Technology is supposed to be the servant of business needs. Yet many organisations find themselves contorting business operations to fit the functional constraints of available technology. To get the most from technology investments, leaders have to ensure that organisation goals are well defined, so that technical strategy can be effectively crafted to meet those goals.
What is business alignment
Achieving alignment between business and information technology (IT) strategies is a crucial issue for the modern organisation. This should come as no surprise given the massive impact technology has had on organisations in every sector.
Technology developments have radically impacted areas such as production, communications, research, recruitment, security and human resource management.
Technology also plays a major role in competitive positioning. In relatively short order, IT had moved from being merely an operational function to being a critical strategic organisational asset. In an ideal scenario, the technology asset should be leveraged to deliver and organisation's needs and realise its corporate vision. Sadly, reality is often much different.
Strategic misalignment
Why? IT organisations do not always have a clear understanding of what's important to the business. At the same time executives do not always understand the value of IT or the full implications of technology on business systems and organisational culture. In fact, even some IT executives don't fully understand the complex interrelationships between technology, people and processes. To compound organisations do not always create inclusive fora where corporate, cross-functional perspectives on decisions regarding IT direction and priorities can be fully ventilated.
There are many reasons with this is so. We can't go into them all here. Suffice it to say, opportunities to use information technology are not always well identified, authorised, prioritised or implemented, based on well-defined business objectives or on full understanding of the opportunities, implications and risks of available technology.
Collaboration is key
In today's highly digitised world, business and IT have to be synchronised to achieve success. This requires leaders who make the business decisions and leaders who oversee the technical operations to commit to collaborating to gain understanding of their respective domains. This means new conversations; new fora for exchanging ideas, perspectives and needs; and shared responsibility for guaranteeing beneficial outcomes for the organisation. This cannot be left to chance.
Such synchronisation has to be led from the top.
For example, business executives can participate in IT department meetings and vice versa, to improve mutual understanding of the business objectives, technical capabilities and real limitations. Of course, to do this IT officers have to take the time to become more versed in the language of business.
IT's inability to effectively communicate the business implications of proposed or imposed technology solutions can lead costly problems for an organisation.
Educating business management regarding the importance of partnering with the IT organisation and educating IT management on the importance of learning business speak can reap tangible rewards.
Another important step is the identification and implementation of IT organisation changes (structure, staffing, skills, style). Combined with training, management education, organisations can position internal teams to achieve better alignment of the IT resource to business goals and objectives.
Obviously, making comprehensive changes to the structure of your IT organisation is hardly likely to be trivial. Here are a few pointers to help you get started:
�2 Assure that all IT activities contribute to the goals, objectives, and strategies of the business.
�2 Encourage executive business management to become continuously involved in plans and decisions regarding the use of information technology;
�2 Optimise the IT organisation's structure to best address the needs of the business by matching IT organisation structure, style, staffing, and skills to the requirements of the business;
�2 Create a customer focused culture in the IT organisation
�2 Enhance the awareness of the value of IT to the business
�2 Create deliberate, structured processes to keep business and IT strategies aligned, such as an internal technology advisory body consisting of business and IT management to discuss and share in technology decisions.
�2 Integrate IT project planning and approval process into the enterprise planning process
The rapid pace of technological change means that the capability to evolve the IT function to better align with enterprise strategy will be increasingly central to organisational success. Developing this capability will require attitude changes in both IT and the business personnel.
Ultimately, alignment of IT to business strategy is a process not a project. It is a process that does not being with the technology. It begins with leaders and their teams understanding and committing to the common objective of advancing the organisation.
Bevil Wooding is the chief knowledge officer of Congress WBN (www. congresswbn.org), a values-based international non-profit. He is also executive director of BrightPath Foundation, an education-technology non-profit (www.brightpath foundation.org). Reach him on Twitter @bevilwooding or on facebook.com/bevilwooding or contact via e-mail at technologymatters @brightpathfoundation.org.