Shaping IT Capabilities to the Business Strategy
Capitalizing on Emerging Technologies and Trends
Ivan I. Ivanov
Empire State College of the State University of New York,
Hauppauge, NY 11788, U.S.A.
ivan.ivanov@esc.edu
Keywords: IT architecture, Enterprise architecture, IT governance, Socio-technical system, Systemic effect, Emerging
technologies, Cloud Computing, Mobile Computing, Consumerization of IT.
Abstract: IT progressively has evolved providing greater opportunities to optimizing business processes and to
enabling new business models and services. The fast pace of IT advancement drives considerable prospects
for business improvement and growth. The strategic alignment of IT capabilities to organizational business
strategy, as content and processes, ensures further IT governance to seize opportunities for improvements
and to maximize revenue. Utilizing a well deliberated framework -Operating model, Enterprise architecture,
and IT engagement model- the paper explores the impact of emerging technologies on the alignment
process. Currently, companies across the globe are going through a very disruptive technology
development: Consumerization of IT - when new technologies emerge first in the consumer market and
then, after mass acceptance, are employed largely by business organizations. Consumerization of IT, along
with workforce mobility, reliable, accessible and affordable remote computing, are forcefully reshaping the
corporate IT lanscape, affecting the relationship between enterprise IT, knowledge workers, corporate users,
and consumers. This paper confers the impact of these trends on the IT domain and specifically emphasizes
on the dynamic forces interlinking IT capabilities with the business agility, growth and asset utilization.
1 FRAMEWORK FOR ALIGNING
IT TO BUSINESS STRATEGY
Increasingly we have witnessed how business
success and economic opportunities steadily depend
on IT-enabled capabilities and IT-driven business
transformations. In today’s global digital economy,
the technology and business domains are colliding
forcefully than ever and new business models and
growing prospects emerge. The IT and especially
emerging technologies profoundly change how
companies create value both within specific
industries, and through industry boundaries.
In order to understand why corporations develop
IT architecture, it is important to know their business
mindset when doing so, which ultimately begins
with a discussion on strategy. Some authors state
that strategy cannot be planned, since doing so
would suggest a controlled environment. These
theorists state that strategy happens in an
uncontrolled environment, thus it is more useful to
consider it to be an art or tool over a plan.
1.1 Identifying Core Components of
Business Strategy
In the 1970s, the strong competition in several key
industries (appliances, automakers, and banking
sector) up surged a new concern about the business
operating environment. The traditional long range
planning lost its position to strategic planning, which
allowed businesses to consider changes to its
surroundings.
Strategic planning forced businesses to look
beyond its own walls into the greater fluidity of the
ever growing global marketplace. A holistic analysis
of the factors related to the external environment –
customers and competitors- and the internal
environment –the organization- is needed for
maintaining finest management practices. According
to the online business dictionary “…the objective of
strategic management is to achieve better alignment
of corporate policies and strategic priorities.” “A
brilliant strategy or breakthrough technology can put
any company on the competitive map, but only solid
execution can keep it there.” (Neilson, Martin and
117
Ivanov I.
Shaping IT Capabilities to the Business Strategy - Capitalizing on Emerging Technologies and Trends.
DOI: 10.5220/0005886101170128
In Proceedings of the Fifth International Symposium on Business Modeling and Software Design (BMSD 2015), pages 117-128
ISBN: 978-989-758-111-3
Copyright
c
2015 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
Powers, 2010). Through structural changes or efforts
focused on performance improvement produce
normally short-term gains. Instead, concentrating on
the three major sections formulating this process:
Strategic Thinking, Strategic Planning, and Strategic
Momentum is far more powerful and successful
(Swayne, Duncan and Ginter, 2006):
Strategic Thinking: This is a stage the
organization should grasp both the detailed view of
itself -what it does well, and what seems to be
lacking, and systematic picture of the external
environment.
Strategic Planning: First at this phase a
situational analysis, based on the first stage findings
a SWOT analysis -strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities, and possible threats- should be
performed. Next steps will include formulating a
strategy, and determining ways of its implemention.
Strategic Momentum: The final stage should
evolve the strategic plan implementation. The
organization needs to not only keep in mind who has
been working towards strategy implementation, but
must also keep in mind as well changes in the
external environment.
The essence of Strategy according to Harvard
Business School professor and one of the world’s
most advancing thinkers on strategy Michael Porter
is “about being different,” which means a company
to choose for their core business different and
unique set of activities or to perform already known
activities in a different way. With a set of activities,
different from those of the other competitors in an
industry a company winning strategy means creation
of “unique and valuable position” on the market.
Creating strategy also means making tradeoffs and
combing the unique activities to fit well together and
reinforce one other.
