,
it is important to understand the future business strategy and how the IT organization
can enable the business to achieve its goals. Interviews with key business partners,
such as product development and sales, are required to understand their future
direction and areas that technology can assist. You should also conduct external
research on how leading companies in your industry are providing technology
solutions to support their business.
The final step is developing a road map to get you from where you are today to your
future vision. This includes taking into account how much your company is willing
to invest in the IT organization, along with realistic estimates for the time required to
achieve your future state. We recommend that you develop a six-quarter (18-month)
IT road map. Six quarters are long enough to make significant changes within the IT
organization and in your ability to deliver meaningful benefits to the business. Note that
your six-quarter road map will not be stagnant and should be updated on a quarterly
basis.
The critical elements of your strategy include people, process, and technology. By far
the most important is people:
& People means having the right team aligned with your business partners. This is
essential for your success and we recommend that you devote considerable
attention to this area. It is very often the case that you do not have an effective
team and need to make some organizational changes. You need to take a hard look
at the organization and decide if the team needs any upgrades to achieve your
future vision. These upgrades may include hiring more senior-level staff, addressing
skill-set gaps, or conducting additional training.
& Process can be thought of as glue that holds together the people and technology
elements of your strategy. Frameworks such as the Information Technology
Infrastructure Library (ITIL) and Control Objectives for Information and Related
Technology (COBiT) exist with best practices for managing an IT organization. You
need to evaluate the process maturity of your organization and determine whether
People
IT assessment approach is made
up of three steps:
Development of your
improvement road map is
structured around three
elements, which incorporate
the core competencies of a
value-centric IT organization.
TechnologyProcess
31 2
Develop
Improvement
Road Map
Define
Future
Vision
Assess
Current
State
FIGURE 9.1 IT Assessment Methodology
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you need to make improvements in this area. Staff members often resist processes
and view them as bureaucracy; however, as you grow your organization, you can
no longer operate effectively without basic processes like incident, problem, and
change controls in place.
& Technology is the remaining element of your strategy. Often CIOs spend an
inordinate amount of their time in this area and do not give adequate attention
to people and process. Technology is certainly important, considering the fact that
the IT organization is expected to provide automation capabilities for the company;
however too many CIOs get enamored with technology and focus primarily on this
area to the detriment of the others. Key elements of your strategy include solutions
that are flexible, cost effective, and can scale to meet future demands of the
business.
We now walk through this methodology in greater detail and describe how it can be
used to develop your IT strategy.
Step 1: Assess the Current State of Your IT Organization
When assessing the current state of your IT organization, we encourage you to take a
very objective view and expect to identify many areas of improvement. If you are an
incumbent CIO, it is very easy to think that things are going well in your organization
based on how hard you and the staff are working. You may well need to bring in a senior
consultant to assist in the assessment. Newly hired CIOs have an easier time of taking an
outsider’s view of how well things are operating and identifying areas of improvement.
Regardless of the situation, most IT organizations have areas that can be improved, and
this is the time for a careful review.
Examples of key questions that should be answered during this assessment include:
& Are current business needs being met?
& Is the expected return on investments in technology being achieved?
& Is the project portfolio aligned with business objectives?
& Where does the technology directly touch your customers?
& Does the current organizational structure create barriers or inefficiencies?
& Are the skill mix and staffing levels in place sufficient?
& Are third-party resources being applied effectively?
& Are outsourcing opportunities identified and leveraged?
& Is your spending in line with that of your peers? What are your cost drivers?
& Is there an effective process for approving, managing, and overseeing projects?
& What is the vendor/partner selection and management process?
& How do you assess business risk and put risk mitigation programs in place?
& Are standard development processes defined and adhered to?
& What gaps exist in the architecture?
& How are new technologies evaluated and deployed?
& Will systems scale with corporate growth plans?
& How are new technologies evaluated and deployed?
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We encourage you to spend a lot of time with your business partners to understand
their future strategies and discuss how technology can assist in achieving their goals.
We recommend that you interview your key business partners and ask these open-
ended questions:
& Tell me about your business and plans
over the next one to two years.
& Do you have any strategy documents that I can review?
& How well is the IT organization serving your business today?
& Do you have any suggestions on how we can improve our services?
The goal is to spend the majority of time in these meetings listening and learning
more about your partners’ current challenges and potential areas that technology can
assist. A word of caution: If you ask for feedback, be prepared to hear about things that
are not working well within IT today, and use this information to identify areas of
improvement. Communication is very important during this process. We recommend
that you summarize the results of your discussions in an e-mail to your business
partners to validate what you heard and explain what you intend to do to improve
things. The end result of this phase is to summarize your current state. Table 9.1
provides an example that you can use.
