| By David Deans | Article Rating: |
|
| December 6, 2009 10:30 AM EST | Reads: |
2,296 |
As 2009 comes to a close, a recent editorial in CIO magazine sums-up a nagging issue -- "Despite the emergence of improved IT management tools over the past decade, CIOs continue to grapple with the same IT challenges they dealt with five and even 10 years ago. Which can make a CEO wonder: when are we going to get there?"
Forrester Research believes that CIOs have typically run "the tech factory" for their firms -- responding to business needs with solutions and operations from both internal and external sources. These IT leaders have pursued operational maturity to optimize solution delivery.
Forrester says that CIOs won't ever get away from delivering on operational maturity. But as technology becomes pervasive -- more stable, standardized, and available as a business-centric service -- it's inevitable that business executives will take greater direct control over technology investment decisions.
Forrester calls this evolutionary transition the shift from Information Technology (IT) to Business Technology (BT). Let's review the key drivers of this transition once more. It's the essential "there" destination that many CEOs eagerly anticipate for their organization.
Greater Response to Business Demand
Traditional IT establishes prioritization criteria and IT governance processes. Weighed down by growing legacy maintenance, typically a third of IT spending is reserved for new projects. IT therefore creates conflict among business organizations -- who must lobby for those limited IT resources.
Broader Focus on Business Value
IT should help deliver business results, yet it's often consumed by technical issues -- re-educating staff, deciding what to re-architect, and debating whether to build or out-task. Meanwhile, new capabilities are increasingly available through managed cloud services -- and purchased directly by business groups via software-as-a-service.
Significantly Faster Pace of Change
The rate of business change continues to accelerate, forcing CIOs to be reactive -- while attempting to increase agility. The CIO's dilemma: either their business organizations will move ahead without internal IT, or, their business executives will fail to take full advantage of new technologies in time to use them effectively.
Framework for the Required Transformation
To help CIOs understand best practices, Forrester has developed a BT Leadership Maturity framework in the form of a self-assessment. This tool is designed to provide a candid benchmark of how well they are performing -- highlighting specific areas where additional work needs to be done.
Forrester concludes that CIOs who fail to move quickly will find their firm falling behind more agile competition. Those who assess and improve their organization's BT leadership maturity are responding to changing market realities -- as well as reducing the likely chaos that would result from allowing the business to move forward on its own with BT, without the CIO's close involvement.
Read the original blog entry...
Published December 6, 2009 Reads 2,296
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By David Deans
David is a co-author and moderator of the Business Technology Roundtable. He is a member of the Service Provider marketing team at Cisco Systems, Inc. David has more than 25 years of experience in the technology, media and telecom sectors.
- Microsoft’s Second UI Innovation
- What Motivates Open Standards in the Cloud?
- StorSimple Supports OpenStack
- What to Expect in 2012: Cloud Computing and Open Source Software
- Ten Hot Trends in Cloud Data for 2012
- HP Expands Its HANA Alliance with SAP
- End-User Participation to Provide Unique Forum for Peer Collaboration at 2012 Technology Convergence Conference
- Write Once Run Anywhere or Cross Platform Mobile Development Tools
- Three Buzzwords That Every CIO Hears but One They Should Listen To
- Microsoft’s New Cloudware Could Cast a Shadow over VMware
- Cloud Expo New York: Cloud Architectures Require Scale-out Storage
- AT&T Joins OpenStack, Floats Cloud Architect
- The Future of Cloud Computing: Industry Predictions for 2012
- HP Puts Activist Shareholder on Board
- Gartner Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies 2011
- Microsoft’s Second UI Innovation
- Cloud Computing: A Comparison of Computing Models
- What Motivates Open Standards in the Cloud?
- Big Data Bug Bites GE
- StorSimple Supports OpenStack
- What to Expect in 2012: Cloud Computing and Open Source Software
- Apprenda Upgrades Its .NET Private PaaS
- Ten Hot Trends in Cloud Data for 2012
- Cloud Expo Takeaways: Cloud Confusion Still Exists
- The Top 150 Players in Cloud Computing
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- FullArmor GPAnywhere Secures Microsoft Application Virtualization Applications Through Group Policy
- SYS-CON's Virtualization Conference & Expo: Themes & Topics
- SYS-CON's Virtualization Journal Opens Its "Readers' Choice Awards" Nominations
- Application Virtualization: Instant Migration to Vista, Fast Delivery, Secure Access, Side-by-Side Deployments
- "Virtualization Is Now a Key Strategic Theme," Says Citrix CTO
- Application Virtualization
- Integration with Windows Vista, Microsoft Excel, and Microsoft Application Virtualization
- Will Microsoft Buy Citrix?
- mValent Extends Automated Application Configuration Management to Virtualization Environments
- Has the Technology Bounceback Begun?



