1.1.1 Industry Analysis
Referring again to Michael Porter, the structure of an
industry is embodied in five forces that collectively
determine industry profitability and should be
considered in strategic formulation: Rivalry among
Existing Competitors, Bargaining Power of Buyers,
Threat of Substitute Products or Services;
Bargaining Power of Suppliers; Threat of New
Entrants. The shared power of the five forces varies
for different industries as does the profitability
(Porter, 2008). The model exposes comprehensive
outer view of the organization with its traditional
direct competitors and the correlation with four other
forces within its market environment. The industry
analysis framework suggests that industry
differences can be analyzed a priori by managers
using the Porter’s analytical framework, and based
upon the results of this analysis, executives can
decide whether to enter an industry or forgo
investment.
The Threat of New Entrants force represents the
extent to which the industry is open to entry by new
competitors, or whether significant barriers to entry
make it creates comfortable shelter so the existing
firms need not to worry about competition from
outside. The Threat of Substitute Products or
Services force denotes the extent to which the
products or services marketed by the company are
subject to potential substitution by different products
or services that fulfill the same customer needs and
expectations. The Bargaining Power of Buyers
force signifies the extent to which customers of
those organizations in the industry have the ability to
put downward pressure on prices, highly
concentrated buyers (such as Wal-Mart) and low
switching costs typically conspire to increase the
bargaining power of buyers. The Bargaining Power
of Suppliers force represents the magnitude to which
the firms or individuals who sell production input to
the organizations in the industry have the ability to
maintain high prices. The Rivalry among Existing
Competitors force represents the magnitude to which
fierce battling for position and aggressive
competition occur in the industry. The term
hypercompetition refers to industries characterized
by fierce rivalry among existing firms and very rapid
pace of innovations leading to fast obsolescence of
any competitive advantage and a consequent need
for a fast cycle of innovations. The consumer
electronic industry -mobile smart devices in
particular- is the most current example, as is the ICT
industry in general.
1.1.2 Industry Analysis and the Role of IT
Scholars and experts who have embraced industry
analysis to search and identify IT-dependent
strategic initiatives and opportunities advise to
consider information systems effects on one or more
of the industry forces, thereby tipping it to the
company’s advantage or preventing foreseeable
losses.
Investment in and the use of specialized
emerging technologies and/or applications could
raise or increase barriers to entry in the industry. In
so doing the existing firms would reduce the threat
of new entrants. This particular option is most likely
applicable in IT intense and highly regulated
industries such as Healthcare, Banking, and Finance.
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The widely adoption of Internet technologies,
and more specifically products and services
searches, e-commerce and online transactions
utilization contribute steady to dynamically shifting
power away from suppliers, so toward buyers. As
much as the Internet based systems and applications
help firms strengthen their bargaining position
toward either suppliers or buyers, they also could
reduce their bargaining power just before either one.
Innovative emerging technology executions by
creative companies, whether incumbents or new
entrants, could speed up immediate changes into the
basic of industry competition. A glaring example of
this dynamic was presented by the advent of online
retailing in the late 90-ties and early 2000, and later
with the individualized entertaining industry.
Essentially advances in the IT are transforming
the industry structure and alter each of the five
competitive forces, create the need and opportunity
for change, hence, industry attractiveness as well.
While Porter’s five competitive forces model is
truly important when strategic planning and
managerial decisions are taken, the impact of the key
internal forces clearly associated with the
information technology are particularly critical to
the operational effectiveness and shapes the
organizational business strategy and benefits.
1.2 The Sociotechnical Systems Model
Technology has become the heart and soul of every
business and it has a powerful effect on competitive
advantage in costs optimization, enhancing product
and services differentiation, or spawning new
business options. Every product on the market has
physical and information content and the tendency
today is towards increasing the information
component of products. Naturally, IT is deeply
involved in all aspects of the information
component, and yet IT is increasingly involved in
the physical component likewise – manufacturing
processes become automated, faster, more efficient
and precise with IT. The IT transforms the products
and affects the overall value activities of an industry.
Starting from traditionally information intensive
accounting, and continuing to performing
optimization and control functions, and furthermore
- judgmental, executive decision functions, the
significance of IT is becoming ever more strategic
for companies’ competitive advantage. How to align
the IT to the business strategy and to gain value
turning the great strategy into a great performance is
a “mature way of doing business” in the information
age.
To explore the complexity of the problems inside
organizations, and to avoid unrealistic expectations
when aligning the IT to the business strategy, a
formal methodology of examining and evaluating IT
capabilities in the organizational context should be
applied. In IT, “capability is the ability to marshal
resources to affect a predetermined outcome”
(McKeen, Smith and Singh, 2005). The core IT
capabilities are discussed later in the paper and they
are critical to meet the enduring challenges of
uniting business strategy and IT vision, delivering IT
services, and designing an IT architecture.
The contemporary Information Systems
approaches incorporate multidisciplinary theories
and perspectives with no dominance of a single
discipline or model. Gabriele Picolli in his
Information Systems for Managers text features IT
as a critical component of a formal, sociotechnical
information system designed to collect, process,
store, and distribute information (Picolli, 2012).
Kenneth and Jane Laudon in Managing the Digital
Firm, define Information Systems as Sociotechnical
Systems incorporating two approaches: Technical
and Behavioural, with several major disciplines that
contribute expertise and solutions in the study of
Information systems (Laudon and Laudon, 2014).
