Improving business processes has become the highest priority for today's IT
department, according to a global survey of more than 1,500 CIOs undertaken by
analyst group Gartner.
IT leaders were quizzed on their business priorities, and while cost cutting
and customer relationship management initiatives came high on the agenda,
improving business processes was top of the list, said Mark Raskino, research
vice president at Gartner (pictured).
Advertisement
Raskino presented the preliminary results of its annual survey at Gartner's
BPM summit in London this week. The full survey results will be released later
this month.
This surprise result is indicative of the growing recognition that IT can play a
pivotal role in driving business improvement, said Gartner analyst Daryl
Plummer. Early adopters of BPM were now delivering the sort of
attention-grabbing agility that was persuading others of the technology's value,
he said.
“In a process-centric organisation, people know about processes and
understand who to call on when processes are disrupted,” he said. “Organisations
can also gauge the success of processes by measuring how well they serve the
organisation’s need.”
Meanwhile, those early adopters were starting to find that BPM programmes had
some unexpected benefits, reported Raskino.
One example was an improved ability to attract the latest generation of
web-savvy talent. This new generation of employees are increasingly intolerant
of inefficient, Byzantine processes. " If one member [of this next generation]
thinks a process does to work, they will all move on," he told delegates.
BPM is also helping alleviate the burden of overflowing email inboxes,
Raskino said. “Although processes start in email, they should not stay in
email,” Raskino explained, adding that the creation of “proper processes” will
reduce the email overload problem.
And the focus on BPM is likely to intensify, as the likelihood of yet more
government regulation increases. The decision of both the UK and US governments
to intervene in the current mortgage crisis was indicative of the way regulators
were becoming more hands-on, said Raskino. That suggests business leaders need
to be evermore aware of their internal processes, he concluded.
Comments
Have your say on this article