Budget and resource constraints, and a focus on strategic projects, are
creating a problem of "rogue IT", according to a recent survey.
A poll by 'robotic integration' company
Blue
Prism claimed that two thirds of organisations see elements of rogue IT
behaviour from business users as a direct result of IT department budget and
resource constraints.
The firm highlighted issues such as installing vendor applications and
personal software without the IT department's knowledge, and the use of
software-as-a-service products like Google applications.
Despite the traditional perception that all IT departments hold a dim view of
rogue behaviour by users, the survey suggested that IT departments fully
understand why this behaviour occurs.
However, respondents were pragmatic in their answers, suggesting the use of
governance rather than introducing measures to eradicate the behaviour.
"The perennial problem in enterprise IT is how to manage the day-to-day
demands of the business and business users within the confines of departmental
budget and resource constraints and the pressure to deliver high-level strategic
projects," said Alastair Bathgate, managing director of Blue Prism.
"In this environment it is tough to find the budgets and resources necessary
to address the raft of small changes that business users want.
"It is good to see the IT community acknowledge that users should be given
the power to work on their own solutions, although there is a salutary warning
from the survey that this should be done with tools approved by IT under an
appropriate governance model."
The problem arises when IT departments face the task of managing
business-critical projects while helping the business user with tactical change
requests, according to the research.
Over 52 per cent of respondents reported that working on strategic projects
was the main focus for their department, and 40 per cent said that delivering
day-to-day business change requests was their priority.
The survey also found that 86 per cent of respondents expect projects to be
delivered to ever shorter deadlines.
However, satisfying all business needs is often not possible given the focus
of IT teams versus the volume of change requests required by the business.
More than 71 per cent of respondents cited IT department resource constraints
as the reason why they are not able to satisfy all requests from the business.
This was followed by 67 per cent of respondents who believed that IT
department budget constraints were the key factor.
Of those surveyed, however, 52 per cent believed that they are able to
satisfy over 75 per cent of change requests, and only 10 per cent felt that they
were able to manage fewer than 25 per cent of requests.
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