The notion of above definitions is based on the
Sociotechnical theory work developed by Tavistock
Institute in London in mid-50s and 60-ties. The IT
Sociotechnical approach not only visualizes the
concept, but reveals the impact of new technologies
and processes –the technical subsystem- on the
entire work system, and the dependencies and
interactions between all other facets and components
of the sociotechnical system. According to Picolli
any organizational Information System can be
represented as a Sociotechnical system which
comprises four primary components that must be
balanced and work together to deliver the
information processing functionalities required by
the organization to fulfill its information needs. The
IS Sociotechnical model validates the most
important components, and at the same time
illustrates primary driving forces, within
organizations: structure, people, process, and
technology. The first two – people and structure
shape the social subsystem, and represent the human
element of the IS. The latter two – process and
technology (more specifically IT) – contour the
technical subsystem of the IS and relate to a wide
range of IT resources and services intertwined with a
series of steps to complete required business
activities.
Shaping IT Capabilities to the Business Strategy : Capitalizing on Emerging Technologies and Trends
119
The sociotechnical system approach is
instrumental in helping policy and decision makers
to strategize and manage organizational change
particularly by the introduction of a new IT. The
easiest to envision, justify and manage change is
automation. It occurs when an IT innovation
modifies existing processes without affecting the
social subsystem sphere. Thus, this change requires
little executive sponsorship and involvement, while
the financial benefits can be estimated with some
precision. The further change impacts primarily on
the people component of the sociotechnical model. It
takes place when the information intensity of the
processes being performed is substantially changed
due to introduction of new IT. This level of change
informate - affects mainly employees and most
likely the customers, and would require executive
sponsorship and greater management involvement to
provide appropriate training and overcoming the
human tendency to resist changes while at the same
time seeking to take advantage of available market
opportunities.
The advanced change incorporates the previously
described changes, while also causes organizational
structure disruptions. The magnitude of this –
transform – change shakes all dimensions of inner
components interactions: it transforms the way how
organization selects, utilizes and manages IT; it
results in a change in the reporting and authority
structure of the organization; it manifests a novel
way of tasks’ accomplishment or/and a new set of
tasks or processes. The later change requires
significant managerial and executive involvement
with a steady championship by the top management
team for both signaling purposes and to provide the
necessary political impetus to complete the
transition.
The Sociotechnical system approach not only
validates the four critical components of the
Information system interdependency, but proves that
none of them works in isolation. They all interact,
are mutually dependent, and consequently are
subject to “systemic effects” - defined as any change
in one component affecting all other components of
the system. “Every business decision triggers an IT
event,” this quote from 2003 by Bob Napier, former
HP’s CIO is still valid: when addressing business
issues like productivity, service quality, cost control,
risk management, and ROI the decision-makers have
to consider the appropriate corresponding
modifications in the IT domain.
The process of changes and reciprocal
adjustment of both technical and social subsystems
should continue to interplay and growing closer until
a mutually satisfying results are reached. However,
the model in reality could not be with equal
subsystems’ changes. It should grow from micro to
macro level to reflect crucial influences of the
external environment, including regulatory
requirements, social and business trends,
competitive pressures, interoperability with
partnering institutions, especially when we analyze
the role of the IT systems.
1.3 Unfolding the notions of Operating
Models and Digitized Platform
The process of enterprise architecture design
requires a holistic view of the organization.
Following such approach makes possible to explore
how business processes, information flow, systems,
technology and predominantly business strategies
and priorities interact and contribute value to the
organization. Hence, understanding the
organizational synergy in detail provides the means
to define two important choices related to the
organization’s business operations:
How standardized its business should be
across operational units?
How integrated its business processes should
be across those units?
Any organization operates in one of the four
possible operating models, based on the business
processes selection as illustrated by Weill and Ross
from MIT Center for Information Systems Research
in their IT Savvy textbook (Weill and Ross, 2009).
Which one is considered as “the right one” depends
on the organization executives’ strategic decision:
In the diversification model - low
standardization and low integration -
organizations operate in a decentralized mode
with independent transactions, unique units
with few data standards across local
autonomies, most IT decisions are made
within the units;
The coordination model - low
standardization, high integration - is used by
organizations that deliver customized
services and solutions by unique business
units, while accumulating and providing
access to integrated data across the divisions.
The decisions should be made in consensus
for designing IT infrastructure and integrated
services, while IT applications decisions are
processed within individual units;
Organizations implementing the replication
model - high standardization, low integration
- typically provide high operational autonomy
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to their business units while requiring highly
structured and standardized business
processes. All decisions related to IT
infrastructure, applications and services are
centrally mandated;
Organizations operating in the unification
model - high standardization, high integration
- are centralized managed with highly
integrated and standardized business
processes. The Enterprise IT is highly
centralized and all decisions are made
centrally.
In the information age, when the business
decisions and success depend on the quickly
delivered precise information, IT unquestionably
needs to serve as a platform for the business
operations. For that reason, the Weill and Ross
describe the cocept of Digitized Platform (DP) as an
“integrated set of electronic business processes and
the technologies, applications and data supporting
the processes.” Therefore the DP becomes a
prerequisite to compete in the digital economy and it
should be used for achieving growth and
profitability.
