“Of all the responses to our survey, CIOs felt the biggest barrier to
innovation was the need to focus strongly on operational issues,” says Ivar
Sinka, executive consultant for Capgemini.
The research also revealed that CIOs are a fairly pessimistic bunch. Seventy
per cent of the 400 CIOs surveyed felt that IT was critical for business
innovation, but fewer than half believed their business leaders saw IT as the
driver. Worse still, only 24 per cent of CIOs said the IT function was the main
initiator of business innovation.
Other analysis illustrates similar trends. Research body
the IT Governance Institute
(ITGI) recently considered the views of IT and business leaders from
enterprises worldwide, and found only 46 per cent of CIOs agreed that business
and technology strategies were aligned.
The research from both reports shows that businesses need IT to innovate,
rather than just operate.
“The best approach to innovation is to align the business and the IT
strategy,” says Lynn Lawton, international president for IT governance body
ISACA.
Putting back the spark
However, marrying the business strategy with the IT strategy poses
challenges.
One clear problem is communication. “People get bogged down in acronyms and
infrastructure,” says Lawton.
Just 18 per cent of users agree that the IT department always communicates
its objectives, according to the ITGI report hardly an improvement on the 2005
survey, where just 14 per cent of users felt IT communicated its objectives.
But be aware that poor communication is not just an IT concern. “Quite often
business sees the IT department as nothing more than suppliers of electricity,”
says Lawton.
Paul Reynolds, chief technical officer for the
UK’s Department of Business,
Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR), says that the priorities of the
user community and IT department often clash.
“Users want everything they see on TV,” he says. “But we need to ensure that
the right architecture is in place to support our legal and security
requirements.”
Such integration has become more of a challenge in the internet age, with
increasing demands on information handling and data processing.
Communication is even more of a problem in businesses where the reporting
line runs from the CIO to the chief financial officer, an executive whose focus
often tends to be on cost cutting.
Capgemini’s Sinka says that in general, the most innovative companies have a
direct line between the CIO and the chief executive or chief operations officer.
The chain of command might be important, but Equaterra’s Morris says a
ttitude is just as important as organisational hierarchy.
“If a company is going to successfully innovate, then it needs to move away
from seeing IT as simply an automation function,” he says. “And there needs to
be a strong dialogue between business people and IT people.”
Close dialogue means the roles of CIO and IT director must be clearly
defined. Corporate IT strategist Chris Potts says the CIO should not spend time
running the IT department. “He or she should be driving innovation strategy,
while the IT manager focuses on operational excellence,” he says.
Others disagree and a clear majority of CIOs surveyed by Capgemini felt the
roles should be combined. Still, splitting management roles has worked for the
Met Office and BERR, where CIO and IT management roles are separated along clear
lines and the IT function is driven by business needs.
Both organisations have worked to become more business-facing and the
initiative has meant keeping the lines of communication between business and IT
open. For BERR, a key issue was not to become fixated on strategy. “We are on
the third or fourth iteration of our strategy because we’ve been talking to
business and refining their requirements all the time,” says Reynolds.
Not so long ago, only financial institutions and technology companies could
lay claim to having a strongly aligned IT and business strategy. But the UK
government’s Transformational Government initiative has changed the agenda for
public sector organisations.
“Cross-government communication has improved massively over the past few
years,” says Reynolds. Various groups have been set up the CIO Council, the
CTO Council, the Knowledge Council to share information across departments.
A key development is that a successfully implemented project now sets the
trend for other departments. “We’ve stopped reinventing the wheel and that is a
huge step forward,” says Reynolds.
Thinking the unthinkable
Learning from the success and mistakes of others can help save time and
money. The Met Office, for example, looked to BT for ideas before embarking on
its IT change programme.
If communication failure is one of the biggest barriers to innovation, then
too few or too many skills is another major obstacle.
Crucially, many long-term outsourcing agreements do not allow for
advancements in technology and the arrangement has left many organisations
dependent on their suppliers.
Users also want to work more flexibly and make better use of the so-called
Web 2.0 technologies, such as social networking, corporate blogs and wikis.
Instead of turning to the IT department, many users are creating their own
collaborative solutions. The trend places increased demands on security and
business governance.
Nigel Reed, the Met
Office’s head of technology development, says one particular challenge is
that today’s users have a basic understanding of IT. Many users can write
software, have PCs at home and are beginning to understand how straightforward
technology can be.
“What many non-IT professionals do not understand, however, is that there is
a huge difference between writing software and generating operational business
solutions that work 24 hours a day, 365 days a year,” he says.
Many companies often feel threatened by new web technologies and do not want
employees spending too much time on social networking sites.
On the bright side, however, collaboration can create opportunities for
innovation. Equaterra’s Morris says Web 2.0 technologies have huge potential,
but only if firms can break down traditional ways of thinking. He points to the
origins of the internet to back up his argument.
“The web is a global facility that emerged out of a simple need for
scientists to communicate rapidly across corporate boundaries,” he says. “That
has set a precedent and there is absolutely no reason why the same cannot happen
with new technologies.”
Microsoft, for example, already has 4,000 active corporate bloggers. “The
benefits are huge,” says Steve Clayton, chief technology officer for Microsoft’s
partner group. “It helps me connect with partners and customers and has shifted
the perception of Microsoft as a leviathan.”
Microsoft’s corporate blogging policy is considered to be among the most
enlightened in the world, giving employees more freedom than many companies
would feel comfortable with.
In a nine-step programme, Microsoft tells bloggers what they can do and what
not to do such as respect confidentiality agreements, do not break news,
respect prior employers and identify yourself.
As a major technology player on a global scale, you might expect Microsoft to
be leading the way. However, there is still plenty of room for other businesses
to exploit new technologies. After all, corporate blogging is simply scratching
the surface of innovation.
Green IT is where it is at
Corporate IT strategist Chris Potts says another opportunity for innovation
lies in green and clean technologies.
The experienced CIO is in the unique position of understanding how best to
invest in business change and exploit technology.
“Today’s CIO should be using the skills and knowledge gained through managing
IT to ensure that their companies become expert investors in green technology,”
says Potts.
Internally, BERR is already innovating with green technologies. The
organisation has reduced its offices from 12 to two by allowing employees
flexible working hours and technology provision.
UK CIOs wishing to play a leading role in the future direction of their
company will, therefore, need to be more than just excellent technicians. They
will need to communicate well and they will also need to be highly creative.
Certain organisational structures can help drive innovation, says Morris.
Such structures could be in the form of innovation universities where dedicated
people from all areas of the business interact with suppliers, product
developers and research specialists within the technology organisation.
If UK CIOs do not step up to the innovation challenge, somebody else will.
Countries like China and India, for example, have declared innovation a national
priority. Progress overseas must be seen as a threat, but also as an
opportunity.
“Innovation accelerates innovation,” says Morris. ‘We need to understand why
it is happening and use that to create the next level of innovation. Engage with
it and see where it takes you.”
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