I had this interesting debate with an aspiring CIO on my earlier blog
“The Perennially Dissatisfied User”; he talked about some organizations not
really having this problem where the users kept on finding faults with
everything that IT did. They are a satisfied lot if not delighted; at least
they do not berate IT on everything and there is an equilibrium and harmony
between the teams. The camaraderie lends itself to discussing what works and
finding opportunities to solving business problems or creating new ideas to
explore.
Though far and
few there are such organizations who have found peace and a process design to
make things work collaboratively rather than be at each other’s neck all the
time. IT is seen not just as a service provider, but as an enabler and partner
who can help them achieve success. Not that they do not have conflicts, they
are healthy debates and resolve them to move ahead or agree to disagree. There
is mutual respect for the profession and competency each brings to the table.
How does this state of being come into existence ?
The foundation of
any such partnership is laid over a period of time; it is about creating an
engagement process which outlines the boundaries and acknowledges expertise
where it exists. The governance is democratized in a way that everyone
understands the implications and there is a platform to resolve open issues. Across
organization layers exceptions are discouraged and do not have to become you
versus us; there is no across the table creating two sides, there is only one
side which benefits the function and company.
Business
processes and customer expectations are open to discussion and so are
technology choices; the final decision and accountability are clear in their
design. Sign-offs is achieved in time or if there is a delay everyone is
agreeable to the rationale. It is not about whose budget it is or who is
funding the project or purchase; it is about what is the value the solution
creates for the enterprise. It requires consistent maturity on part of everyone
to ensure that this works. Thus success rates are higher than industry
benchmarks.
There is clear
communication of expectations, be it hardware standards for new devices or
restrictions on access to applications or internet. Decisions on solutions are
based on merit and agreement on the metrics used with everyone collectively
aligned. Thus everyone works towards the common goal and thereby leaving no
room for fault finding should things not work out. Whenever priorities are
competing with each other for budgets or resources, the group is able to reason
it out and come to an agreement on the way forward.
Escalations for
exceptions are pushed back to the business and IT leaders to resolve. Policies
are simple yet effective in their intent and well understood by everyone. They
are living documents which are frequently reviewed against changing business
environment as well as dynamic technology landscape which shifts expectations
and the way of working. This keeps IT infrastructure and environment simple to
govern and manage. Shadow solutions are rarely seen in such organizations with
high levels of engagement being the norm.
Sounds too good
to be true ? Organization culture plays an important role in facilitating this.
I have seen some enterprises embrace this so well that they become the poster
boys of how to use a specific technology or solution. Business CXOs talk about
success stories and benefits accrued acknowledging the role IT played in their
ability to win. The CIO persona and behaviour plays an important role and s/he
shuns pure technical discussions and focuses on how to help the company stay a
leader. IT vendors love doing business with such companies.
Is a transition
to such a nirvana state possible ? Can sustainable change be made for good ? I
would say “conditions apply”. To begin with the organization culture has to be
collaborative and progressive; the company should be profitable with the
appetite to spend, else the discussion will always be on cost. The CIO should
be articulate, know the business and have skills to keep his team cohesive and
motivated. When all these factors come together then you have a recipe for
success that everyone talks about !
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