The Digitized Platform and the Operating Model
are multi facets interrelated. First a company needs
to have a vision what they want to do (business
strategy), and then to think over how IT can help to
create a platform to accomplish their vision for
progress and profit. Weill and Ross exemplify the IT
role in this process “IT can do two things very well
integration and standardization.” Integration
delivers data access across a business, while the
standardization – reduces variation in business
processes and increases quality, efficiency, and
predictability in the operations (Ross and Beath,
2011). By identifying what the company wants to
integrate and standardize, actually defines its
Operating Model. In fact, the Operating Model
establishes the objectives and the requirements for
the specific company’s Digitized Platform.
Let makes this real by illustrating with two
examples how two different well-defined operating
models bring together specific requirements to
companies’ Digitized Platforms and benefit them to
achieve remarcable success.
In order to support its business strategies to
innovate and remain on leading position in the
industry, Procter & Gamble (P&G) not only spends
3.4 percent of revenue, more than twice the industry
average on innovation, but has created the most
efficient and effective utilization of IT by employing
a “Diversification” operating model. To accomplish
that feat, P&G created Global Business Services
(GBS), an internal shared services organization, to
provide a base of over seventy common, repetitive,
non-unique services for of the company’s 250
world-wide units. GBS delivers shared services
ranging from core IT systems to advanced
collaborative tools that allow researchers, marketers,
and managers to gather, store, and share knowledge
and information, such as:
Web 2.0 based social networking and
collaborative tools such as PeopleConnect
and ConnectBeam allow over 8000
researchers and scientists from inside and
outside the company to work together while
reducing research and development costs.
Microsoft integrated services that include
instant messaging, unified communications,
Microsoft Live Communications, Web
conferencing with Live Meeting, and content
management with SharePoint. The integrated
services help P&G to reduce the time and
effort necessary to share data and information
between employees and others involved in
the company's R&D activities.
Cisco Systems’ TelePresence technologies
have revolutionized the company
collaborations throughout all 70 major global
locations. P&G required Cisco to build
individual video studios to particular
specifications that portrayed the distinct
characteristics of each location, to make users
more comfortable and more accurately to
reflect the diversity of employees at each
location. The TelePresence system helps
P&G to accelerate the decision making and
faster speed to market, while reduce business
travel costs and increase resource utilization.
Obviously, P&G business success is derived
from its efforts in product innovation and
collaboration, developed and supported by
company’s constantly evolving digitized platform.
The listed above collaborative systems illustrate how
well-planned advanced technologies stimulate
sharing knowledge, ideas, innovations and support
teamwork across company’s world-wide spread
autonomous businesses.
A further example of a different operating model
is the ING DIRECT Bank replication operating
model. ING DIRECT operates internationally, and it
does not offer any tangible product, but
predominantly on-line or phone bank products and
services. Although the business processes / services
in the bank’s branches world-wide are the same,
there is no need of interaction between the separate
offices as they serve primarily local clients. So there
Shaping IT Capabilities to the Business Strategy : Capitalizing on Emerging Technologies and Trends
121
is low need of business processes integration.
However, the offered services in all counties are
identical and by standardizing the core business
activities, ING DIRECT establishes a Digitized
Platform that includes standard systems and
processes which are very easy to replicate. As a
result, ING DIRECT implements its systems for
weeks only, avoiding any risks and downtime
caused by untested and unknown applications, and
thus significantly reduces bank’s implementation
costs, increases its business efficiency and
outcomes.
2 THE KEY DOMAINS OF AN
ALIGNED ENTERPRISE
ARCHITECTURE
In general, “… enterprise architecture (EA) is a
holistic design for an organization, aligning the
current state of IT capabilities, processes, and
resources to enable business strategy” (High, 2014).
In the Federal Enterprise Architecture document, the
CIO Council refers to the EA as the “glue’ that ties
business and IT strategy together and that allows
them to drive each other. The best practice to
conceive and manage EA function is by identifying
the key domains, specific for every company.
At times, these key architectural domains are
shaped with a broader vision in mind and consist of
different sub-fields. Randy Heffner from Forrester
Research in his report depicted four interrelated
facets of EA that provide short- and long-term
effectiveness of delivering business technology
solutions: business architecture, information
architecture, application architecture, and
infrastructure architecture (Heffner, 2010 ). In the
Common Approach to Federal EA, six sub-
architectural domains delineate the types of analysis
and modeling that is necessary for an EA to meet
stakeholders’ requirements: strategic, business
services, data and information, enabling
applications, host infrastructure, and security (EO of
the US, 2012). Peter High in his World Class IT
Strategy book illustrates seven facets in cascading
logic from strategy to technology: strategic
intentions, business context, business value, business
process, data architecture, application architecture,
systems (IT) architecture (High, 2014). In all three
previously described models, and likewise in other
not specified here, the two key EA domains are
actually: the Business architecture and the IT
architecture. And for each of them we may add
particular sub-domains reflecting organization’s or
industry’s specifics. Such approach will simplify and
will provide better alignment of different
architecture life-cycles in some of these domains as
well will reflect more precisely diverse business
requirements.
