What do you do when you find yourself in quicksand?

Danger! Quicksand

What do you do when you find yourself in quicksand?

Climb out? Dive in deeper? Or flail around and hope it gets better?

More and more, corporate IT finds itself on the horns of a dilemma. The business wants more, delivered faster and cheaper, but IT’s budget for new development is constrained by support costs (as much as 75-80 percent). What is delivered often comes slower and at a greater cost than what would be available from an external provider. Ironically, this fact is often pointed out by the very chargeback systems that were designed to help control IT costs.

According to a study by Gartner and Financial Executives Research Foundation, Chief Financial Officers are already playing a greater role in technology decision making. A recent article on CIO.com highlighted a report written by The Economist Intelligence Unit for Dell Services in which two-thirds of CIOs consider their operations aligned with the business. Less than half of their CxO peers agree.

Before discussing how to resolve the dilemma, it’s useful to first look at how not to resolve it. Gojko Adzic, in his May 31 post How To Solve “Not Enough Time”, took on the issue of barriers to process improvement:

Many problems mask themselves as “not enough time”. Not enough time to test properly, not enough time to automate testing, not enough time to clean up code, not enough time to investigate issues or coordinate on what we’ll do… “Not enough time” is a pessimistic statement – we can’t do anything about it. Time flows at the same speed regardless of our intentions or actions. We can restate the problem into something more useful – “too much work”. Now that’s something that can be solved nicely.

It comes down to three steps:

  • kill software already made that isn’t needed.
  • kill software in making that won’t be needed
  • kill software that was not successful

The very first comment in response:

Doesn’t spending time to kill software that wasn’t useful require more time? If we have too much work now, do you really expect me to take on more work to kill unnecessary stuff?

In other words, “I can’t save myself because I’m too busy drowning”.

Addressing the issues facing IT today requires positive action. The cavalry will not come riding over the hill and save us, we must do it ourselves. Doing so will require a fundamental shift in the way IT views itself in relation to the business.

Three concepts are key to transforming IT’s role in the enterprise:

  • Customer Focus: The job of IT is not to provide technology, but to use technology to provide value. Doing so will require understanding the needs of business, both as individual units and as a whole. Fostering the partnership between business and IT must be made a top priority.
  • Alignment and Execution on Strategy: A coherent strategy that is clearly communicated and gains definition as it traverses the levels of the organization is most likely to ensure that efforts are neither wasted nor contradictory.
  • Active, Collaborative, and Innovative Governance: Providing greater value for less cost requires actively managing the enterprises’ technology portfolio. IT is uniquely positioned to provide both data and expertise to insure that optimal value is generated from technology investments and expenses, whether from internal or external providers.

Aspects of customer focus have been the topic of a number of posts. In “Holding Back the Tide”, I outlined the danger of being seen as the “Department of No”. This same theme appeared in “Deja Vu All Over Again”, detailing the prevalence of business users bypassing IT via cloud services. This is not to say that passively granting all wishes is the way to proceed; doing so can mean failing the enterprise as a whole which is equally your customer. Actively working with customers to try to find solutions that work for all concerned is far more likely to be successful than a curt denial.

TechRepublic’s recent “Good governance means reconsidering personal agendas” perfectly captured the essence of strategic alignment with this statement: “It means that the entire organization creates a partnership toward the common goal of laser focus on business outcomes”. Effective leadership develops a unified strategy and then ensures that the strategy filters down to the various components of the enterprise so that all are pulling in the same direction. This is not the same as micro-managing. Each unit sets the outcome to be attained by its constituent parts, each of which determine the best way to execute within the constraints they’re given. This provides both flexibility and coordination.

As I noted above, IT uniquely possesses the expertise needed to help insure that IT operations are aligned enterprise strategy and are both efficient and economical. This puts corporate IT operations in a dual role: coordinator of services and provider of services. It is a role that should be familiar: unless your enterprise builds its own servers, runs its own communications backbone, etc., some part of the IT role is already outsourced and managed. It is in the interests of both IT and the enterprise to have IT expand this across all areas. Rather than attempting to prevent use of mobile, cloud, etc., IT needs to be facilitating and managing so as to provide the best service to both individual units and the enterprise as a whole. This requires understanding the strengths and weaknesses of different options (in-house development vs. outsourced, owned infrastructure vs. cloud-based capacity, internally hosted applications vs. software as a service, etc.) and being able to provide guidance as to which option best fits the situation at hand. It requires being prepared to support the options chosen, regardless of whether those options are provided by IT or merely facilitated by IT.

Promoting the facilitator role is the missing ingredient for many enterprises. Chargebacks can be a very effective tool in understanding where the money is going, but are insufficient on their own. If the business has no official option to use another provider, then the chargeback is merely an insult. Giving them control is key to turning the business into a partner in the process instead of an adversary.

