The CIO's Guide To Aligning IT Strategy With The Business: Idc Perspective
The CIO's Guide To Aligning IT Strategy With The Business: Idc Perspective
The CIO's Guide To Aligning IT Strategy With The Business: Idc Perspective
EXECUTIVE SNAPSHOT
FIGURE 1
Aligning IT strategies with business strategies has been a mantra for CIOs for quite a few years. Yet,
despite the apparent straightforward nature of the endeavor, many CIOs struggle to achieve that
alignment. The rapid rise of digital technologies and transformation has significantly raised the bar —
now, CIOs must find synergies and multiplier effects, not just business alignment, and that has a big
impact on the creation of IT strategies.
IT strategy logically flows from the enterprise business vision, mission, goals, and strategies —
especially digital business strategies. Collectively, they should anchor and guide IT strategy
development. Yet IT strategy should also inform business strategy by presenting new and unexpected
opportunities and capabilities. CIOs and strategy development stakeholders must cycle back and forth
between business and IT strategies to maximize synergies.
CIOs need to find new process-driven approaches to formulating strategy in the new world where
technology is found in every aspect of the business. An effective strategy development process is
inclusive of all stakeholders, reliably identifies the most critical business needs and opportunities,
objectively assesses the current state of IT and the enterprise, surfaces and vets all salient IT strategic
initiatives and opportunities, explains how business and IT success will be measured, and engages
and motivates all those who must embrace, support, and execute the strategy.
This study lays out a process for creating IT strategy (see Figure 2). It explains how CIOs can envision
and develop new IT strategies, identifies key activities and actions for each step, and provides advice
on ensuring effectiveness and adoption of an IT strategy. (Note that implementation and execution of
the strategy are not discussed here — the study focuses on how to create an IT strategy.)
FIGURE 2
Key Activities
Identify, contact, and recruit all salient stakeholders. F. Edward Freeman's work on the
Stakeholder Theory lists employees, environmentalists, suppliers, governments, community
organizations, owners, media, customers, and competitors. Additional stakeholders would
include LOB executives, CIO direct reports, and key partner representatives. Team members
must be willing and able to devote the necessary time for the duration of their involvement.
Build trusting relationships among all stakeholders, and gain support for the strategy effort.
Educate nontechnical stakeholders on essentials of digital technologies and digital business
and operating models.
Conduct workshops to learn about and select key tools and practices, such as agile, design
thinking, value streams, and lean start-up, that can help create a structured framework.
Agree on a strategy development process and governance and oversight for the process.
Define the purpose and desired outcomes for the IT strategy development process.
Review existing IT and enterprise vision, mission, strategy, and goals.
Review IT spend across the entire enterprise.
Create/adopt an agile approach to formulating the IT strategy.
One of the biggest mistakes CIOs can make in formulating an IT strategy is to use ad hoc, non-
systematic approaches that attempt to match technology solutions with highly visible problems.
Modern IT strategies are complex, have multitudes of interdependencies and diverse and powerful
stakeholders, and have a material impact on the success or failure of the business. Strategy
development is one of the most critical responsibilities — one that requires rigor and a structured
approach and processes.
Above all, the IT strategy formulation process needs to be agile, as business environments are
continually shifting. A strategy that only adjusts on an annual basis runs the risk at any point in time of
being mistargeted. The process needs to continually sense changes in the business ecosystem and
prompt decisions about possible changes to the strategy.
Questions
The groundwork stage is the foundation and springboard for actual strategy development and should
not be considered complete until the following questions are answered:
Are all necessary participants onboard, with clear roles and authorities?
Do all stakeholders have the necessary level of understanding of relevant digital technologies
and business and operating strategies and models?
Business and IT strategies exist in a messy world of shifting business, social, technological, economic,
and geopolitical forces. Those forces and dynamics make up the business context in which the IT
strategy must function and succeed and form the basis for identifying key drivers that will shape and
help decide what key initiatives need to be prioritized.
Key drivers are quite individualized to a given business. But they can include technology emergence
and evolution; global competition and challenges; competition in the form of new business and/or
operating models; shifting customer and market dynamics — personal, social, and cultural; geopolitical
and regulatory shifts and uncertainties; environmental and climate impacts; and threats to privacy and
security. (See Critical External Drivers Shaping Global IT and Business Planning, 2019, IDC
#US44330818, October 2018, for IDC's discussion of key drivers that will shape IT strategy over the
next five years.)
Key Activities
Compile and review trends, disruptions, and forecasts in business, technology, environmental,
geopolitical, social, regulatory, and other salient arenas.
