If IT Isn't Aligned with the Business By Now, CIOs Should Quit or Be Fired

to IT Organization |

I've been listening to CIOs, reading about CIOs and hearing their problems for almost 12 years now, and to be perfectly candid, I am sick and tired of having to listen to CIOs' alignment struggles: The seemingly insurmountable challenge of aligning their IT department's mission and priorities with their business’s mission and priorities.

This so-called predicament has been on our radar screen for decades. We've written ad nauseam about alignment challenges in the past. Here's one article that makes the case for The ROI of alignment. Another where we question why alignment was so difficult. Another where we offer a formula for alignment. And still another where our in-house coach instructs CIOs to avoid the "managing expectations" moniker when addressing alignment. There's a lot more. Trust me.

In addition, my e-mail inbox receives a steady stream of survey results that detail the cumulative admonitions from CIOs regarding their alignment failings.

The most recent damning evidence came from CA in late November. "IT executives around the world are seeking to do a better job of aligning IT investments with business goals, but only about half believe they are doing so," said the report, which polled 300 CIOs and IT executives at companies with more than $250 million in annual revenues. (Full disclosure: The survey was conducted by CIO's Custom Solutions Group.)

It gets worse: 74 percent of respondents believe that better prioritization of IT spending based on business needs is a critical IT management goal. Now, there are many ways you can interpret that data point, but to me it says: Almost three-quarters of CIOs have yet to align basic IT spending with business priorities. It's a goal. In fact, the survey found that only 38 percent of CIOs feel that they are effective or very effective in enabling IT to prioritize based on business needs. About half the respondents report their efforts are only somewhat effective, and for 13 percent of companies, "the situation is much worse."

Mind you, this survey was completed in 2007! Not 1987.

From my perspective, alignment woes have become an all-to-convenient excuse for underperforming IT chiefs. The word is a crutch that CIOs use to cover up their fear of actually talking to, engaging with and fleshing out core business needs. It allows CIOs to hide from actually solving those strategic business problems. And rather than making IT transparent—the opposite of the unwieldy and unmanageable cost center that it is notoriously known as—CIOs seem to want to stay separate. Aloof.

Isn't the goal to be just another cog in the business's machine?

By this point in IT's evolution it seems incredulous to me that CIOs wouldn't have realized the criticality of solving any potential business-IT disconnect, and then actually doing it. Which is why I’m so tired of hearing about it.

CIOs claim to know all about the alignment imperative. Results from our 2008 "State of the CIO" survey, which polled more than 550 IT leaders, show that 100 percent of respondents say that aligning IT and business was their number-one priority. Great! At least CIOs know what they should be doing.

But if all CIOs know about it and claim to have been working on it for decades, then why are we still talking about it, and hearing about the alignment fracture from CIOs and CEOs, and having to sift through survey after survey about the alignment challenge? And how can CIOs in good faith show their face

Continue Reading

Print
What is Tech Briefcase?
TechBriefcase is a new, free service where IT Professionals can Search, Store and Share IT white papers and content like this. Learn more
Bookmark content
Speed up your research efforts with content across the web.
Search and Store
Find the white papers you need. Create folders for any topic.
View Anywhere
Open your briefcase on your iPhone, tablet or desktop. Share with colleagues.
Don't have an account yet?

Browse CIO Blogs

See all CIO Blogs »

Cloud computing has emerged as one of the most significant game changers to hit the technology landscape in the past 20 years. With this massive expansion of the cloud, the perception of the IT organization is shifting from a utility player to a change agent. This eBook breaks down five ways progressive organizations are using cloud-based IT Management solutions to help drive innovation and become more strategic, including: adding visibility and analytics, speeding up time-to-value, lowering costs, improving prioritization, and providing a blueprint for future cloud deployments.
Read the white paper to see how IBM helped Citigroup deliver new services and enhancements to their 200 million customers faster.
There are 3 ways to modernize legacy applications: rewrite completely, acquire packaged solutions or migrate existing code. This paper explains why it's best to migrate and how IBM® Rational® software can help.
Accommodating specific lines of business can result in a hybrid ecosystem of applications and servers. The resulting complexity of this architecture makes for an environment that is costly to maintain and difficult to change when addressing new challenges.
This whitepaper will help you to define a mobile device passcode policy. Security managers must attempt to reconcile two opposing goals. They must: 1) create a passcode policy that is strong enough to protect the device if it is lost or stolen, while: 2) not annoying users with needless length or complexity.
This whitepaper, authored by The Radicati Group, looks at the key reasons organizations should consider moving to a cloud-based archiving solution. Email archiving solutions enable organizations to store, monitor, and collect electronic data exchanged by their users to comply with internal policies and regulations.
ATERNITY will showcase a 30-minute demo on how Fortune 500 companies are leveraging its award-winning FPI Platform to deliver a user-centric approach to Proactive IT Management.
For businesses to move forward and tap into the ever-expanding universe of Internet users and network-enabled devices, it's critical to learn how to make the transition to IPv6. Learn the critical steps your organization must take to make a seamless transition-and keep your business world connected.
Learn how IT teams can protect against spear phishing tactics. Harry Sverdlove, chief technology officer of Bit9 offers a frank discussion about spear phishing - the most common technique used in today's advanced attacks.
Learn how to build a solid business case for your migration to Red Hat Enterprise Linux so you can run leaner, innovate faster, be more flexible and own the New Now.
Social media isn't about you; it's about everything around you. As you consider how your customers want to communicate with you, social media is something that can't be ignored. But what should your strategy be? Is social media "just another channel?" What kind of a plan makes sense for your contact center and for your customers? Join our experts as they share their insight and research results.
Hardware tokens were a popular method of strong authentication in past years but the cumbersome provisioning and distribution tasks, high support requirements and replacement costs have limited their growth. The additional log-in steps that hardware tokens require and the resulting user frustrations have limited adoption and make them impractical for larger scale partner and customer applications.

Newsletter Sign-Up »

Receive the latest news test, reviews and trends on your favorite technology topics

Choose a newsletter
  1. View all Newsletters | Privacy Policy