Genius, according to Thomas Edison's most famous cliché, is 1 percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration. You could easily substitute the word "genius" with "strategy." If you lead an IT organization that hasn’t achieved basic competence, don't waste time and energy improving IT's alignment with business strategy.
If IT can't complete projects on time, within budget, and with all deliverables intact, don't run around talking about how IT can help the business reach its goals. If you can't keep the servers and networks up with reasonable levels of performance or solve the problems average end-users have without undue delay, then "strategic alignment" doesn't matter enough to warrant an investment of your time and attention -- not before you fix the basics, anyhow.
Imagine two IT organizations. The CIO of one has focused so extensively on strategic alignment that he has no time left to pay any attention to ensuring competent delivery. The other CIO has placed such a laserlike focus on delivery that she hasn't given a thought to strategic alignment. Here's how it comes out.
The grasshopper vs. the ant
The CIO who ensures strategic alignment while ignoring the importance of competent delivery leads an organization that provides no actual value. How can it? Unfinished projects, by definition, deliver nothing. Systems that fail frequently and perform poorly when they are up obstruct business process as much as they enable it. End-users who can't rely on the basic technology will use something else. Strategic alignment without competence delivers nothing because zero times anything is still zero.
On the other hand, the CIO who ensures competent delivery while ignoring strategic alignment delivers something. Unless every successfully completed request is entirely pointless, the business will get something out of the deal. Even if -- through some bizarre twist of corporate politics taken to the furthest extremities of dysfunction -- every single successfully completed request is useless, if the systems stay up and perform well and end-users get the help they need, the business will still be able to operate.
Or at least, it will be able to operate as well as you'd expect an organization that fragmented and siloed to operate. Strategic IT alignment will be the least of its troubles.
By Bob Lewis
source :InfoWorld
Thursday, April 9, 2009
Want to be strategic? Be competent first
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Want to be strategic? Be competent first
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