- +
Ticked Off at Tick the Box Mentality 04 February, 2008 13:01:15
Does your executive search firm know the difference between an MIS manager and a CIO, and if it does, can it explain that difference to its corporate clients?Does your executive search firm know its MIS managers from its elbow? Does it even know the difference between an MIS manager and a CIO, and if it does, can it explain that difference to its corporate clients? - +
Strategies for Dealing With IT Complexity 24 December, 2007 10:30:47
Every innovation, every business process improvement, comes with an IT complexity tax that must be paid by CIOs in time, money and sweat. Here are strategies to mitigate the increasing complexity of IT as it enables new business.Every innovation, every business process improvement, comes with an IT complexity tax that must be paid by CIOs in time, money and sweat. Here are strategies to mitigate the increasing complexity of IT as it enables new business.
Management 2.0? That’ll Be the Day
Google Eyes the Enterprise Market
PHP, JavaScript, Ruby, Perl, Python, and Tcl Today: The State of the Scripting Universe
The 14 Silliest Smartphone Accessories: How to Humiliate a BlackBerry, Embarrass an iPhone
Refocusing Projects Onto Business Value, Part 17: Project Alignment Management
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services. Optimized Back-up and Recovery for VMWare for VMWare Infrastructure with EMC Avamar
Choices in Storage Architecture for Oracle Environments
Why Security SaaS Makes Sense Today
How to Beef Up Your Sales Pipeline
Dude! You Say I Need an Application-Layer Firewall?!
The IP Storage payoff: Turning your investment into efficient, affordable results
Revolutionising Back-up and Recovery
Enterprise Wireless WLAN Security
Newsletter Subscription
The successful transfer of knowledge to an offshore vendor - everything from programming expertise to what users expect from a system - can make or break a project. Here's what you need to know to do it right.
READER ROI
- Why knowledge transfer problems can hobble an offshore project
- What kind of work you can offshore and what you can't
- How to successfully transfer knowledge to overseas workers
When IT executives at Life Time Fitness, a fast-growing health and nutrition company, first considered sending systems development work offshore two years ago, they tried to do everything right. They started off with a small pilot and used an Indian vendor they had already been working with. But that offshore team had worked solely at Life Time's Minnesota headquarters - not at its own Indian location. Even so, Life Time's IT executives were happy with the team's work and felt they had a good handle on the cultural and communication issues that sometimes arose. So in mid-2002 CIO Brent Zempl decided to take the next step: to truly offshore a pilot project - a non-mission-critical application used to analyze data for construction site selection.
He signed a contract with the same vendor the company had been working with. Their pitch "was very convincing", recalls Wesley Bertch, Life Time's director of information systems. "They had all of these processes - Six Sigma, CMM Level 5 - and said they could collect requirements and deliver the system on time and budget at or better than the level we could. So we went ahead."
Problems cropped up immediately. The culprit was knowledge transfer. The offshore workers' lack of programming experience and knowledge about the project and its origins, together with their faulty understanding of Life Time's users' needs and misperceptions about what constituted a successful project, hindered the documentation of system requirements. Life Time Fitness went over budget to bring one of its own technical writers into the process and extend the documentation process from two weeks to a month. Finally, the offshore liaison hopped a plane back to India, documentation in hand.
A few months later, the offshore team produced a data model. It was a disaster. "It had so many problems, we couldn't even log all the defects in the week we had to do it," Bertch recalls. "And that was just the database. When we went through the QA testing, screens would go blank. Data was lost." The application wasn't just user-unfriendly, it was unreliable and, therefore, unusable. "It was a major embarrassment for both sides," Bertch recalls.
Ultimately, Zempl swallowed the financial loss and brought the system back in-house for his own programmers to rework. But not before learning a lifetime of lessons about offshore outsourcing, and the importance - and limitations - of the offshore knowledge transfer process. As Zempl discovered, the process of transferring knowledge from local client to offshore vendor - everything from hard skills like programming knowledge to more tacit knowledge such as an understanding of what the company and its users expect from a system - can make or break a project. CIOs hoping to transition work offshore must deal with cross-cultural misunderstandings, the fact that employees who hold most of the knowledge about a certain system may also be clutching pink slips, the unavoidable reality that offshore vendors lack company-specific understanding and the problem of high turnover among offshore IT professionals.
In certain cases, these obstacles will completely preclude a move to offshore outsourcing. In others, knowledge transfer can be done well enough to make the outsourcing work, but only if CIOs understand the full extent of the knowledge that must be transferred and spend the time and money necessary to get it from here to there. "Many people just think about transferring the technical knowledge," says Atul Vashistha, founder and CEO of offshore advisory firm neoIT. "They forget about all the other aspects - including change management, people retention and mentoring - that have to take place both here and offshore."
2008 CIO Summit
19th August, 2008 Four Seasons Hotel, Sydney Developed in partnership with CIO Magazine, IDC, INTEP and the CIO Executive Council.
The world of the CIO is extremely complex and diverse. Multiple priorities demand attention and decisions are needed instantly. Individual teams need to be driven towards common goals, and businesses strive to become more mobile, agile and responsive. For CIOs, the challenge never ends.
Every year the CIO Summit identifies what is top of mind for CIOs across Australia and New Zealand, and offers insight for CIO benchmarking and vendor strategic planning alike.
Recent IDC research shows that over 59% of CIO's believe that 'to achieve their business strategies, technology should be used more aggressively than today.'