Effective Application Lifecycle Management and architecture need to be at the heart of the governance effort. Funds and staff can be freed up by culling redundant systems. Good architectural practices will help ensure that new development meets the needs of the business, and that existing applications avoid deteriorating. Promoting configurable applications that can be shared across the enterprise while still meeting the unique needs of disparate business units can also help in getting the most value out of both development and infrastructure.

Another extremely important consideration is tailoring the governance to the circumstances. One-size-fits-all schemes that attempt to impose the same process on all systems lead to unnecessary expense. Obviously the enterprise accounting system will be tightly controlled. If, however, every initiative is subject to the same restrictions, then innovation will be stifled. Taken to the extreme, this can lead to real cost issues: would you want to tie up a developer, tester, and project manager for every content change to the corporate web site? Low-maintenance, relatively self-service tools and services (collaboration, content management, reporting and business intelligence to name a few) can both increase customer satisfaction and lower costs.

There is no magic solution to the issues corporate IT is currently facing. The practices above can provide real value, but implementation cannot be a cookie-cutter process. Each organization’s circumstances and history impact on how and whether a given practice can be applied. What is universal is that inaction will not work. Flailing about and hoping that things will improve means that you sink deeper into the quicksand. At some point, your problem will be over, but not in the way you want.

8 thoughts on “What do you do when you find yourself in quicksand?

  1. Hi Gene,

    There’s an old saying that goes, “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are different.”

    In theory, I wholeheartedly agree with this statement you cited from Tech Republic:

    “It means that the entire organization creates a partnership toward the common goal of laser focus on business outcomes

    Like

    • Sorry, premature post Let me finish the thought.

      In practice, this comments devolves into “Business outcomes are the only driver. The business needs X by time Y. IT needs to align behind this important outcome.”

      I agree that there certainly are things that the IT function can do to be more efficient, and killiing fruitless projects is certainly high on the list.

      However, what the Tech Republic comment omits is that there are real challenges which place serious obstacles in the way of achieving the business goals. And these are drivers, just as important as the business outcomes themselves.

      There’s another old saying that goes, “All things are possible, especially if you aren’t the one who actually needs to do the work!”

      I’ve personally observed several business managers who demand difficult outcomes from IT, without wanting to understand the implications of those demands. Or, business analysts who feel more qualified to impose requirements, without understanding the tradeoffs inherent in those requirements.

      IT applications are not, and have never been a purely top-down process. Nor are they a bottom-up, “here’s what we can do with Oracle, SAP, “, eat the dinner I cooked or go to bed hungry process.

      And the “dueling solutions” model (“My answer is better than yours. No it isn’t. Yes it is”) is bankrupt, too. This approach is equivalent to Positional Negotiation, discussed in the book, Getting to Yes.

      It seems to me that an aligned team approach is needed, and it must address the critical outcomes and all of the key challenges (competitive, market-driven, financial, organizational, skills, and yes, technical) that are obstructing the path. These challenges need to be researched and understood well enough, so that their interrelationships and priorities are clear.

      Without doing this,
      a) opportunities for important synergy and leverage are often missed,
      b) important tradeoff decisions are uninformed, and usually decided by politics.
      c) significant risks may be overlooked or downplayed until they come back like the Ghost of Christmas Present

      Good post!
      Charlie

      Like

      • Charlie,

        Thanks. In my opinion, anything less than a partnership between the IT and business risks tremendous waste. Both need to understand the Canute’s example and work together.

        Additionally, there are dial tone type projects that are strategically important but uninteresting to individual business units. These can’t be ignored either. Peter Kretzman put up a great post on this just last week.

        Like

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  4. Gene:
    As usual, well observed. Charlie makes some excellent points, as well.
    Optimizing IT, as well as any other enabling infrastructure, in an ever-evolving business is a matter of successive approximation. There will always be some infrastructure that is out of balance with what might be perfect. The trick is to try to avoid limitations that have the biggest negative impacts on the business–sort of a Von Neumann–Morgenstern maxi-min strategy.

    Enterprise Architecture is the critical guidepost to this whole process. Building systems based on requirements at the departmental or business unit level leads to redundancy and waste, although possibly accelerating delivery. In the end, the costs and benefits of such trade-offs can only be understood in light of the larger picture. Deciding how large the context must be to avoid preventable waste is a matter of judgement and accumulated wisdom.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks Howard, much appreciated.

      “Charlie makes some excellent points, as well.”

      Indeed, he has a habit of doing that 🙂 One of the many benefits I’ve enjoyed from running this blog has been the interaction with individuals like Charlie. I’ve had the privilege of collaborating with him on three posts (one on process and a two-part series on the architecture of the problem) – a great learning experience.

      “In the end, the costs and benefits of such trade-offs can only be understood in light of the larger picture.”

      Agreed. As the scope of the system increases, the risks and costs of an accidental architecture approach increase as well.

      Like

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