Identify the most important forces and drivers that will impact the enterprise and IT.
Describe how the selected drivers will help define the desired future state of the enterprise.
Prioritize and map drivers to time frames in which drivers are expected to be active.
Describe responses that will be needed from the enterprise and IT.
Time phase responses based on projected time frames.
While there may be a multitude of key issues, CIOs need to work with business leaders to select only
those that truly move the needle for the business. It's been said that, when everything is a priority,
nothing is a priority and that is true when it comes to IT strategy. IT and LOB executives will have to
subordinate the agendas of their own organizations to focus on the drivers that offer the most potential
for business benefit to the enterprise. Selecting the most important drivers is critical, as the selected
set will define the focus of successive stages of strategy development and the strategy itself.
Questions
What drivers are most likely to present threats to the business? Opportunities?
Are drivers strengthening in potential impact?
What is the anticipated time frame of each driver?
What are the potential impacts of each driver on the business and its ecosystem?
TABLE 1
Personal mission and Vision, mission, goals, and Vision, mission, goals, and Key players and stakeholders
goals strategies strategies
Principles, values, and Talent, culture, and Size, age, industry, and "Ownership" and power
drivers management business and financial structure — controllers and
performance influencers
Digital and business Depth of digital skills and Depth of digital skills and Quality of ecosystem
savvy experience experience products, services, and
experiences
Problem solving abilities Extent of digitalization of Talent, culture, and Role of the enterprise in the
infrastructure and services management ecosystem
Workers' trust in senior Trust and respect for CIO Customer and market Key value streams —
managers including CIO and IT department from LOB demographic shifts and producers, enhancers, and
executives dynamics consumers
Innovation talent Depth and quality of IT Competitors, disruptors, and Velocity of growth and
services and capabilities threats change
Ability to self-direct and Competitors, disruptors, and Brand strength and customer Competitors, disruptors, and
motivate threats and employee sentiment threats
Autonomy in decision Current operating models Current business and Strength and capabilities of
making and effectiveness operating strategies and partners
models
Engagement with Budgets and financial Revenue, spend, and Weaknesses and missed
business resources profitability opportunities
Capacity for personal Capacity for organizational Capacity for organizational Capacity for ecosystem
change change change change
Key Activities
Assemble necessary data, market and customer intelligence, and ecosystem intelligence to
underpin analysis and decision making.
Identify the most salient and important attributes for assessment.
Create an assessment framework and scoring system.
Describe the current states of the business and IT, using SWOT or other frameworks to
assess relative competitiveness and readiness to execute business and IT strategies.
Assess the viability and currency of the existing business strategy.
The current state assessment requires at least a basic framework that identifies the most salient
attributes to keep stakeholders from getting too far down in the weeds. The intent is not to put every
aspect of IT and the business under a microscope but instead to select attributes of both organizations
that need to be addressed by the IT strategy. In support of that aim, the assessment should include a
simple scoring system to measure importance (high, medium, low) of each selected attribute and the
relative current state (strength, weakness, neutral). And the current state assessment should reflect
the viewpoints of employees, managers, customers, partners, and the business' ecosystem.
Questions
How is the enterprise performing relative to peers in the industry?
How is IT performing relative to peers?
How is IT enabling and driving enterprise performance?
What's working with enterprise and IT strategies? What's not?
At what stage of readiness for digital transformation are IT, the enterprise, and the ecosystem?
What gaps or inadequacies need to be addressed?
How fast does the business need to respond to threats, changes, or opportunities?
As we noted previously, an agile approach that emphasizes learning and refinement in an iterative
staged approach will create more adaptive strategies. Design thinking is another discipline that helps
the strategy team frame (or reframe) problems and their solutions from the customers' perspective to
make sure that a prospective initiative and its outcome are important for the target audience. Finally,
Collectively, the tools and practices should be employed in a series of workshops that distill the
drivers, issues, and needs identified in the earlier stages of work into prioritized strategic initiatives
comprising the IT strategy. Each workshop should focus on one initiative and involve only the
stakeholders that are germane to that initiative.
In defining strategic initiatives, the strategy teams should start with a desired business outcome and
initiative and then work through the value streams that produce that outcome. Supporting the value
streams are IT capabilities: the data, technology, talent, processes, and governance necessary to
deliver a given outcome. For example, a desired outcome or initiative focused on generating new
revenue from appliance service data would require new IT capabilities (sub-initiatives) in
data/analytics, product development, digital platforms, and new business model development.
Key Activities
Distill drivers and issues into focused business problems, challenges, and opportunities.
