Contact Information: Contact: Seth Geisler Martin Levy Public Relations 858.610.9860
On-Demand IT Governance: 5 Steps to Driving Business Value
Transform IT From "Keeping the Lights on" Into Key Force Driving Strategic Initiatives
| Source: Innotas
SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwire - September 29, 2009) - Paradoxically, while the majority of IT
budgets and resources are focused on non-project, run-the-business work
like maintenance and operations activities, organizations instead need IT
departments to focus their energies on strategic project work that drives
business initiatives forward. Such misallocations are in part why IT
departments are usually viewed as business offshoots -- ad hoc shops
putting out technological fires -- rather than an integral driver helping
grow the business instead of merely running it.
It can be a very different story, however, when departments employ on-demand IT
Governance, which can help ensure IT is working on the right projects
at the right time and in the right way. Moreover, IT Governance provides
managers and company leaders with deep, real-time visibility into the
status of initiatives across the portfolio on a daily basis; can identify
how these efforts are being distributed; can quantify which projects are
providing the most organizational benefit; and can accordingly devote
resources toward those initiatives deemed most valuable to the
organization.
IT organizations that are considering an IT Governance solution (or are
already in the process of deploying one) should keep in mind the following
five steps, offered by leading on-demand IT Governance provider Innotas, in order to realize maximum
benefits:
1. Catalog
Many IT departments don't have a clear picture of everything that's being
worked on; they simply don't have a mechanism in place to capture every
piece of work performed by every single person on every single day, nor do
they account for time spent on maintenance or sustaining operations. Even
departments that do track such details usually rely on archaic,
time-consuming technology.
The first step in this process is to change that. Take inventory of and
catalog everything the department is working on: not just project work, but
applications, resources, requests, etc. Avoid spreadsheets -- which are
cumbersome and only accessible on specific work stations -- in favor of a
centralized repository that provides a panoramic view across the entire
organization.
2. Prioritize
Once everything is cataloged and centralized, and managers have visibility
across the portfolio, they can start making strategic decisions regarding
where time, personnel and other resources should be allocated. What makes
the most sense to work on? What's going to drive the most business value?
Where will the organization reap the highest ROI? Is the department in line
with the organization's strategic objectives? By defining what was just
cataloged and putting prioritization criteria in place, the organization
can start working on the most important initiatives first.
3. Execute
During the execution phase, while work is being delivered, managers and
personnel should monitor their performance real-time. Are they working on
the right things? Are they performing at a high level? Is their work on
time, on budget, in scope, within resource expectations, to the customer's
satisfaction, and delivering value?
4. Control
Control refers to monitoring and measuring performance and managing
resources and work accordingly. Is the department delivering business
value? Are its customers satisfied? Are there any redundant or duplicate
applications? Are the existing processes working?
5. Optimize
Now that all the work is cataloged, prioritized, monitored and measured, IT
managers have the data they need to make smart, fact-based, strategic
business decisions. They can identify which initiatives don't drive value,
revenue or customer satisfaction, and can make real-time adjustments as
necessary. Does the department need to re-allocate resources? Does it need
to retire an application, or perhaps reduce time spent enhancing it,
because it doesn't deliver business value? Is the department spending too
much time upgrading infrastructure?
IT organizations that follow these five steps -- that catalog everything
the department is working on, prioritize projects and activities, monitor
initiatives in real time, set controls to measure performance and manage
resources, and adjust business operations based on what makes the most
strategic sense -- will undoubtedly reap the most significant benefit from
their IT Governance investment.
Innotas was recently placed by Gartner (www.gartner.com) in the Visionaries
Quadrant in the June 2, 2009 Gartner analysis, "Magic Quadrant for IT
Project and Portfolio Management" by Dan Stang, principal research analyst
and Michael Hanford, research director.
Additionally, analyst firm IDC (www.idc.com) positioned Innotas as an
industry leader in its IDC MarketScape SaaS/On Demand ITPPM Market View and
noted that the company is helping drive SaaS adoption and innovation. The
report, "IDC
MarketScape: IT Project and Portfolio Management, 2009 Vendor
Analysis," was released on July 24 and is authored by Melinda-Carol
Ballou program director and Joseph C. Pucciarelli program director.
To learn more about how customers are using Innotas on-demand IT
Governance, download the Innotas eBook, "The 7
Undeniable Truths of IT Governance: Success stories from companies that
didn't wait until it was too late."
Follow Innotas on Twitter at www.twitter.com/innotas.
About IDC MarketScape
The IDC MarketScape vendor analysis model is designed to provide an
overview of the competitive fitness of ICT (information and communications
technology) suppliers in a given market. The research methodology utilizes
a rigorous scoring methodology based on both qualitative and quantitative
criteria that results in a single graphical illustration of each vendor's
position within a given market. IDC MarketScape provides a clear framework
in which the product and service offerings, capabilities and strategies,
and current and future market success factors of IT and telecommunications
vendors can be meaningfully compared. The framework also provides
technology buyers with a 360-degree assessment of the strengths and
weaknesses of current and prospective vendors.
About the Magic Quadrant
The Gartner Magic Quadrant is copyrighted 2009 by Gartner, Inc., and is
reused with permission. The Magic Quadrant is a graphical representation of
a marketplace at and for a specific time period. It depicts Gartner's
analysis of how certain vendors measure against criteria for that
marketplace, as defined by Gartner. Gartner does not endorse any vendor,
product or service depicted in the Magic Quadrant, and does not advise
technology users to select only those vendors placed in the "Leaders"
quadrant. The Magic Quadrant is intended solely as a research tool, and is
not meant to be a specific guide to action. Gartner disclaims all
warranties, express or implied, with respect to this research, including
any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
About Innotas
The Innotas
on-demand IT Governance solution is an easy-to-use, rapid-to-deploy,
and cost-effective way to manage resources and budgets across an IT
department's entire inventory of projects, portfolios, applications,
assets, and service requests. With its strong foundation in Project Portfolio Management and Application Portfolio Management, Innotas provides
CIOs and IT management with visibility across both strategic initiatives
and sustaining operations for improved decision making across the entire IT
portfolio. Our customers, including the City of Memphis, Crayola, Forbes,
Hamilton Beach, Jo-Ann Stores, The Northwest Company Inc., World Vision and
many others, span a wide range of industries including financial services,
government, healthcare, retail, technology, telecommunications and energy.
For more information please visit www.innotas.com or contact us at +1
415.814.7700.