Red, yellow, and green ratings can be used to highlight areas of improvement in
simple terms that your business partners can understand. Do not use a lot of technical
TABLE 9.1 IT Assessment Summary Example
IT Element Current State Rating Corrective Actions
People Very complex IT organizational
model
Red Simplify IT organization model
and align to business partners.
Inexperienced staff responsible
for applications functions
Hire experienced IT leader who
can build a
management team.
Business partners unsure whom
to contact for IT services
Clarify IT roles and business
partner engagement process.
Process No formal process to review
and prioritize IT requests
Yellow Establish executive-level
governance board.
Limited management metrics
on effectiveness of IT group
Develop small number of IT
performance metrics.
Basic IT processes, such as
change control, not in place
Adopt process framework, such
as ITIL, as overall methodology.
Technology Systems instability and staff
focused on day-to-day activities
Yellow Develop overall IT architecture
to guide future
investments.
Limited business intelligence
capabilities exist today
Invest in business intelligence
for competitive advantage.
Recent security issues and
no formal risk management
program in place
Hire experienced security
leader and develop security
program.
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jargon, as this will confuse everyone and limit the effectiveness of this assessment. Based
on the results of your current-state assessment, we are ready to proceed to the next step
of defining your future state.
Step 2: Define Your Future Vision
When defining your future vision, you need to strike a balance between a bold, forward-
looking strategy for your organization and something that you can reasonably deliver in
the next two to three years. The overall vision for your organization should not really
change over time, and your strategies should be focused on major deliverables that you
plan to accomplish over the next couple of years. This is the time to reach out externally
to understand industry best practices for similar companies that you can implement
for your business. Too often CIOs are internally focused. Now is the time to reach out to
your peers, industry analysts, consultants, and vendors to understand the possibilities
that exist for your company.
Major components of your future vision should include:
& IT vision statement
& Key business strategies that the IT organization will assist the company in
achieving
& Major IT strategies that you plan to employ over the next couple of years to assist
business partners in achieving their business strategies
An example of an IT vision statement might be: ‘‘Company X business partners are
delighted with the services provided by the IT organization.’’ This vision will not change
over time, and staff members within the organization will strive to provide excellent
services to their business partners.
It is important to understand your company’s future business strategies in order
to identify areas in which the IT organization can provide the most value. If these
strategies are published, you can validate your understanding during interviews with
members of the management team. Otherwise, you will need to draft your under-
standing based on these conversations. Key business strategies for your organization
might include:
& Grow the business 30 percent over the coming year by introducing two new
product lines.
& Improve customer satisfaction and achieve highest industry rating as measured by
independent survey.
& Reduce costs by 25 percent through selective outsourcing and supply chain
management.
From an IT perspective, it is important to have IT align with these business
strategies and demonstrate how the organization is adding value and contributing
to the business goals. Note that it is possible that the company may not have well-
articulated goals; this may make it harder to demonstrate how the IT organization is
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enabling the business. In either case, your IT strategies should contribute to one or more
of these areas: increase revenue, improve customer satisfaction, reduce costs, and meet
compliance requirements.
Major IT strategies fall into two categories: internal IT and business enabling.
Internal IT strategies might include IT organizational structure, technology refresh,
governance, or process improvements. Examples of business-enabling strategies would
be specific initiatives that would assist the sales organization to grow the business, help
the product development organization develop products quicker, or cost-savings ini-
tiatives through automation of tasks that are performed manually today.
Provide management with alternative proposals, usually based on level of invest-
ment and desired time frame, to achieve the future vision. IT is competing with many
other investment priorities. You need to be realistic regarding the level of resources the
company can devote to this area. Table 9.2 shows a high-level framework that you can
provide to management to determine your investment strategy.
TABLE 9.2 IT Investment Alternatives Framework
Alternative Major Programs
Time
Frame
Estimated
Incremental
Costs Business Benefits
Aggressive
implementation
Hire third-party integrator
to accelerate IT strategy
implementation.
Reorganize IT under
experienced leader.
Establish IT governance
board to oversee
program.
12
months
$10–20 M Improve IT
performance in
shortest time frame
possible.
Will require
considerable shift in
business priorities
and IT funding.
Accelerated
implementation
Hire third party to assist
in IT program
implementation.
Continue with existing IT
leadership and reevaluate
management team.
Provide business
executives regular
updates on IT program.
18–24
months
$5–10 M Improve IT
performance with
minor shift in
business priorities
and funding.
Incremental
improvements
Leverage third parties in
selected areas.
Maintain status quo with
existing IT leader and
management.
