A striking lack of alignment in way CIOs measure and communicate the value of IT operations to CEOs and CFOs – who knew?
That may not come as too much of a surprise to many of us, but it’s one of the headline conclusions of a new study carried out by Forrester Research on behalf of the Technology Business Management (TBM) Council.
Some context: the TBM Council was initially founded by Apptio as a CIO user community, but spun off as a separate Delaware-based, nonprofit organization in mid 2012.
Its mission statement is to identify and promote best practices for running technology organizations like a business and boasts 800 CIOs and ITDMs among its members.
Some top line findings from its Business Technology Value Scorecard: Moving From Transaction Orientation To Outcome Orientation report:
There’s a big challenge to be faced in that IT metrics today are predominantly transaction-focused rather than measuring IT’s contribution to business outcomes and ability to respond to market changes.
Two-thirds of IT budget is spent on maintenance and operations, forcing CIOs to focus on operational KPIs.
CIOs struggle to link KPIs to specific strategic objectives and business value. The report argues:
Clearly, there is a need for a common language that allows IT and business executives to better understand the activities — and the outcomes of these activities — toward efficient stewardship of business resources.
A clear and concise dashboard composed of a suite of relevant metrics that span the activities within the IT portfolio that positions both this efficiency and effectiveness should contribute to better interdepartmental communications, better business and IT strategic planning, and an environment that is self-optimizing based upon desired results.
While there is no perfect scorecard or KPI, the CIO’s challenge is to think, communicate, and measure in business terms against four distinct categories of KPI: health, delivery, outcome, and agility.
Within these, there are various domains:
The TBM Council and Forrester make some key recommendations around KPIs:
It’s also necessary to tackle the cultural issues as well:
The TBM Council concludes with a reminder of the need for a fusion of business and technology warning that a purely technology-centric view creates silos.
Alignment between business and IT isn’t enough; there needs to be joint accountability for business outcomes:
To be fair, IT leaders haven’t done a good job of “training” their business leaders to ask the right questions. Instead of focusing on an industry benchmark like the IT cost per employee, CIOs need to focus on measuring their contribution to business outcomes.
Use metrics like percentage of projects with joint IT/business ownership to underscore the lack of support from business leaders or compare business areas to encourage friendly competition.
It advises that organizations must consider KPIs as managing a portfolio and drive a portfolio mindset for BT decisions:
Align your focus to your maturity and culture — your context. If you don’t have a stable environment, measuring uptime and other health KPIs is important, but if you feel you have a stable environment and consistently deliver on your SLAs, focusing on outcome and agility metrics may be a great idea.