Join us on August 19th to discover how this is possible with the latest technologies including Virtualisation, Web 2.0, IP Surveillance and Software as a Service (Saas).
Click here for more information.
Please email Denyse_Robertson@idg.com.au for further information.
- +
CIO Live Podcast #79: Brent D Taylor, author of The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires Part II 05 October, 2007 06:00:00
For his new book, The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires, social researcher Brent D Taylor spent four years of intensive research investigating the psychological make-up and backgrounds of some of the world's richest men and women, including IT luminaries Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and Steve Jobs. Taylor discovered that, despite working in different industries and coming from different upbringings, they all have one thing in common -- they are all outsiders. - +
CIO Live Podcast #78: Brent D Taylor, author of The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires 28 September, 2007 17:34:25
For his new book, The Outsider's Edge: The Making of Self-Made Billionaires, social researcher Brent D Taylor spent four years of intensive research investigating the psychological make-up and backgrounds of some of the world's richest men and women, including IT luminaries Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and Steve Jobs. Taylor discovered that, despite working in different industries and coming from different upbringings, they all have one thing in common -- they are all outsiders. - +
CIO Live Podcast #77: Panasonic Speeds Up Trans-Pacific File Transfers, Part III 21 September, 2007 07:00:00
Part three in our three-part special report from CIO's sister publication Network World in the US, as Paul Desmond reports from the Network World IT Roadmap Conference in Santa Clara, California. With development teams in the US and Japan, Panasonic needed a more efficient way to move very large files between the two locations. Iben Rodriguez, IT consultant for Panasonic Research and Development, explains how a storage-area network and virtual server technology helped speed up WAN performance. - +
CIO Live Podcast #76: Panasonic Speeds Up Trans-Pacific File Transfers, Part II 14 September, 2007 07:00:00
Part two in our three-part special report from CIO's sister publication Network World in the US, as Paul Desmond reports from the Network World IT Roadmap Conference in Santa Clara, California. With development teams in the US and Japan, Panasonic needed a more efficient way to move very large files between the two locations. Iben Rodriguez, IT consultant for Panasonic Research and Development, explains how a storage-area network and virtual server technology helped speed up WAN performance. - +
CIO Live Podcast #75: Panasonic Speeds Up Trans-Pacific File Transfers, Part I 07 September, 2007 07:00:05
Part one in our three-part special report from CIO's sister publication Network World in the US, as Paul Desmond reports from the Network World IT Roadmap Conference in Santa Clara, California. With development teams in the US and Japan, Panasonic needed a more efficient way to move very large files between the two locations. Iben Rodriguez, IT consultant for Panasonic Research and Development, explains how a storage-area network and virtual server technology helped speed up WAN performance.
- +
Information security governance: Centralized vs. distributed 05 September, 2008 10:15:00
Should security policies, procedures and processes be managed within a central body, or distributed at an individual level? You need to find the middle ground.The management of information risk has become a significant topic for all organizations, small and large alike. But for the large, multi-divisional organization, it poses the additional challenge of determining how to deploy an information security governance program among what are often disparate business units. Should the policies, procedures, and processes that define the program be developed and managed within a central, corporate body? Or perhaps responsibility would be better placed at the individual unit level? Is there a workable middle-ground? - +
DNS error brings Sophos antivirus updates to a halt 05 September, 2008 13:40:00
Optus, Internode and Equinix affected among others.A sporadic Domain Name Server (DNS) error has blocked Sophos anti-virus updates around the world. - +
Ouch! Security pros' worst mistakes 04 September, 2008 08:05:00
We've all done regrettable things on the job, but does any valuable wisdom come of it? Four security pros candidly explain their biggest blunders and what they learned in the processIt was a mistake so bad the person who made it asked that his name and company not be mentioned here. Let's call him Frank. - +
Security ROI: Fact or Fiction? 03 September, 2008 08:32:00
Bruce Schneier says ROI is a big deal in business, but it's a misnomer in security. Make sure your financial calculations are based on good data and sound methodologies.Return on investment, or ROI, is a big deal in business. Any business venture needs to demonstrate a positive return on investment, and a good one at that, in order to be viable. - +
Information Security and the Importance of Context 01 September, 2008 10:00:00
Those entrusted with information security must raise their contextual awarenessWhen the US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was first created, it created a sudden need for tens of thousands of screeners. Getting a job as an airport screener was a pretty easy process. It seemed as though if you had a pulse, you were in. Jump forward to 2008 and becoming a screener is a bit harder as the TSA has instituted background checks, has upped the educational requirement to include a high school diploma or GED, and added other significant requirements.
Viva la Verticals! Key to Vendor Growth is Through Vertical Market Opportunities, Says IDC 05 September, 2008 11:05:00
F-Secure delivers fastest protection in the online world 04 September, 2008 16:50:00
Rogue security apps dominate Fortinet's Aug 2008 IT threat report 04 September, 2008 16:00:00
IntraPower Signs Deal with Australia’s Largest Service Station and Convenience Store Network 04 September, 2008 10:07:00
TANDBERG Begins Desktop Videoconferencing Roll-Out at New England Credit Union 03 September, 2008 16:01:00
|
||
|
||
|
|
||
|
Growth Strategies in Uncertain Times: Building & Maintaining Good Client Relationships in Professional Services Organisations
To stand out and build your business, there are certain key attributes you must build across your firm. Learn how to grow your business and to think strategically about building and deepening core client relationships by reading on.