Formalize program and
provide regular updates
on progress at lower
levels in organization.
24–36
months
$1–2 M Least costly
alternative.
No shift in existing
business priorities
or funding.
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When generating alternatives, start with your existing organization and budget,
and provide management with an estimate of how long it will take to achieve your
future vision. Your second and third alternatives can add additional resources and/or
shorten the expected time frame. This is an iterative process and a great opportunity to
spend more time with your business partners to ensure that you understand their
business requirements and how the IT organization can enable the organization to be
successful. Once you have locked down the investment envelope and desired time frame
to achieve your future vision, you are in a position to develop a more detailed
implementation road map.
Step 3: Develop Improvement Road Map
The improvement road map is how you take your future vision for the IT organization
and convert it into reality. Based on your investment envelope, you need to flesh out the
individual elements of your strategy. These strategies fall into the three elements that
we discussed previously: people, process, and technology. Each of these elements will
have three to five individual strategies that will comprise your overall IT strategy. Next
we review each of these elements in more detail.
People
As discussed previously, people are the most difficult area and the one that we
recommend you devote considerable time and attention to. Having a great IT team
that is well organized and aligned with the business is essential for success. For this
reason, consider structuring your organization like the business. For example, if you are
functionally organized with global leaders of sales, product development, and so on,
we recommend that your IT organization have teams that support these functions.
However, if you have a line-of-business structure with general managers, we recom-
mend that you have IT groups aligned with these businesses. Your goal is to make it very
easy for your business partners to do business with the IT organization, including
knowing whom to contact for assistance.
IT governance is another critical area that needs to be established in order for an
IT organization to be successful. Demands for IT requests always exceed the company’s
ability to fund this area, and a fair and consistent process needs to be established. It is
critical to establish an IT governance board, IT steering committee, or other mechanism
for business leaders to evaluate major IT initiatives and determine which ones are the
most important for the company. These groups should be cross-functional and include
senior-level staff members who can make investment decisions for the company. Critical
objectives for these groups include oversight of the major IT programs and approval of
future IT investments, and meetings should be held on a monthly or quarterly basis.
Of equal importance is the governance that is put in place beneath this executive level to
execute to the direction provided by the business leaders. Typically, this working-level
group is supported by the establishment of a program management office and accom-
panying methodologies and processes.
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Staff development and training is another area that should be included in your
overall strategy. Because the IT field changes rapidly, programs need to be put in
place to ensure that your staff members are trained on the latest developments. If
this area is overlooked, IT organizations either have to use consultants or continu-
ously hire new staff with current skills. Included in this area is the need for
individual development plans for staff members and documented succession plan-
ning for key executive and management roles. Finally, one word of caution: Beware
of a strategy that overemphasizes staffing your key positions with internal resources
only. Although such a strategy may have worked well for prior IT generations,
today’s IT world is moving far too quickly to be able to rely only on resources who
have been brought up through company ranks. An appropriate mix is suggested to
ensure that new thinking is introduced into your organization when and where
needed.
IT sourcing is another area that you need to include in your overall strategy. No
organization can be good at everything, and you need to analyze what you view as your
core competencies, areas in which you will spend the time to hire and develop skilled
staff. Examples of skills that we recommend you always keep in house would be
architecture, business analysis, vendor management, and program management.
Context skills are those that you should consider for outsourcing to third parties.
Applications maintenance, quality assurance, and help desk functions are examples of
functions that you may want to outsource. Keep in mind that each company will have
unique requirements. You need to go through core/context analysis to determine your
company’s sourcing strategy.
These are a few examples of people strategies that you should consider for your IT
strategy. Each organization is different and will have unique areas that need to be
developed. As mentioned, the people area is the hardest one to perfect. Hire the best staff
possible, and keep them closely aligned with your business partners. Do not compromise
in this area or be pressured to accept less effective staff since your success relies heavily
on having the right team in place.
Process
Process is the glue that binds the people with the technology to ensure that the overall IT
organization works effectively. Many IT organizations do not spend enough time in this
area, seeing it as slowing things down or downright boring. Process should be viewed
like brakes on a car, which are provided to allow the car to go faster, not slower. When
approaching overall IT processes, consider following a framework such as ITIL. This
framework has a catalog of standard processes, such as change management and
problem management, that should be adopted by your organization. The infrastructure
organization, in particular, needs to pay close attention to processes, and following this
framework can speed up the adoption cycle. If your team or clients are not ready for
ITIL terminology, many ITIL concepts can be adopted in advance of a full-blown ITIL
implementation. Start by setting up ITIL training for IT leadership and some of your
most forward-thinking business partners.
