Analysts Examine How IT Can Drive Business Growth During the
Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, October 7-12, in Orlando
ORLANDO, Fla--IT can drive business, but IT leaders must become leaders of the
business to direct this growth, according to Gartner, Inc. Gartner
analysts said it is time to be a business leader first, and an IT leader
second.
During the opening keynote today at Gartner Symposium/ITxpo, being held
here through October 12, Gartner analysts examined how IT leaders can
drive growth for the business. They emphasized that this cannot be
accomplished unless IT leaders understand the business of their company.
Attract and Retain Customers
Gartner analysts outlined how IT leaders need to attract and retain
customers by taking advantage of an efficient, secure, always available
communications environment. In the emerging strategies for
communications, user control is critical. Communications in context, at
the right time and place, makes a significant difference.
“We (IT leaders) can put communications in
context to give people better information that they can actually act on,
at the time they should act on it,” said David
Willis, vice president and distinguished analyst, Gartner. “With
intelligent filtering, location awareness, and automated presences
management, we can identify the best channels to open based on inferred
and learned behaviors. These approaches will not only make the workplace
a more liveable place, they will also make it a more productive place.
We can integrate our critical applications into our communications
systems and reduce the impact of human latency.”
Maximize Profitability and Effectiveness
IT must also deliver an efficient, lean, and green infrastructure to
maximize profitability and competitive capabilities. IT leaders must run
an agile operation that can support the needs of the company as it
evolves.
“Exploit technologies like virtualization to
lubricate the gears of IT, permitting quick shifts,”
said Carl Claunch, vice president and distinguished analyst, Gartner. “Apply
automation; it not only helps cut down rising labor costs, but it
accelerates responses to events and delivers consistent, repeatable
actions. Operations must build a picture of the relationship of
infrastructure and applications to the business process. You must
embrace those business priorities.”
Improve Business Processes
A business is the sum of its process. Processes - what they do and how
they perform – drive business value, and they
drive differentiation. IT has addressed the majority of simple and
straightforward processes – those that are
predictable, repeatable, and neatly controlled. Advanced organizations
will harness the most complex, most volatile, most dynamic, and
multi-party processes.
“Find the most critical processes to improve,”
said Susan Landry, vice president and distinguished analyst, Gartner. “Which
ones generate the most revenue? Where can you create differentiation
that can’t be imitated? Where can you
eliminate cumbersome handoffs, costly errors, and duplication?
Orchestrate those services and processes as you need them to power the
more complex and highest value processes.”
Stop Deleting Opportunities
With the volume of all messages that workers receive—e-mail,
text, instant messages, voice mail—the
challenge for many is to delete as many of these messages as they can.
People want only the right information all the time. Companies want the
same thing, at the million document and billion transaction level.
“The problem is not just too much
information, it’s too much bad information.
The information is delivered unpredictably. It comes from every
direction in unimagined forms,” said Whit
Andrews, research vice president, Gartner. “Establish
that information infrastructure. Focus on the opportunities grasping for
air in the information flood.”
Build Innovative and Agile Organizations
It is not enough to be merely efficient. The business must also be agile
in order to respond to changing demands. Organizations must find new
ways to do better things. Business needs innovation, and that means
moving beyond the activities that IT people have obsessed about. IT has
been asked to reduce costs, tighten compliance and reduce or even
eliminate risk, all while reducing costs.
“Now organizations are asking IT to help them
become more agile, which means accepting some risk in exchange for
innovation,” said Jeffrey Mann, research vice
president, Gartner. “Rather than embracing
some collaboration and Web 2.0 possibilities, most IT organizations have
spent their efforts trying to prevent people from accessing them. How
can IT leaders create an innovative and agile organization if they
believe that the most innovative and exciting technologies and services
have no business value? To embrace opportunity, IT needs to loosen up to
allow good things to happen, safely.”
Managed Risk
IT leaders need to understand the risk related to the use of IT, and
these people communicate that risk, so the business can make an educated
and informed decision whether or not that risk is acceptable. It is not
IT’s job to say no.
“Information security doesn’t
mean zero risk, it means managed risk,” said
Neil MacDonald, vice president and Gartner Fellow, Gartner. “Talk
about what all these new technologies can enable, but in a context of a
new approach to IT risk management. Help your business colleagues make
educated decisions. It is not IT’s job to
assume all IT-related risk.”
Be a Business Leader First, an IT Leader Second
The business is telling IT loudly that they want IT to be business
leaders. More CIOs and IT leaders are coming from business backgrounds
with no previous experience in technology.
“The business is telling us that they want IT
leadership who looks like them, acts like them, and sees the role of IT
as they do, as a business leadership role,”
said Tina Nunno, managing vice president, Gartner EXP. “You
(IT leaders) understand how the business processes really work, and
where the key business information really is.”
About Gartner Symposium/ITxpo
Symposium/ITxpo is the industry’s largest and
most strategic conference for senior IT and business professions. More
than 6,000 senior business and IT strategists from virtually all major
industries will gather to gain the latest advice on the biggest
challenge: driving profits and performance with IT. Gartner's annual
Symposium/ITxpo events are key components of attendees’
annual planning efforts. They rely on Gartner Symposium/ITxpo to gain
insight into how their organizations can use IT to address business
challenges and improve operational efficiency. Additional information is
available at www.gartner.com/symposium/us.
About Gartner
Gartner, Inc. (NYSE: IT) is the world’s
leading information technology research and advisory company. Gartner
delivers the technology-related insight necessary for our clients to
make the right decisions, every day. From CIOs and senior IT leaders in
corporations and government agencies, to business leaders in high-tech
and telecom enterprises and professional services firms, to technology
investors, Gartner is the indispensable partner to 60,000 clients in
10,000 distinct organizations. Through the resources of Gartner
Research, Gartner Consulting and Gartner Events, Gartner works with
every client to research, analyze and interpret the business of IT
within the context of their individual role. Founded in 1979, Gartner is
headquartered in Stamford, Connecticut, U.S.A., and has 3,900
associates, including 1,200 research analysts and consultants in 75
countries. For more information, visit www.gartner.com.
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