Perspective is always in the eyes of the beholder.

Focus on problem-solving: Understand the business first and foremost. Without a C-level knowledge of the business goals and objectives, IT leaders cannot position your IT resources correctly. IT has to proactively work with the business, to ensure that the C level (and other non-IT executives) leadership is appropriately engaged, have the right resources, are paying close attention to customers and partners, and successful in relationship building to identify and co-solve business problems with priorities. Once the business problem has been defined, business and IT work collaboratively, the cross-functional, multi-disciplined, mutually respectful and sufficiently open-minded teams will be able to resolve it effortlessly. The executive leadership must laser focus on business objectives and the success should be defined by accomplishing a business goal, not just a theoretical solution or an IT challenge only.

Measure the right things and measure them right: In order to gain respect from business partners, IT needs to build a reputation as a value creator. In order to demonstrate IT value, organizations need to first know wherein lies the IT value. If you understand that up front by doing the right strategic questioning, you can later go back and ask if you achieve the value that had been set out to attain. The value itself is a multi-dimensional concept, a seamless customer experience, an optimal business service, a commercial value proposition, a social value system which deals with and provides context for varying interest and need. IT leaders should well prepare a set of questionnaires for both self-checking and collecting feedback from customers or business partners: (1) How does IT become strategic? and (2) How does IT deliver maximum value? (3) What are the well-selected performance indicators to measure multidimensional IT values and measure them cohesively? The level at which services are currently provided, or the baseline from which improvements can be measured, is crucial to the way in which IT performance will be assessed. Measure IT performance through the benchmark which can reflect IT value to the business, not only for the bottom line but also for top-line growth.
Perspective is always in the eyes of the beholder. Business and IT need to have mutual respect and need to focus more on being objective in approaches and allow for the ever-changing markets and environment. This requires a mind shift to allow for the element of ultimate control to be released in order for the change to take effect and allow for taking calculated risks to do more with innovation, and ultimately, build a solid reputation for IT to be a changing organization and strategic partner of the business.
0 comments:
Post a Comment