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Focus on a couple of processes at a time since it takes a while for the
organization to adopt them in their day-to-day operations. Typically, an internal
IT program should be established that prioritizes the processes needed and launches
focused projects in a staggered fashion to ensure optimal adoption and minimize
disruption.
IT investments are often one of the largest capital expenses in the company,
along with facilities, and processes need to be put in place to ensure that these
investments are carefully evaluated. The IT leader should partner closely with the
finance organization to ensure that business cases are developed for proposed IT
projects and return on investment (ROI) analysis has been performed. IT projects are
competing for scarce resources with other investments within the company, such as
the decision to open a new office. The business has many competing priorities and IT
projects should follow the same ROI analysis as IT investments. Too often depart-
ments that are very vocal about their needs, without adequate business justification,
get all the attention (projects); checks and balances need to be in place for these
investments.
Development of critical metrics to measure the overall effectiveness of the IT
organization is essential to demonstrate that the organization is improving over
time. Service organizations, such as IT, can be viewed as merely cost centers. Metrics
can be used to identify areas of investment along with key drivers for these expenses. For
example, the help desk may be spending an inordinate amount of time supporting a
given department with e-mail issues and may determine that some training is required.
The majority of applications development staff members may be spending time on an
end-of-life finance application while ignoring requests for a sales application that can
generate additional revenue. At the very least, you should establish a typical best
practices operations review process. Each of your direct reports should identify the top
three performance metrics that are critical to their success and present these metrics
over time with clear goals identified for each one. These metrics should be compiled
into a single report and reviewed monthly. Each missed goal should result in a
remediation plan.
Communication is another area to which many IT organizations do not devote
the necessary time and resources. Technical staff members are not always the
best communicators and can easily confuse business partners with technical jargon.
This can lead to bad relations between the organizations, and a decline in the level of
cooperation. Hiring a communications staff within IT or soliciting help from the
corporate communications organization can assist in this area. Implementing new
technology will require changes to how the business is operating, and human nature
does not always embrace change. Clear, crisp communications inside and outside of the
IT organization can help in this area and facilitate change within the organization. A
top-notch communications manager will implement a variety of mechanisms, such as
business partner and department-wide meetings and newsletters, to ensure that
expectations are clear and well managed with your business partner and internal
IT staff.
These are a few examples of processes that you should consider for your organiza-
tion. Implementation of a continuous improvement program can help to drive the
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overall process maturity within the organization. Your continuous improvement
program should identify those processes that are critical to running an effective IT
organization for your company and track progress toward achieving your ultimate
goals. Keep in mind that these programs will require time, and management focus and
discipline are necessary for them to be successful.
Technology
Technology is the final element of your strategy and an area that some IT
organizations overemphasize. Do not underestimate the ability of technology to
assist in the transformation of the business; however, first you must ensure that you
have the right people and processes in place. One of the first areas to address is an
overall technical architecture for the company. Just as an architect develops blue-
prints of a house for a builder, an IT architecture serves as the broad basis for
deployment of technology. Your architecture should encompass these areas: busi-
ness architecture, data architecture, applications architecture, and technical/
infrastructure architecture.
Business architecture covers business goals, business functions or capabilities,
and business processes and roles. This architecture is direction-setting for the
business and should drive all other architecture development. Business functions
and business processes are often mapped to the applications and data they need in
order to operate. Keep in mind that this information may not exist for your
organization, and you may need to draft your understanding of the company’s
business architecture based on interviews with business leaders. From a pragmatic
perspective, it may be easier to focus on a few key areas of the business, such as order
to cash, and identify how process simplification and automation can assist the
business achieve future goals.
Data architecture is very important. Be prepared for multiple sources of key
information, such as customers, products, and employees, and poor data quality
that must be addressed before new systems can be implemented. Identifying business
owners for data is important to ensure that you can clean up data and keep it clean
on an ongoing basis. These data owners are often referred to as data stewards, and
they play a key role in systems projects. If they do not already exist, partner with the
appropriate business leaders to develop key integrated data sources, such as customer
and vendor master files.
Applications architecture includes all the major business applications that are used
to run your business. These systems are often separated into back-office enterprise
resource planning and front-office portals and customer relationship management
(CRM) systems. Portals and CRM systems support the revenue-generating activities
of the company. This is an area to which you should try to devote more IT resources.
Investments in these systems can provide the highest ROI, and IT organizations should
attempt to place a great focus on this area.
