The front page of a business newspaper
carried an interview of some of the big 5 IT services company CEOs that had me
engrossed as these industry captains shape the direction for the industry,
influence decision making and are consulted by global CEOs on IT strategy and
direction. Thus the interest was high to gain from the collective wisdom as they
talked about their experiences with global CIOs, decision making process,
budgets, successes and finally their perceptions of where CIOs could and should
be.
There were some clear messages; the global
economy will continue to remain under pressure for the next couple of years.
Outsourcing deals will be smaller and of shorter duration as IT budgets will
see a lot more rigor in the discussion. Talent shortage will squeeze growth for
IT companies and Cloud computing will keep the hardware industry challenged.
The CIO role will change again with technology evolution; the difference
between the good and the challenged CIO will widen.
They outlined the differences on how CIOs
across geographies and industries outsourced core and non-core activities to
focus on what matters, i.e. you guessed it right, the business. But then they
also mention in the same breath that CIOs that did not outsource remained
challenged to align the IT objectives to business. Whether it is Remote
Infrastructure Management, or Application maintenance and everything in
between, the message was clear, outsource or perish, get relegated to reporting
to the CFO.
Huh ? Now that is simplistically stretching
a facet of the CIOs role to create a perception that outsourcing can be equated
with strategic intent. If you don’t outsource, then you and your team is busy
with things that do not matter to the business and thus you are likely to
remain alienated. Was there a vested interest in the words from these CEOs who
have been struggling to grow their business ? Some had taken over from ousted
CEOs with a clear mandate to bring back the old days of high growth.
While I am a proponent of outsourcing and
have partnered with IT service companies big and small to give away the
technical or operational activities, in my experience there have also been
cases of outsourcing not delivering to promise. CIOs connected with the pulse
of the business draw the line on what needs to be given away and what should be
retained. The company’s focus, perceptions of core, and finally the financial
health determine what operating model should be adopted by the CIO.
The CEOs went on to talk about CIOs need to
engage their stakeholders on what matters. People in a glasshouse do not throw
stones at others. My plea to the same CEOs is to introspect a bit before
preaching to their customers, the CIOs. The sales heads of the same companies
want to engage with the CIO on nitty-gritties of technology that even the next
level in the IT department rarely gets involved in (OMG I saw a data center).
They do not practice what they preach. A few CIOs I met the next day agree !
So what separates the good from the
challenged ? I do not for a moment believe that it is as simple as outsourcing
operations or infrastructure or total outsourcing; a good CIO is a well-rounded
leader who manages people and perceptions while ensuring that the delivery of
promise is consistent with quality that is visible. S/he communicates
effectively in all situations and is able to challenge business and IT
partners/vendors in a discussion on the right solutions to business problems
enabled by technology.
Is this the finite list ? No again, there
is no checklist that determines the difference; you have to find your balance.
I agree with your thoughts. I did a study last quarter on "Business Aligned IT" and my research shows that this is again topical primarily because the business landscape is no longer the same as it was maybe 3 years ago and its not going back to an as-is state.
ReplyDeleteAs such if the C-Suite does not collaborate with IT then they are loosing out on a significant competitive lever. Outsourcing is one of the components of that. The real issue is selecting a vendor/SP that can make good on delivery commitments within the budgets allocated.