Create and run workshops to brainstorm initiatives and solutions that can address identified
business drivers, problems, and needs. Start with divergent thinking to create a wide
assortment of potential solutions, moving to convergent thinking to winnow down the solution
set.
Evaluate solutions based on constraints including budgets, financial viability, legacy culture
and processes, talent availability, and other factors that may obviate some solutions.
"Test" the top solution initiatives with those who will implement or be affected by the initiatives.
Refine based on feedback or reexamine the original drivers and issues to ensure that they are
relevant and important.
As powerful digital technologies have become core to business success, IT strategy development has
become a "chicken and egg question": technology or business — which comes first? The answer is
"both." Business needs, strategies, and models obviously drive technology strategies and adoption
and will always be the dominant force in setting IT strategy at large enterprises. Yet, without cloud,
data/analytics, and machine learning technologies, new business and operating models such as those
employed by Uber, Lyft, Google, and others simply could not exist. Business strategies need to be the
starting point and anchor for IT strategies, but at times, they will be shaped, if not driven, by new and
emerging technologies.
Questions
Do strategic initiatives represent the most important needs and opportunities over the planning
time frame?
What opportunities can new digital technologies create for the business?
Which initiatives are owned by IT? By LOB executives?
What new IT capabilities are needed to support the strategy?
How radically do IT and the enterprise have to change, and over what time period, to achieve
the desired future state?
If successful, will the strategy enable the CIO and IT organization to deliver the capabilities
and services needed to achieve the enterprise vision, mission, and goals?
Will workers, managers, and partners engage and enlist to execute the strategy?
Key Activities
Discuss how metrics and KPIs will be used and who will manage them.
Discuss what strategy success looks like and whether there are thresholds of attainment.
Start with desired business outcomes for each initiative, and identify key dimensions that
measure performance.
Identify metrics and KPIs that measure the outcomes in terms that will be useful to the CIO
and LOB executives to fix problems or sunset initiatives that aren't effective.
It's important to favor outcome or impact measures (e.g., sales growth, process cost reduction) over
activity measures (e.g., website visits, projects completed) as the former measure the health and the
viability of IT and the business while the latter often turn into vanity metrics. Also important is creating
metrics that help assess the success of IT strategy implementation and the business outcomes that
result from execution.
Questions
Do metrics reflect true business impact?
Can data be readily collected at a viable cost?
Will actions be taken based on unfavorable metrics? By whom?
Will metrics be shared with all stakeholders and impacted audiences?
Questions
How long will the communication campaign be continued?
How will the success of the communication be determined?
Who are the key spokespersons?
What is the most effective way to communicate and sell the IT strategy to each target
audience?
The IT strategy fulfills many functions, from guiding IT focus and resource allocation to coordinating
digital initiatives across the enterprise to engaging managers and workers to work collaboratively
toward IT and enterprise success. Achieving those purposes means that CIOs must invest quality time
beyond just constructing the IT strategy. Working with the diverse group of stakeholders necessary to
forge an effective strategy requires building trusting relationships, meeting and exceeding customer
expectations for IT services (being credible and respected), and fully understanding the business of
the enterprise and LOB executives. Any less will result in a subpar strategy with weak support. CIOs
are advised to be sure that those prerequisites are in place before embarking on an enterprisewide IT
strategy development effort (see Figure 3).
Essential Guidance
LEARN MORE
Related Research
The CIO's Guide to Developing IT Strategies for Enterprise Transformation (IDC
#US44926119, forthcoming)
Critical External Drivers Shaping Global IT and Business Planning — 2019 (IDC #US44330818,
October 2018)
Synopsis
This IDC Perspective explores the new process-driven approaches to formulating strategies that CIOs
need in the world where technology supports every aspect of the business. An effective strategy
development process includes all stakeholders, reliably identifies the most critical business needs and
opportunities, objectively assesses the current state of IT and the enterprise, surfaces and vets
necessary IT strategic initiatives and opportunities, explains how business and IT success will be
measured, and engages and motivates everyone who must embrace, support, and execute the
strategy. This study explains how CIOs can create new IT strategies, describes a six-stage process for
agile strategy development, identifies key actions for each step, and advises on ways to ensure
effective adoption of an IT strategy.
"Modern IT strategies are complex and have multitudes of interdependencies, diverse and powerful
stakeholders, and a material impact on the success or failure of the business," says Marc Strohlein,
adjunct research advisor with IDC's IT Executive Programs (IEP). "That makes strategy development
one of the most critical CIO responsibilities — one that requires rigor and a structured approach and
processes."
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