Is it Time to Reset Your IT Strategy?

Added 15th Oct 2008
Chris Potts

Article Highlights

  • There's a world of difference between running the IT department ‘like’ a business, and trying to run it ‘as’ one
  • In the long term, the IT department will find itself in a corner from which escape is difficult

A rallying call of corporate strategies for IT in recent years has been to run the IT department 'like a business'. When the technology-centric first generation of IT strategies reached a point of diminishing returns, this next stage was both inevitable and beneficial. With the bulk of IT spending shifting from investment in new technologies to maintaining existing ones, applying sound business discipline has kept that spending under control and has driven a focus on IT operational performance and efficiency. But with these benefits come pitfalls, especially if you take the IT-is-like-a-business approach too far. The danger exists because your IT department isn't a business. It is a part of a business: a significant contributor to a value chain, not a self-contained value chain of its own. And the harder you try to create a separate value chain for IT, the harder it becomes for IT to become integrated with the business.

“There's a world of difference between running IT ‘like’ a business, and running it ‘as’ one. ”

What to Watch Out For

A strategy founded on running IT like a business will reach a point of diminishing returns. Innovative companies have moved to the next-generation strategy, in which the CIO's purpose is not necessarily to run a traditional IT department at all. Her primary role is to provide corporate leadership to business functions. The drive for IT to manage themselves in more businesslike ways followed the technology-centric strategies that ended once the 21st century got into its stride. People learned that technology deployment alone does not guarantee business success. As executives called time on deploying IT at any cost, technologycentric strategies gave way to ones founded on IT operational efficiencies: IT departments would deliver more for less.

The benefits of running IT in a more businesslike way are well known. However, alongside the benefits, there are also risks. The most damaging to the CIO's longer-term strategy is any attempt to run the department as a separate business rather than just running it in a more businesslike way. There's a world of difference between running the IT department 'like' a business, and trying to run it 'as' one. Running IT like a business means adopting a businesslike mindset, processes and financial disciplines. Running it as a business means competing for revenue and investment in an open market, and going bankrupt if you run out of cash to cover your liabilities.

 

What happens if a CIO attempts to run her department as a business? Colleagues in other departments will say that IT wants to be treated like a supplier. In that case, contributing to corporate and business strategies will be a heroic, uphill battle rather than IT's core contribution to the enterprise. Then there are other pitfalls. The company's business units will be reluctant to fund any investment by IT in anything that looks like branding, marketing, selling or upgrading the management systems that support the IT department's own productivity. Why should they? One of the primary cost advantages of an internal department is that it doesn't require all the capabilities a real supplier needs to compete in the open market. So the CIO is caught. She has placed herself in competition with bona fide external suppliers but without access to the investment that they have in order to compete as an equal.

In the long term, the IT department will find itself in a corner from which escape is difficult. It lacks the means to compete with real IT suppliers and has separated itself from the business that it is meant to be part of. This is when taking 'IT department as a business' too far seriously undermines the next generation strategy for IT.

 

  • Page 1 : Is it Time to Reset Your IT Strategy?
  • Page 2 : What Best Strategy to Undertake

Related Articles

Latest Articles