Technical/infrastructure can be viewed as the ‘‘plumbing’’ that everything runs
on and includes the hardware, network, and voice technology. These systems need to
be scaled to support future business growth and resilient to ensure they are available
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24 hours a day. Recent trends are headed toward renting infrastructure resources via
cloud technology and paying for resources only when required. Infrastructure invest-
ments can be costly. IT organizations are encouraged to develop a balanced strategy of
investing in critical infrastructure that cannot be easily purchased as a service and
relying on third parties for the remainder.
The technology section of your IT strategy will be very company specific. Your
focus should be on identifying areas in which technology can have the highest impact
on the business and quickly delivering solutions. Technology evolves very quickly. IT
organizations need to constantly evaluate new offerings to determine if they can be of
use. Further, keep an eye on end-of-life systems and technology, and ensure that you
develop upgrade plans that will allow you to provide continuous support of these
systems.
Improvement Road Map Summary
Your IT road map should consist of a series of individual strategies that you intend to
deliver over time. Strategies that you might include for your company are:
& People: IT organization, IT governance, sourcing, staff development and training
& Process: ITIL implementation, metrics and reporting, investment analysis, and
communications
& Technology: Business, data, applications, and infrastructure architecture; com-
pany-specific technology initiatives such as sales force automation; technology
refresh initiatives
The template in Figure 9.2 can be used to summarize each of these individual
strategies in a consistent and easy-to-read format.
Each of your strategies will have a long-term objective, along with specific mile-
stones that you plan to accomplish in the area. For example, your IT organization
strategy may include an overall objective to be customer focused and include several
milestones, such as a reorganization and training required to meet that objective. It is
important to strike a balance between identifying all the key strategies for your
organization and focusing on a limited number of areas that you can expect to improve
over the next one to two years.
The summary of your strategy is your overall IT road map and includes the
expected time frame to deliver your strategy. Recommendations in this area include
organizing your road map by key business partners, such as sales and marketing, and
using a six-quarter time frame. Six quarters provides adequate time to deliver
programs that may take more than one year to complete and provides visibility
into the organization’s longer-term strategy. Figure 9.3 provides an IT road map
example.
Note the legend that identifies projects that are approved/proposed, along with
project that have been delayed from their original delivery date. Most IT organizations
should be able to summarize their strategy in two pages. This road map can be an
98 & Process
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C09 07/22/2011 10:15:27 Page 99
effective vehicle for management discussions on IT programs. The IT road map should
be viewed as a living document and updated on a regular basis.
Final IT Strategy Document
The final IT strategy must be easily understood by management and must address
critical business objectives. Guidelines for developing the document include:
& Highly graphical
& Management summary of one page
& Overall document is 25 pages or less
& Include bold recommendations on sweeping changes you plan to make in order to
transform the organization over the next two to three years
Your IT strategy should establish aggressive but achievable plans that you are
committing to deliver. The costs associated with your recommendations are going to
be significant and normally will require board approval, so you must deliver on these
commitments. You need to keep a high level of communications during this time frame
and test your recommendations during the development process to improve manage-
ment acceptance. Finally, you must ensure that the key objectives are understood by the
entire IT team and that your management’s objectives are tied to successful delivery.
Whenever you have the opportunity to address large groups of staff members, reinforce
the strategy and key priorities.
Strategy: Align IT in the most effective manner to deliver exceptional services to our business partners.
Risks:
Significant changes are necessary to operate in a
cost-effective fashion.
Milestones:
Hire new IT leader Date
Implement new IT organization model Date
IT leadership development program Date
IT-wide staff development plans Date
Objectives:
Customer-focused IT organization that provides
the highest level of service to internal business
partners.
Deliver technology solutions to enable the
business in the following areas:
Reduce costs
Increase revenue
Improve customer satisfaction
Cost-effective organization that operates at or
below industry benchmarks
Assessment of Current Environment:
Inexperienced IT management
No formal training and development program
Unclear roles and responsibilities
Poor relations with business parties
CIO
VP
Infrastructure
VP
Applications
VP
Shared Services
HR/
Finance
Enterprise
Architecture
FIGURE 9.2 IT Strategy Example: Organizational Structure
Developing an IT Strategy & 99
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C
0
9
0
7
/2
2
/2
0
11
1
0
:1
5
:2
7
P
ag
e
1
0
0
Q3 09 Q4 09 Q1 10 Q2 10 Q3 10 Q4 10
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sales
Sales Force Automation
Online Quoting
Product Development
Collaboration—Wikis, Blogs
Showcase Company Products
Marketing
Customer Experience
Marketing Analytics
Technical Support
Network Upgrade
Data Center Move
Finance
Business Intelligence
Global Payroll
Proposed
Approved
Delayed
Legend
FIGURE 9.3 Six-Quarter Road Map Example
1
0
0
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