Many IT organizations continue to struggle with strategy alignment
and demonstrating the value of IT to the business. Recently a
group of IT Executives discussed this topic and concluded there
was no silver bullet when it comes to IT Governance, or is
there?
IT Governance can be defined as the guiding principles for
directors on how to ensure the use of IT is effective, efficient
and acceptable.
Robert McIsaac, Group Vice President & Chief Information Officer
First Citizens Bank simplified it when
he indicated “effective IT Governance is about using the right
resources on the right problem in the right amounts at the right
time”.
It continues to remain high on the focus list because the business
may not have fully grasped the effect IT has on its business and
IT hasn’t fully become part of the business. There also has been
some confusion of what is the difference between IT Governance,
effective IT Management, standards and best practices. In
reality, you cannot have effective IT Governance without
effective IT Management, use of industry standards and best
practices. But it’s the partnership between IT and the business
that will ultimately lead to effective IT Governance.
The following strategies are something to consider, however not
all techniques can effectively work for all organizations:
·
IT Steering Committee: having a committee comprised of the right executives to discuss IT
investments seems, on the surface, to ensure IT investments are
being given the proper focus. However, having these discussions
during normal management meetings is the true indicator that IT
is truly part of the everyday operation of the business.
·
Charge Back System: Although being able to calculate the IT costs to particular parts
of the business does increase everyone’s awareness and help in
the determining priorities, it can create animosity if not
handled properly. Knowing the cost and being able to calculate
the return for the organization on investments are much more
important than distribution of IT costs to the business.
·
Organizational Structure: The best organizational structure for an organization depends on
the personalities and strengths of the executives involved.
Having the CIO report directly to the CEO may have little to do
with the effectiveness of the IT Governances. However it does
send a signal externally on the importance of IT to the
organization.
·
Organizational Culture: IT has to become part of the business and the business has to
accept IT as being a strategic partner in the business. The IT
executive has to speak in business terms and shows how IT brings
value to the organization. Changing the culture of the
organization is often a long and arduous task and requires a
strategic plan, patience, and most of all commitment from the
top of the organization.
·
Use of Frameworks and Tools. - There are a number of frameworks that address IT Governance
issues including ITIL, COBIT and the new ISO 38500 standard. No
one framework will assure that IT resources are used
effectively, although using these frameworks can increase the
chances that it does. The GRC (Governance Risk and Compliance)
tools assist in Risk and Compliance Analysis but may do little
in the Governance areas except for organizing documents and
assisting in communication. It may be a better way to
communicate in a one-on-one fashion than relying on tools to
ensure communications happen.
·
Communications between IT and the business
- On one hand,
IT is in a great position to have open communications and
interaction with other parts of the business. They are
positioned to help the other departments than anyone else in the
organization. Chuck Musciano, CIO of
Martin Marietta Materials
states “can you imagine some other department going to another
department to find out about how they operate their business?
The problem is that the “I” in IT sometimes seems like it stands
for introvert; good technicians often find it hard communicating
in direct on-on-one conversations”. So the CIO has to be and
have people who are conversant in both the technology and the
business.
It is difficult to identify the perfect solution to IT
Governance except the following may be identified as when you
know it’s not working:
·
The CIO reports are filled with technical jargon
·
The CIO spends a large amount of time in their office.
·
The business selects the CIO on their technical expertise
·
Project overruns seem to be the rule, rather than the exception
·
IT projects get allocated based on corporate politics rather
than value to the organization
·
IT related risks tend to have higher probabilities and impacts
than similar businesses
So there may be no silver bullet when it comes to effective IT
Governance except that IT has to be an integral part of the
business and it’s the board and senior management’s job to make
sure they have the right people, organization and culture in
place to make that happen.
It will also be a positive sign when
effective IT Governance is discussed between board members and
CEOs and not necessarily between IT Executives.
About Visage Solutions –
www.VisageSolutions.com
Visage Solutions is a consulting company operating in the areas
of regulatory compliance, risk assessment, information security,
risk management and compliance processes. Utilizing our
proprietary SingleVue™ and OpsAudit™ methodologies, the company
focuses on assisting business entities in mitigating operational
risk. Visage has provided solutions to a client base ranging
from private, entrepreneurial companies to large multinationals.
Our team is comprised of experienced executives, managers and
consultants who can assist clients with the development,
implementation and execution of their risk management and
compliance strategy.