Later on, the business of IT will be discussed
with emphasis how IT architecture could be
designed, built, and utilized more efficient and with
greater value for the company. With escalating IT
operational costs and the inability to get adequate
value from the IT investments, firms are striving to
convert their IT from a strategic liability to strategic
asset. According many recent surveys from Gardner,
Forrester, and CISR most of the IT budgets are spent
for keeping the existing applications and
infrastructure running. Many firms typically spend
over 80% of their IT budget for supporting the
existing systems, and the budget for renovation or
new systems, if exists, is below 20%. The widely
adopted piecemeal approach results in set of isolated
systems wired together to meet the next immediate
need. And while there are some valuable IT-based
products and services in the company IS
environment, the organizations find that it takes
longer and longer to test and integrate the new
patches with the existing systems, increases
vulnerability to systems outages, and makes more
difficult to respond to changing business conditions.
Reversing such company’s IT fortunes requires
different thinking from the type that “helped” the
organization to create its messy legacy.
The current digital economy has introduced
urgency around the need to plan and manage IT
strategicaly. To succeed in this approach and with
the needed business transformations, the
management must pursue four activities to ensure
that the company generates stratigic business value
from IT. These four activities – Commit, Build,
Run, and Exploit - constitute the “IT value creation
cycle.” (Ross, Beath and Quaadgras, 2011).
In recent years, the IT units have
professionalized their Build and Run IT activities by
developing service catalogs, calculating and
monitoring unit costs, standardizing project
methodologies, defining and implementing
technology standards, and working with business
partners to manage demands. While improved IT
Build and Run activities generate measurable
business benefits, they are just the first step in
producing sustained business success. Companies
that have achieved a reasonable level of maturity in
their Build and Run activities can greatly enhance
the strategic value of IT by developing more
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effective Commit and Exploit activities and as a
result to excel at all four by implementing seamless
handoffs from one activity to the next.
Commit involves allocating business and IT
resources to enact the company’s strategic priorities.
This requires the firm to articulate its stratigic
priorities in terms of its operational requirements
and to direct resources accordingly. This activitiy
actually demostrates how well the Business – IT
alignment works in every company. At the
enterprise level, Commit can be political challenging
as the senior executives have to fix what is broken in
their management and the use of IT. In a nutshell, IT
and business leaders have to introduce new ways of
thinking about and funding IT that would later lead
to building a digitized platform. As previously has
been difined the IT architecture domain could be
consider interchangeable as Digitalized Platform
(DP). Exploit involes driving additional benefits
from existing business architecture and technology
capabilities. Effective Exploit leverages digitized
platforms to continuously improve corporate
performance, profitable growth and business
opportunities.
The IT unit of the future will not own all
Commit, Build, Run, and Exploit activities, but IT
and business leaders will need to coordinate and
balance well all four activities to ensure that the
company generates strategic business value from IT.
Every company can decide which accountabilities
belong inside the IT unit, and which can best be
enacted outside IT. Maturing the four IT value
creation activities will demand development and
coordination of new capabilities, not only in IT but
throughout the enterprise. However the firms are not
equally successful in harvesting dividends from the
advanced IT capabilities, or driving benefits from
their digitized platforms.
2.1 Directing IT Funding to Strategic
Business Needs
The IT funding and investment decisions are
important and challenging part of the previously
discussed Commit activities since the systems are
implemented, they become part of the firm’s legacy:
their ongoing support requires time and money, their
influence and constrains dictate how business
processes are performed. IT funding decisions are
long-term strategic decisions that implement the
company’s operating model.
Weill and Ross intense research on multiple IT
successful or failed firms’ shows that three
important factors are affecting the IT funding and
investments in any IT-savvy firms:
Defining clear priorities and criteria for IT
investments - the operating model of the
company defines the business priorities and
how it will deliver products and services. The
top executives and IT leaders respectively
must clarify the IT investments priorities. All
companies are different, but what the IT
savvy have in common is that they “create a
central point for business change efforts” -
and this central point helps them to prioritize
the IT investments on high-value projects.
Establishing transparent process of project
prioritization and resource provisioning - in
IT well-advancing companies the senior
management is responsible for strategic
business initiatives and respectivelly for
project prioritization. The prioritization
criteria must be clear and must specify how
the IT project team will be held responsible
for the project outcomes and deliverables.
The transparency in project approval will
guarantee that not individual or political
decisions would influence project’s approval,
but pure economic and business efficiency.
Monitoring the projects through the phase of
implementation and afterwards - only a few
companies track their IT projects from the
idea –all through putting into practice,
including post-implementation. By applying
post-implementation projects’ review (PIR),
companies can obtain valuable information
about accomplished outcomes, further to
study and improve their IT funding cycle.
