Business Transformation Requires Transformational Leaders
Leadership and teaming skills are front and center in times of rapid change. Meet today’s constant disruption head on with expert guidance in leadership, business strategy, transformation, and innovation. Whether the disruption du jour is a digitally-driven upending of traditional business models, the pandemic-driven end to business as usual, or the change-driven challenge of staffing that meets your transformation plans — you’ll be prepared with cutting edge techniques and expert knowledge that enable strategic leadership.
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Insight
How much are you spending on technology? Who pays for what? How do you determine funding responsibilities? And how do you determine how to pay for infrastructure, applications, R&D, and ongoing technology management? These are huge issues -- especially when you consider that the US spends more than one trillion dollars a year on hardware, software, and services. Yes -- a trillion dollars!
Organization: A Trend Emerges
How many of us wrestle with the question "who should report to whom?" several times a year? Have your efforts to "reorganize" the business-technology relationship been proactive or reactive? Often, because some influential people complain about the relationship, things change. But reactive changes usually don't last long.
IT experts have predicted for years that architectural thinking will save money and increase flexibility in IT. But few firms have implemented architectural models and processes that enable integration, standardization, and reuse. Fortunately, in the past couple of years, companies are becoming more serious about architecture. They are thinking about standards and reuse at the highest levels.
Three is the Magic Number
Editor's Note: The following two articles are from Cutter's Business Technology Trends and Impacts Council Opinion, " Spending Priorities for 2002," (Vol. 2, No. 11) published at the close of 2001. It may benefit readers to consider what you ended up spending on IT for 2002 and compare it to what is budgeted for 2003. Are your charging strategies for IT defined more clearly in 2003?
Get Set for Change
As IT departments go through the rigors of budgeting for the next fiscal year, they'll have to cope with the pressures of the economic slowdown and the realities of the post-9/11 world of terrorism.
This time of year, whether you want to or not, you have to give some thought to the basic issues of our IT management profession. Things like: Who's paying? How much can the company afford? What technologies does it want? And what is most important? Many of you have been working up annual budgets and plans for months, but the time is near, here, or past, when you'll have to lay out your commitments and defend what you think.

