Critical.
Authoritative.
Strategic.
Subscribe to CIO Magazine »

Five Roadblocks to Faster IT Projects

How do you speed up your IT organization? Here are five things that may be standing in your way

Several clients and prospects have said to me that they want to speed up their IT organisations. But speed doesn't come easily, and that's a message none of these organizations has been comfortable hearing. Here's what stands in their way:

A Focus On Big Projects

In every case, the whole structure of the IT organization - from project offices to approval processes - is geared for large projects that last a year or longer. The projects are strictly linear, with business analysts interacting with architecture to produce reference solutions, then development experts converting that into designs, and then specifications being laid down. All this is good for getting a big effort right, but these steps slow down the work.

Hostility Toward New Ways Of Doing Things

These IT organizations won't invest in and experiment with new tools, approaches and methods until there is a project "worthy" of them. Meanwhile, no business client will take a chance on anything new. The result is that yesterday's languages, tools and methods remain today's, and likely tomorrow's.

Silence Rather Than Dialogue On IT Investments

When business people are left in the dark about IT's existing portfolio, they can only wonder about the state of things. Without portfolio feedback, the business can't judge whether to extend what it owns a little longer or to start again for the next decade. More often than not, the business defers to IT, and IT defers to what it already knows.

The Business Side's Commitment Level

Not all the problems are in IT. In every one of these companies, the business does not make IT tech projects a priority. Decision-makers don't come to meetings, and key issues aren't worked out early. Far too often, core questions (e.g. What is a superior customer experience?) aren't asked until late in the game. At project's end, the business won't participate in testing or invest in deployment support.

Corporate Style

Corporate behavior influences what you can do. If your performance evaluation system is too rigid, or if you are required to plan (and then execute according to that plan) with nothing held back for change, your speed will be limited. Here, IT can push against the limits, but it's hard to go any great distance past them.

Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.

More about: Dialogue, Speed

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Users posting comments agree to the CIO comments policy.
Login or register to link comments to your user profile, or you may also post a comment without being logged in.
Related Whitepapers
Latest Stories
Community Comments
Latest Blog Posts
Whitepapers
  • Improving Storage Efficiencies with Data Deduplication and Compression
    IT organizations worldwide are dealing with the tremendous growth of data and the complexity of managing the storage for that data. In this data-intensive environment, IT managers need to optimize the capacity and performance of their disk storage systems while working to reduce complexity and lower costs. Read on.
    Learn more »
  • Pathways Advanced Course Outline 2012
    12 month CIO designed and delivered leadership development program aimed at changing today's ICT professionals into tomorrow's business leader.
    Learn more »
  • Why Hackers have Turned to Malicious JavaScript Attacks
    Website attacks have become a serious business proposition. In the past, hackers may have infected websites to gain notoriety or just to prove they could—but today, it’s all about the money. Reaching unsuspecting users through the web is easy and effective. Hackers now use sophisticated techniques—like injecting inline JavaScript—to spread malware through the web. Learn about the threat of malicious JavaScript attacks, and how they work. Understand how cybercriminals make money with these types of attacks and why IT managers should be vigilant.
    Learn more »
All whitepapers
rhs_login_lockGet exclusive access to Invitation only events CIO, reports & analysis.
Recent comments

HP and IDG news, product videos and resources