There is a splendid example of how British
Telecom revamped its IT funding model based on
the newly developed business strategy around three
lines of business: retail, wholesale, and global
services. At that time (2004), BT was running above
4000 systems, and over 6000 IT employees were
working on more then 4300 projects world-wide.
The new appointed company management examined
the existing IT environment and concluded it is not
designed for integration or low cost. To endorse IT
to be a critical tool for enabling BT’s business
transformation, the top management established
“One IT for One BT” to consolidate the systems
environment and to reduce the project portfolio.
Actually BT rebuilt the company’s project portfolio
by targeting the three core business processes: lead-
to-cash (“selling stuff”), trouble-to-resolve (“fixing
stuff”), and concept-to-market (“innovating stuff”).
These three processes defined the key elements of
Shaping IT Capabilities to the Business Strategy : Capitalizing on Emerging Technologies and Trends
123
BT’s unification operating model and provided the
management focus and clear methodology for IT
spending and resource allocation. The process for
project approval was established very clear: the
business unit prepares project case with expected
specific benefits, and then the IT unit provides costs,
technologies that can be used, and time frame for
execution. Special established requirements and
options for the level of ROI were adopted.
Furthermore, the projects were monitored following
approved metrics periodically in ninety-day cycle,
and beyond the implementation phase if they
generate the expected business ROI. The company
succeeded to reduce its total IT costs by 14 percent
and to cut the unit cost of IT services while tripling
output and doubling delivery speed. The new IT
funding processes, aligned well to the company
business strategy, helped BT to be transformed from
a very traditional and conservative telecom company
to a competitive and innovative firm.
Two additional lessons from the BT case could
be summarized in:
the positive effect of the PIR process helps
companies to lower the risks of investments
by learning from mistakes and best practices
from previous projects and to stimulate
employees to explore options to maximaze
project’s profits;
to create and manage IT project portfolios in
order to be able to estimate and allocate
properly the company’s IT expenditures. The
IT Portfolio combines the IT investments (or
costs) for existing systems, which cannot be
left without maintenance and support and the
IT investments for new projects.
The objectives of the IT advancing companies
should be to change the ratio new projects vs
existing systems to 40%:60% and to force the
company to a new more competitive level.
2.2 Building IT Architecture
Once the company takes charge of directing IT
funding to the strategic business needs, it is ready
for the second component of the Commit activities:
to build a digitized platform for enhanced business
performance.
The IT architecture or the Digitized Platform of a
company is the computer hardware and
infrastructure, software applications and data which
all together provide and support the core business
processes of the firm. In today’s highly
technological world, the DP is a company
instrument to achieve an efficient operating model
which will guarantee the company long term
prosperity and success. According Weill and Ross
from MIT CISR based on their extended research
around the globe the companies’ IT experience of
building their DP as a “journey” that can be divided
into four stages:
Stage 1 - Localizing – this stage illustarates
the dynamic, energetic and innovative
approach of any new company or IT unit,
when the firm’s priority is rapidly grow of
new systems or customized solutions as they
respond to customer demands and seek to
establish their unique proposition. Localizing
benefits/concerns analysis: the stage helps in
local and functional optimization, however it
raises complexity and expensive localized IT
solutions that respond to instant business
needs, and soon alter the stage name as
Business silos where business processes lack
consistency and costs/performance gaps
become commonplace.
Stage 2 - Standardizing – firms retreat from
the rapid-fire responces and focus on IT
efficiencies through technology
standardizations and shared infrastructure and
resources. Standardizing benefits/concerns
analysis: the stage succeeds to discipline
processes in IT service delivery and
investment prioritization, and to achieve IT
functional efficiency as to low OpEx and
high reliability, however soon after its
adoption it limits opportunities and become
incapable to meet new strategic needs.
Stage 3 - Optimizing – firms implement
disciplined enterprise processes and share
data as required by their operating model.
Optimizing benefits/concerns analysis: in the
stage firms define enterprise priorities, invest
in core packaged or customized integrated
platforms and systems, and most likely
accomplish high operational efficiency. In
general IT spending is increasing, but not the
IT unit costs, the project priorities are
established based on enterprise requirements,
rather than isolated ROI estimates, however
focusing on standardization and integration
provides little if any opportunity for
innovations.
Stage 4 - Reusing – firms exploring the
opportunities to utilize their business
processes as reusable components that they
customize for new, but related, business
prospects. Reusing benefits/concerns
analysis: in the stage firms achieve Business
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modularity based on synchronized strategic
and operational decisions with clear rules,
reliable data, and business intelligence tools,
these all result in gaining the most of IT
capabilities towards assets utilization, new
business opportunities and growth.
The successful DP creates a set of reusable IT
modules, and the business agility allows the IT
advanced companies promptly to address the
following four business opportunities:
empowering the employees with information
they need, and optimizing the processes for
maximum performance;
speeding up product/services innovations;
reorganizing the business processes to meet
better the customers and business needs;
improving merging and acquisition processes
for business growth.
If the company strategy to growth is by
acquisitioning businesses, the process of integrating
the IT infrastructures and information systems of the
new and the old structures is often extremely
challenging task. That is why many companies
choose “rip and replace” strategy to completely
change the old IT infrastructure in the acquired firm
with their existing DP which already has been
proven success.
