A key priority for IT chiefs in 2007 should be taking a back-to-basics,
people-focused approach to technology development, according to Capgemini’s UK
chief technology officer.
Carl
Bate told IT Week that “the tired old problem with the business/IT divide”
will continue into 2007. “CIOs should have a fantastic role, with a horizontal
view across the business and helping to improve operations,” he said. “But their
role is often so full of tension. They get less budget but have to deliver more
value; boards want innovation but also industrialisation and there’s a low
success rate of IT-enabled business change.”
Advancements in technology mean the CIO role has become even more complex.
“We’re in a stage of ‘bricolage’, with people using any available tool - Word
documents, post-it notes, Google - to get the job done,” Bate explained. “It’s a
corporate governance nightmare. IT is putting in systems to help operational
efficiencies and policy enforcement, but people are using the web and other
tools to get the job done.”
To counter these problems, Bate said there was a need to revisit the
information systems trends of 20 years ago, an area Capgemini has been working
on with its clients. “With information systems, it was all about putting people
first,” he argued. “Now there’s lots of focus around IT and innovation, but
we’ve lost the people-focus. IT departments need to consider why a person would
adopt a certain technology rather than use a spreadsheet, for example.”
As well as promoting a “back to the future” approach, Bate cited
service-oriented architectures, convergence, green IT and the rise of web models
as the hot trends for next year.
Bate predicted a shift in corporate IT systems as they become supplemented by
more web models. “We’ll see less generous return on investment on major
corporate IT projects because of this. Corporate IT systems do add value, but
they need to retain a focus on real-world events and what people actually want.”
Despite the heavy focus by vendors and government on energy-efficient and
environmentally-friendly IT systems this year, Bate argued that this is a new
area that firms are just starting to ask questions about. “It’s not top of the
IT department agenda. At the moment green IT is about devices and power
consumption issues, but end-to-end green computing is the key, and we’ll see
more of this next year,” he said. “Green IT is starting to come into some of
Capgemini’s outsourcing core propositions, especially around power management.”
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