One great example of a company that has
reached the fourth stage of its journey to build
advanced DP and successfully reusing it in many
differnet ways is Amazon. Initially Amazon business
strarted in dot com era as online C2C bookstore.
Their strategically evolving IT architecture well
aligned to agile business strategy created a
successful and growing business. Soon after the
beginning, Amazon has expanded the range of
selling goods far beyond books, and proffered its
advanced wide-spread digital platform to large
number of businesses and independent retailers. At
present, over 2.5 million retailers are using the
Amazon DP and are part of its enormous
marketplace with over 150 million global customers
Amazon did not stop with the first previously
described transformation from direct sales business
model to sales-and-service model. The company has
capatalized on its advanced IT capabilities and
succeeded to build one of the largest in the world
cloud computing platform, creating and launching
the Amazon Web Services in late 2006. In short,
with this new business model, based on innovative
utilization of existing DP and enhancing it with new
applications and higher computing performance,
Amazon targets and serves new customers and
different business processes, providing computing
resources on demand, and applying diverse profit
formula. AWS is an explicit example of IT advanced
firm where the investments in IT are used for
building digital platform that can be used and reused
multiple times by the company itself, its direct
customers or resellers to reap the benefits and to
enhance the growth.
Evolving through the four stages of building DP
is a challenging experience for organizations and
their IT units. As it has been said at the beginning -
the radical changes impact the organizational
mindsets in rethinking and reengineering the
traditional IT resources. Indicators for such
transformations can be seen analyzing the latest
Gartner CIO Agenda Report from 2015. It is based
on survey gathered data from over 2500 CIOs from
84 countries across the globe. The results represent
how IT domain is moving beyond IT craftsmanship
(focusing on technology) and IT industrialization
(focusing on process efficiency and effectiveness)
into a third era of enterprise IT, where digitalization
is transforming business models and provides
continual opportunities for growth, innovation and
differentiation - Figure 1. (Gartner, 2014).
Figure 1: New IT domain - “Digital first” (Gartner, 2014).
As one CIO is cited “we stopped thinking of the
IT as a bad, and started thinking of it as what keeps
the business running.” And this is the pivot point for
the modern organizations how to plan and manage
IT stratigically – by closing the loop with the Exploit
activities in the “value creation cycle” the companies
would maximaze the gain from reusing ingredients,
will steady advancing performance and profitable
growth, at the same time chasing new business
opportunities – see Figure 2.
Figure 2: The IT Value Creation Cycle (Ross, Beath and
Quaadgras, 2011).
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125
3 INSIGHTS ON ALIGNED IT
CAPABILITIES TO BUSINESS
STRATEGY
For the benefit of any company it is most important
to define and establish the IT architecture
underneath the organization’s business strategy. A
well-formulated IT architecture typically consists of
content and processes and describes the following
key components of the enterprise IT architecture:
Technology planning and management:
strategy, governance and operations aligned
to business processes
Information and data flow architecture
Applications architecture and functional
systems, including correlated interfaces
IT infrastructure: existing platforms, services,
and adopted standards.
The “IT/Business Alignment Cycle” is a
frequently used methodology which introduces a set
of well-planned process improvement programs that
systematically address a broad range of activities to
permeate the entire IT organization and its culture.
The four phases of the alignment cycle are (Nugent,
2004):
The Plan phase translates business objectives
into measurable IT services and helps close
the gap between what business needs and
expects and what IT delivers;
The Model phase designs infrastructure to
optimize business value and involves
mapping IT assets, process, and resources ,
then prioritizing and planning to support
business critical services;
The Manage phase drives results through
consolidated service support and enables the
IT to deliver promised levels of service based
on pre-defined business priorities;
The Measure phase verifies IT commitments
and improves its cross-organization visibility
into operations.
Following the above IT/Business alignment
cycle fosters organization-wide shared IT
expectations and defines a common framework for a
broad range of activities forcing alignment of IT and
business objectives. This simple framework should
be revisited periodically when there is a significant
course correction in corporate directions or in the
key components of the IT architecture.
In the evolving IT/Business alignment process
several significant points should be considered.
The first finding reflects the lead on driving
value from IT and the following critical steps should
be executed:
Set the directions for the IT-Business
alignment process – define the company
operating model, identify the key components
of the IT architecture, articulate the strategic
vision that the OM and IT is intended to
realize;
Lead the IT-business transformations –
straight the activities to build the DP,
complete the organizational changes needed
to execute the vision;
Preserve technology, data, and process
standards – supervise the technology
implementations conforming to the operating
model, the platform enabling it, and adopted
standards;
Exploit the value – gain the advantage of the
business agility provided by the adopted IT
platform, reuse and innovate constantly to
achieve sustaining technology S-curve.
The second finding reinforces Structure
rationalization to transform IT from a costs center
to strategic assets with business intelligence
capabilities. The Gartner analysis on Future
Directions of the IT industry from 2011, exemplifies
where the transformations are the most appropriate –
from lessening the After the Sale IT spending to
substantial increase the investments in Before the
Sale and in The Sale sectors – see Figure 3 (McGee,
2011). The process requires significant alternations
in the enterprise requirements to support
transformational initiatives such as: content-aware
computing, social and semantic computing,
information-enabled pattern-based strategy.
Figure 3: The IT Money Spending Model (McGee, 2011).
Only few years later, the current Gartner analysis
shows a new Nexus of Forces – BI/analytics (social
and information), cloud and mobile- as leading CIOs
investment priorities forcing transformations in the
traditional IT money spending model targeting
Before the Sales and the Sales sectors– see Figure 4
(Gartner, 2015).
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Based on the CIOs strategies reported in the
table, IT and business leaders transform profoundly
the role of IT from a strategic liability to strategic
asset strengthening the customer experience and
pursuing new channels of growth.
Figure 4: The CIOs priorities 2014/2015 (Gartner, 2015).
The third finding suggests modifying the Latin
philosophy “Ex Chaos Facultas” (“From Chaos
comes Opportunity”) to “From Consumerization
comes Opportunity” to reflect the current technology
trends. Recent tendencies in IT utilization show that
new technologies emerge first in the consumer
market and then, after mass acceptance, are
employed largely by business organizations. The
expected consequence of this pattern is that across
the globe companies are experiencing the most
disruptive new technology trend of this decade:
Consumerization.
Enterprises are capitalizing on the
consumerization of IT and proliferation of mobile
devises by developing applications aimed at
improving employee productivity and customer
satisfaction – see Figure 5. (Columbus, 2014).
Figure 5: Consumer Tools into enterprise (Columbus,
2014).
Consumerization of IT, along with workforce
mobility, and flexible, reliable, accessible and
affordable remote computing, change forcefully the
corporate IT lanscape affecting the relationship
between enterprise IT, corporate users, and
consumers. For organizational IT management,
consumerization exemplifies the convergence of a
demanding set of challenges such as information and
infrastructure security, technology policy, data
protection, and end-user technology. A new
tendency -BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) and
COPE (Company-owned, Employee-enabled)-
driven mostly by current Consumerization of IT in
the enterpise, is forcing companies to redesign or
create their policy and rules on how smart portable
devices can be used for both corporate and private
purposes, and how the related expenditures should
be covered.
For corporate management, consumerization of
IT signifies a new strategy which supports business
models and process innovations, talent strategy and
customers’ satisfaction, as well as corporate brand
and identity. Consumerization of IT blurs the line
between personal and work life, especially for
mobile workers. Mobile workers make up about
39% of the employees in North America, 25% in
Europe, and 42% in Asia, according to Forrester’s
analysis (Forrester Consulting, 2013). Their cohort
benefits the business immensely by increasing
productivity, and advancing collaboration and
business agility, thereby improving customer
satisfaction and climbing the rate of talent retention.
Consumerized employees spread the boundaries of
the workday and workplace, and it is fair to name
them “anytime, anywhere workers.”
The fourth finding is that in a digital economy
every organization is challenged by IT constant
innovations, and it should take a look again on the
pivotal question: “What comes first: IT architecture
or Business strategy?” The IT rapid advancement is
spawning completely new industries in several
different ways:
IT makes new businesses technologically
feasible – advances in nano-technologies
made today’s mobile industry possible. If we
think about Apple’s i-products – they came as
of technological advancements and
miniaturization, however Apple did
something unique and far more smarter
making not only a great technological
product, but wrapped it in a superb business
model. The Apple’s true innovation was to
enter and gain a substantial slice of the
personalized entertainment industry –
utilizing the technology innovations and
make it easy, customers’ friendly and
demanding the control of all i-products and
services.
IT can spawn new businesses by creating
demand on new products such as customized
Shaping IT Capabilities to the Business Strategy : Capitalizing on Emerging Technologies and Trends
127
financial services (mortgage, brokerage, and
investment) there were not optional nor
needed before the spread of IT caused a
demand for them. Web 2.0 technologies help
social networking and Big Data to flourish as
multibillion dollar business, the new coming
Web 3.0 with the next digital inspiration:
semantic technologies, Internet of Things,
M2M would make even beyond the current
experience.
IT creates new businesses within old ones.
Many companies take advantage of excess
capacity and skill of its advanced IT value
chain and provide products and services to
others based on them.
4 CONCLUSIONS
There are many other considerations and challenging
implications in the IT-Business alignment process:
asymmetric competition, speed of innovations, speed
to the market, speed of organizational model’s
evolution. All these specifics require yet more
efforts and analyses on how to integrate technology
into the strategic business objectives and to excel on
IT-enabled capabilities. The suggested simplified
EA framework and findings for consideration have
to provide a consistent, predictable, and agile
experience when mapping and executing
IT/Business alignment.
Further work is planned in two directions: how
consumerization of IT adoption to the dynamic
business objectives and current operating models
can be evaluated and measured, and how Web 3.0
technologies would impact the business of IT at the
enterprise level.
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